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BROOKLYN, N.Y. — The moment was made for Jaron “Boots” Ennis. It was cultivated before anyone even knew who he was — back in “The Dungeon” years.

This dungeon had no specters lurking. It was where pain was processed, where doubts were checked at the entrance and where future champions were honed. Small, round pools of light pierced the darkness. Industrial lanterns illuminated the musty, thick air of the dungeon each time the power went out, and it went out often.

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In the basement of this Germantown Philadelphia church is where Derek “Bozy” Ennis built a makeshift gym for his sons: Derek, Farah and the youngest, Jaron, nicknamed “Boots.”

The problem with “Boots” is he always liked to fight. Blessed with agility, speed and ambidextrous power, he could sometimes eat punches he could have avoided.

A sense of tranquility always pervaded, because the Ennis family genuinely felt one of the three were destined to make it in the hardscrabble world of professional boxing. Derek nor Farah had the skill nor disciple of “Boots.” And when “Boots” was rising, Team Boots was bogged down by lawsuits that tethered him to managers. His career was delayed because of it, but “Boots” knew, and his father knew, talent always rises.

It rose to the heights Team Ennis expected Saturday night at Barclays Center in Brooklyn, New York, when “Boots” vanquished 23-year-old previously undefeated Xander Zayas for the unified WBA and WBO 154-pound world championship.

Jaron ‘Boots’ Ennis (L) slips a punch from Xander Zayas during their WBO and WBA title bout.

(Evan Bernstein via Getty Images)

Ennis (36-0, 32 KOs) received a tsunami of boos from a partisan Puerto Rican crowd at the sold-out Barclays, but came out immediately attacking Zayas with a jab out of a righty stance, then strafed Zayas with a righty jab from a southpaw stance. He was relaxed, in control and dominant, knocking Zayas down for the first time in his career in the opening round with a straight left, after a barrage of shots. Zayas found himself in the ring with someone he never faced before.

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Ennis had Zayas in trouble again in the second, landing almost every punch he threw. He said throughout the buildup for this fight that he wanted to be the “Face of Boxing.”

He was Saturday night.

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