How to watch Jaime Munguía in Spanish

Mexico · super middleweight
Diego Salcedo
By Diego Salcedo
Published June 12, 2026 · Updated June 12, 2026

Jaime Munguía, from Tijuana, is one of the most exciting Mexican punchers, developed through the Golden Boy stable. His cards are usually available in Spanish on DAZN.

Who is Jaime Munguía?

Jaime Munguía is from Tijuana, Baja California, a border city with a huge boxing tradition and a fan base that fills arenas on both sides of the line. He shot to fame very young by winning the light-middleweight world title, and has since carried the label of 'the next great Mexican fighter'.

Developed and promoted by Golden Boy, Óscar de la Hoya's company, Munguía embodies the style Mexican fans love most: coming forward, hunting the knockout and never hiding. That mentality has made him hugely popular with Hispanic audiences in the United States, especially in California and Texas.

Career, style and biggest fights

Munguía started as a light middleweight who won by knockout almost at will, and over time moved up to middleweight and super middleweight, refining his technique without losing his offensive trademark. His big test came against Canelo Álvarez in 2024: he lost on points, but made clear he belongs at the highest level.

His boxing is built on pressure and volume, with good body work and power that always keeps the knockout threat alive. He is exactly the kind of fighter who makes every one of his cards appealing, which is why his bouts are usually part of the programming offered in Spanish on DAZN.

Where to watch Jaime Munguía in Spanish

Jaime Munguía's fights in the US are spread across the same platforms as the rest of boxing, and which one carries a given card depends on the promotion behind it. In practice, DAZN is the most common home for top Mexican boxers in 2026, usually with a Spanish audio option, while ESPN Knockout and TV Azteca pick up select cards and Netflix takes the occasional megafight. The table below is the full free-first picture; for any specific date, confirm the broadcaster on our fight page or the promoter's listing.

WhereTypeNotes
TV Azteca (Box Azteca)FreeSaturday-night boxing, free over the air in Mexico (Azteca 7). In the US it reaches some systems; it is the classic free window for Mexican boxing.
Televisa / TUDNCableSpanish-language boxing on TUDN and the TelevisaUnivision channels, with select cards featuring Mexican stars.
ESPN KnockoutCableESPN's Spanish-language boxing brand, with cards on ESPN Deportes, ESPN2 and the Disney+ Premium plan.
DAZNStreamingSince 2026 it is the main home of boxing: it brings Top Rank, Matchroom, Golden Boy and Queensberry under one subscription, with Spanish audio on many cards.
NetflixStreamingThe megafights (Canelo-level) land on Netflix with Spanish commentary, included in your subscription with no pay-per-view fee.
Prime VideoStreamingSome PBC cards stream on Prime Video; check the Spanish audio option on a per-event basis.
PPV (pago por evento)PPVSome big US fights are still pay-per-view (PPV) on top of a subscription. We say it plainly: if a card is PPV, you pay for it separately.

Free, paid and PPV — what to expect

If you want to follow Jaime Munguía regularly, plan for a streaming subscription: most of the relevant cards are on DAZN, and the occasional huge night may be on Netflix (included, no extra fee) or, less often, on a US pay-per-view that you buy separately. The truly free route — TV Azteca over the air — exists mainly in Mexico and on some US systems, and it will not carry every fight. We will always flag clearly when a card is PPV so there are no surprises on your bill.

How to follow Jaime Munguía without cable

You do not need a cable package to follow Jaime Munguía. DAZN, ESPN's services and Netflix all run as apps on Roku, Fire TV, Apple TV, smart TVs, phones and tablets, so a single device and a Wi-Fi connection are enough. Because most of these are month-to-month streaming subscriptions, a practical approach is to subscribe in the week of a card you want and cancel afterwards if you only watch occasionally.

The single most important habit is to confirm the broadcaster and the ring-walk time for each specific fight, because they change from card to card and the main event often starts late at night US Eastern time. When we publish a page for Jaime Munguía's next bout, it will carry that information with kickoff times in every time zone.

Other fighters to follow

Frequently asked questions

Where can I watch Jaime Munguía's fights in Spanish?+

Jaime Munguía's cards are usually available in Spanish on DAZN, with select fights on ESPN Knockout (ESPN Deportes / Disney+ Premium) or TV Azteca and TUDN. The biggest events can land on Netflix. Always confirm the broadcaster for the specific fight, as it changes by card.

Is Jaime Munguía fighting on Netflix?+

Only the very biggest events go to Netflix. Most of Jaime Munguía's fights are on DAZN or ESPN's platforms; check the specific card before assuming where it airs.

How can I watch Jaime Munguía for free?+

Free options are limited in the US: TV Azteca's boxing is free over the air in Mexico and on some US systems. Most cards are on paid streaming, so a DAZN subscription is often the realistic route.

What weight class is Jaime Munguía in?+

Jaime Munguía competes at super middleweight. Weight classes can change over a career, so check the latest for any given fight.

Do I need cable to watch Jaime Munguía?+

No. DAZN, ESPN's apps and Netflix all work on Roku, Fire TV, Apple TV, smart TVs and phones, so a streaming subscription and Wi-Fi are enough to follow Jaime Munguía without cable.

How much does it cost to watch Jaime Munguía?+

It depends on the card: a DAZN subscription covers most of Jaime Munguía's fights, the occasional megafight on Netflix is included in that subscription, and a few US cards are separate pay-per-view. We flag PPV clearly so there are no surprises.

Broadcaster rights verified: June 13, 2026.

Diego Salcedo
Diego Salcedo
Recaps, analysis and matchday talking points · Houston, Texas

Diego Salcedo is a bilingual football writer based in Houston. He breaks down matches, tactics and the talking points of every World Cup matchday, following South American and European football closely for over a decade.

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