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By Norm Frauenheim-

LAS VEGAS – It’s a noisy business. Maybe that’s why you haven’t heard much about – or from – Carlos Castro. 

He’s the quiet guy in a contentious crowd full of tireless trash-talkers who work harder in social media than they do in the gym. In Jake Paul’s world, clicks are more valuable than punches. A twitter account is today’s bully pulpit.

But Castro confines his craft – and perhaps his identity — to doing the work where it has always been done.

In the gym. 

And within the ropes.

That’s where he’ll be Saturday night at Mandalay Bay on a Fox pay-per-view card featuring seldom-seen Keith Thurman in his first fight in 30 months against newly-minted welterweight Mario Barrios.

For Castro (27-0, 12 KOs), the fight is a huge step. He faces Luis Nery (31-1, 24 KOs) in a junior-featherweight fight that could lead to a world-title shot against Stephen Fulton or Uzbek Murodjon Akhmadaliev, each of whom have two of the division’s significant belts.

A Castro victory over Nery, a former two-time champion, would speak volumes. Just don’t expect the volume to come from Castro, 

The bout is a chance at affirmation for the Phoenix fighter, one of four Arizona fighters (also Keenan Carbajal of Phoenix and the Ramos brothers, Abel and Jesus, of Casa Grande) scheduled to appear in Las Vegas on the same night when DAZN is scheduled for another PPV card featuring Carlos Cuadras-versus-Jesse Rodriguez at Footprint Center in downtown Phoenix. Location, location, location??? 

Cuadras-Rodriguez might be a good fight on an otherwise shuffled card. But it’s in the wrong place on the wrong night. Footprint, the Suns home arena, has 18,422 seats. A good bet is that there will be more people at the FanDuel book on the concourse level than in the arena’s seats at opening bell.

Arizona’s fight crowd figures to watch Castro, instead. If you haven’t heard about him yet, he’s hoping you will with a victory that will finally affirm his place on the world-class stage.

“He’s already one of the best in the world at junior-feather and featherweight,’’ his longtime promoter Robert Vargas of Iron Boy Promotions said. “He knows that. He’s proven it. But he just needs the victory that will get people talking about him.

“A win over Nery, a really tough guy, could do it.’’

It could. But a victory over Nery would also qualify as a mild upset, at least according to the prevailing odds. Castro is plus-140, meaning he’s a 7-to-5 underdog. On the percentage scale, that means he has less than a 50-50 chance at beating Nery, an aggressive lefthander from Tijuana. His chances? 41.7 percent.

There are countless ways to interpret the narrow odds. In part, they look to be based on simply who’s better known. That would be Nery. But Castro has been patiently working his way into the collective awareness of fight fans. He did so in February 2019 with a one-sided decision (110-90, 99-91,98-92) over Filipino Genesis Servania, who knocked down Oscar Valdez and had the current junior-lightweight champion in trouble throughout a 2017 Tucson fight. Valdez escaped with a decision (117-109, 116-110, 115-111).

That’s when Vargas and Castro knew they could play on the world-class stage. But Castro’s patient work ethic kept him from bragging. Kept him off social media, too. All the way, he continued to work on developing his skillset and upper body. Power has been a question, one that looms large against Nery. Does he have enough of it to keep the Mexican off of him?

We’ll see. In an eye-opening performance on a card featuring Yordenis Ugas’ upset of Manny Pacquiao last August, Castro flashed newfound power in scoring a 10th-round stoppage of former contender Oscar Escandon in a featherweight bout. At 37, Escandon might not have had much left.

But he still had enough power to hurt Castro. He did. But that’s when Castro displayed newfound command of an evolving skillset. For nine-plus rounds, he did it all. 

All, and even more, might be necessary against Nery, whose lone defeat is a stoppage loss to Brandon Figueroa in his last bout.

“This the beginning of a new chapter to my career,’’ Castro said after the Escandon stoppage, his first bout with former Valdez trainer Manny Robles in his corner.

The career’s beginning was humble. Castro, now 27, arrived in Arizona from Obregon, Mexico as a 3-year-old. He grew up in trailer park in southwest Phoenix. The surrounding streets only led to trouble. Vargas said his father decided to get him into one of the countless mom-and-pop boxing gyms that dot the Phoenix landscape. 

Vargas signed him as a 17-year-old with a long amateur career. He labored – always quietly – on small cards in Phoenix. He also labored as a landscaper to support his family. He‘s a husband. And a dad. Now, he’s a contender, one step from a shot at the world title he has always wanted.

By today’s chest-thumping standards, that’s reason to brag. But there is no boast in Castro’s skillset. He’ll let a victory over Nery speak for itself. At least, he hopes one will.

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