LAS VEGAS –  Just because it looks like no man can beat Shakur Stevenson doesn’t mean there is no one out there who believes he can.

A night after unbeaten, new four-division champion Stevenson wiped out WBO 140lbs belt-wearer Teofimo Lopez by three 119-109 scores at Madison Square Garden, former 140lbs champion Jose “Rayo” Valenzuela similarly swept his lightweight opponent and asked for the opportunity to fight Stevenson.

The 26-year-old Valenzuela, 15-3 (9 KOs), put on an impressive clinic to thwart the aggression and power punching of Mexican countryman Diego Torres, 22-2, Sunday night in the main event of Zuffa Boxing’s card at the Apex by three 99-91 scores.

Overcoming immense pressure Torres learned from the hands of none other than Hall of Famer Marco Antonio Barrera, Valenzuela shrugged off a fourth-round cut near the right eye and swept the remaining rounds.

Asked about Stevenson’s showing, Valenzuela said the bout went exactly the way he thought it would against former two-division champion Lopez.

“Styles make fights … it was a pretty bad matchup for Teofimo. He kept getting hit with [Stevenson’s] jab,” Valenzuela said, criticizing Lopez’s footwork and fight plan. “You’ve got to let your hands go.”

As a fellow southpaw standing taller than Stevenson with a slight reach advantage, Valenzuela said his boxing acumen would pose problems for the Newark, New Jersey, product who won a 2016 Olympic silver medal.

“I’ve been watching him since I was young. I couldn’t compete in the national tournaments when I was young, because my parents didn’t have the money to take me,” Valenzuela said. “I know I have a couple losses. I know Shakur is this and that.

“But boxing is all about styles. I think I’ve got all the abilities and the movement … it takes two to tango, and I think me and him would be a great fight down the line.”

Valenzuela’s interest is intriguing because as Stevenson collected the 140lbs “The Ring” belt by defeating Lopez, Zuffa Boxing head Dana White confirmed that the fighters in his newly formed stable are permitted to participate in higher-profile bouts against “The Ring” champions.

“If I had to pick anyone, I’d fight Shakur Stevenson,” Valenzuela said.

“If you look at Teofimo Lopez, he’s shorter, right-handed … so was [recent Stevenson foe William] Zepeda. I’m 5-feet-10. It’s different. [Stevenson and I] match up differently. We match up perfectly. I come to fight. [Stevenson] is a defensive fighter. It’s all about putting on great shows for the fans.”

Valenzuela has to heal from the cut as he awaits the birth of a child.

And Stevenson must sort out if he’ll defend his WBC lightweight belt or new WBO strap, or perhaps surrender one.

At 140, the other champions are Richardson Hitchins, Dalton Smith and Gary Antuanne Russell, who defeated Valenzuela by a wide decision in March and returns to defend his belt later this month.

At lightweight, IBF champion and former Valenzuela stablemate Raymond Muratalla and new WBO champion Abdullah Mason are formidable foes.

Yet, after what he did Sunday, impressively moving to land his power left flush by creatively backpedaling and evading Torres’ potent hands, Valenzuela didn’t want his night to end without making his best pitch.

“I think it’d be a hell of a fight,” he said.