June 24, 2022; San Antonio, Texas; Jesse Rodriguez steps on the scale to weigh in for his upcoming fight at the Tech Port Arena in San Antonio, Texas. Mandatory Credit: Ed Mulholland/Matchroom.
Advertisement
image_pdfimage_print

By Norm Frauenheim –

The first half of the year ended with Bam. The second half begins with Boots.

Jesse “Bam” Rodriguez’ brilliant stoppage of Juan Francisco Estrada on June 29 and Jaron “Boots” Ennis’ homecoming title defense against David Avanesyan Saturday are a couple of weeks at the heart of a busy boxing year, a problematic 2024 yet still with reasons to be optimistic that it’ll be remembered for more than just Ryan Garcia.

Through the rest of the week, it’s up to Ennis to extend the drama delivered by Rodriguez’ pound-for-pound statement in a seventh-round stoppage of the accomplished Estrada in front of a roaring crowd in Phoenix.

That’s a tall order. But the elements are there. Ennis is at home in Philadelphia, which celebrates its unrivaled boxing heritage with a statue of Rocky on the steps of the city’s Museum of Art. Boxing has always been something of an art form in Philly.

Ennis just looks as if he’ll be the city’s next master. There have been flashes of Ennis’ blend of power and style since his debut in 2016. But boxing’s forever balkanized politics and petty rivalries always seemed to keep him from achieving his projected artistry.

But now Ennis (31-0, 28 KOs) has a new promoter, Matchroom, and a renewed future that begins, the promoters say, Saturday against Avanesyan (30-4-1, 18 KOs) in a DAZN-streamed-welterweight fight at Wells Fargo Center.

Philly fans have noticed. They bought 4,000 tickets in the pre-sale when the fight was first announced with Cody Crowley as the opponent. A month later, Crowley got injured and Avanesyan – knocked out by Terence Crawford in December 2022 – replaced him. Tickets continued to sell. Reportedly, about 10,000 had been sold three days before opening bell.

Call it Ennis’ coming-out party, not unlike Rodriguez’ defining victory over Estrada. Before the super-flyweight bout, it was called a chance for Bam to crash the top five in the pound-for-pound debate. Turns out, that was more than just hype. Bam jumped into the top tier in several ratings, including this one.    

Ennis, who figures to take over the top of the welterweight division in the wake of Crawford’s move up to junior-middle, has fought 31 times, all victories. He’s been fighting long enough to be an aging veteran. But he’s not. He’s just entering his prime, 27, about three years older than the 24-year-old Rodriguez.

Prime means promise. Bam and Boots haven’t squandered theirs. At the heart of boxing in 2024, they’re the future. The guess, perhaps the hope, is that they’ll continue to pursue it in the ring instead of social media.

That brings this column back to Ryan Gracia. He’s in the Bam-and-Boots generation. He’s about a year older than Rodriguez. He’s a couple of years younger than Ennis. But the 25-year-old Garcia has become the poster child for how-not-to-do-it throughout an ongoing story as sad as it is enraging.

He tested positive for a PED and blew off weight before bludgeoning Devin Haney on April 20 after weeks of dark and bizarre behavior on social media. He denied the PED test, alleging some kind of conspiracy about how he had been set-up.

He’s been suspended. But there’s been no suspension of the craziness. Racist remarks on twitter are the latest, including an unforgivable comment about George Floyd, a civil-rights symbol since he was slain on the streets of Minneapolis.

Within 280 characters, Garcia sounded like a rabid racist and a grave robber. Sick, sick stuff. Yet, it continues. He says he’ll go to rehab, but then says he’ll coach his brother instead. He’s been suspended by the New York Commission, his promoter and ruling bodies.

But he stays on social media, almost as if that’s a bigger addiction than any substance. By now, we all know he has a social- media following that only Gallup can count. 

Increasingly, however, his social-media audience is in more control of him than he is control of it. It wants outrage and Garcia delivers, repeatedly elevating the outrage.

It’s dangerous, even more dangerous than boxing, which throughout the first six months of 2024 has been unable to escape the distraction and damage done by the Garcia story.

This Saturday, however, there’s another chance to forget about him, his ongoing decline and his absolute lack of respect for a time-honored craft practiced at the highest level by Rodriguez and Ennis.

If you don’t go to rehab, Ryan Garcia, then just go away. Let the rest of this year be remembered for what Bam did and Boots is about to do. 

Advertisement