Breaking news: Mikey Garcia is a spectacular warrior. Furthermore, now a ton more individuals know it. The three-division best on the planet - still an occupant at 135 pounds - put his stamp on the following most noteworthy weight class Saturday night at Barclays Center in Brooklyn, New York, with an in a general sense perfect consistent choice over previous four-division boss Adrien Broner. Garcia's win was his 37th straight in a profession that started 11 years prior, yet its uneven nature against his most astounding profile rival to date ought to give absolutely the pound-to pound jar he's been looking for since consummation an over two year cutback the previous summer. "He's a modest bunch on such a large number of levels," said Paulie Malignaggi, himself a previous two-division champion who dropped a split choice to Broner in 2013. "There's nothing you can reprimand in Mikey Garcia. He's only a better than average contender. What's more, it took some person the nature of Adrien Broner to get Mikey Garcia to this level." Garcia (37-0) entered the session as a 2-to-1 most loved and once in a while neglected to look like it, tossing more punches than Broner (33-3) in everything except one of the 12 adjusts and completing with 115 shots in the last round - simply the second time he's gone the 12-round separation. He functioned admirably to Broner's body when he could get the fleeter man along the ropes or in the corners, and he additionally left the reckless Cincinnati local with swelling above and beneath the two eyes on account of a compelling left hand that he utilized for both a hit and a snare. "We prepared for that for 10 weeks," Garcia said. "We must be prepared to do whatever it takes, and that was being a tad bit busier than the normal battle I have." To be sure, Garcia landed 244 punches to Broner's 125, including a 152-72 edge in control shots and a 92-53 hole in hits. Neither one of the mans was down or altogether hurt through 36 minutes, however Garcia's strategic strength earned him a 117-111 decision on one authority scorecard and 116-112 edges on the others. CBS Sports concurred with the more extensive edge, calling it 117-111 (nine rounds to three) for Garcia. "I controlled the rounds and kept the action up," Garcia said. "He's an awesome battle with incredible abilities, yet I was the best today around evening time." Broner lost surprisingly outside the welterweight division however stays insubordinate. "It was a decent battle. I'm a contender. I come to battle I come to win," he said. "It was Tom and Jerry. I needed to get the mouse. He battled the better battle. He was the better man today around evening time. Be that as it may, I'm as yet a four-time champion, and when I resign, I'm still going to be in the history books." Garcia said after the battle that he'd consider moving back to 135 pounds if either a unification session or a significant title barrier was offered, yet he would likewise consider alternatives introduced at either 140 or 147 pounds. He tipped the scales at 139 1/2 beats on Friday, the heaviest of his profession. The session was contracted at 140 pounds. Garcia held titles at 126 and 130 pounds before the long rest - incited by wounds and wrangling with Top Rank, his previous limited time organization – yet came back to win the WBC title at 135 pounds with a savage stoppage of Dejan Zlaticanin in January. He's 3-0 with two knockouts since the arrival. "He vaulted himself into the best 10 pound-for-pound rankings," said Showtime expert Al Bernstein. "His procedure is so solid and he's a warrior, which we saw here today around evening time." In the last undercard before the headliner, previous 154-pound champion Jermall Charlo made an effective middleweight make a big appearance with a fourth-round TKO over No. 1-positioned WBC contender Jorge Heiland. The win makes Charlo the compulsory challenger to the WBC champion at 160 pounds. That title will be a