Promociones PM Returns to Tijuana

TIJUANA, BAJA CALIFORNIA – Former world champion turned promoter Diego “Pelucho” Morales is back giving young aspiring fighters in the border city opportunity to show their skills before their local followings beginning tomorrow night with a six-bout offering at the Salon Mutualista. Fighters weighed-in Thursday afternoon at the offices of the Comision de Box, Lucha Libre y Kickboxing de Tijuana next door to the famed Auditorio Municipal.

In the main event, local favorite Jesus “Bombardero” Valadez (5-1, 2 KOs) of Tijuana takes on determined Edgar Vazquez (4-2-1, 2 KOs) of Tijuana in a six-round light welterweight bout. Valadez, just 18-years-old, has become known for his crowd-pleasing action style. Vazquez is looking to rebound from a March stoppage loss to more experienced Miguel Zuniga. Both fighters weighed-in at 63.5 kilograms or about 140-pounds.

In a heavyweight attraction, Juan Manuel Dominguez (2-0, 1 KO) of Tijuana hopes to keep rolling against Rodrigo Ramirez (0-1) of Tijuana in a four-rounder. Dominguez, who scaled 104 kilograms (229.3-pounds), will already be fighting for the third time since turning pro in March. Ramirez, who came in at 118 kilograms (260.1-pounds), has been out of action since a second-round stoppage loss back in September of 2010.

Another active newcomer, former Tijuana amateur champion Erick Cebreros (2-0) will take on debuting Benny Guevara of Tijuana in a four-round featherweight fight. Cebreros, who turned professional only in April, scaled 57.7 kilograms (127.2-pounds). Guevara, faced with a tough assignment for his premier outing, came in at 56 kilograms (123.5-pounds).

Former U.S. amateur standout Aldwayne Simpson (1-0, 1 KO) of Richmond, California by way of Kingston, Jamaica ends a nearly three-year hiatus in a four-round light welterweight bout against Miguel Nava (0-3) of Tijuana. Simpson scaled 64.8 kilograms (142.9 pounds). Nava, never in an easy fight, was not present at Thursday’s weigh-in and will take to the scales Friday morning. Simpson recently wrapped up a training stint alongside former world champion Robert Guerrero.

Ciro Arrellanos (1-0) of Mexico City, Distrito Federal meets Tijuana’s debuting Martin Gomez in a four-round light welterweight fight. Arrellanos, one of three fighters on the card out of the Ray Solis Boxing Gym, scaled 64 kilograms (141.1-pounds). Gomez, fighting out of the Torito Gym, weighed-in at 64 kilograms as well.

Two fighters looking for their first win square off as Pedro Garcia (0-2) of Tijuana takes on Luis Contreras (0-2) in a four-round lightweight fight. Garcia, of the Chavez Gym, scaled 61 kilograms (134.5-pounds). Contreras, of the Xico Gym, came in at 61.4 kilograms (135.7-pounds).

Tickets for the event, promoted by Promociones PM, are available at the Perro Salado Billiards Hall, the offices of Box Latino and Hollywood Beauty Supply.

Quick Weigh-in Results (in pounds):

Light Welterweights, 6 Rounds
Vazquez 140
Valadez 140

Heavyweights, 4 Rounds
Dominguez 229.3
Ramirez 260.1

Featherweights, 4 Rounds
Cebreros 127.2
Guevara 123.5

Light Welterweights, 4 Rounds
Simpson 142.9
Nava*

Light Welterweights, 4 Rounds
Arrellanos 141.1
Gomez 141.1

Lightweights, 4 Rounds
Garcia 134.5
Contreras 135.7

*will weigh-in Friday morning

Mario Ortega Jr. can be contacted at [email protected].




Hovhannisyan Moves Past Acosta on Shobox

SANTA YNEZ, CALIFORNIA — In by far his toughest test to date, lightweight prospect Art Hovhannisyan remained unbeaten with a ten-round split decision over former titleholder Miguel Acosta in the Showtime-televised main event emanating from the Chumash Casino Resort on Friday night.

Hovhannisyan (15-0-2, 8 KOs) of Glendale, California by way of Gyumri, Armenia got off to a strong start, and it looked as though he may make it a short night. Near the end of the first round, Hovhannisyan, 132, caught Acosta, 134, with a clean right hand to score a knockdown. Acosta (29-6-2, 23 KOs) of Santiago de Leon de Caraca, Miranda, Venezuela appeared to be in trouble, but lucky for the former champion the bell sounded before Hovhannisyan could really capitalize.

Though Hovhannisyan maintained in control for the next few rounds, Acosta got his legs under him and slowly worked his way back into the fight. In the fifth, Acosta countered Hovhannisyan with a right hand, dropping the Armenian to a knee for a knockdown of his own. It appeared to be a flash knockdown, but may have been motivation for Acosta to believe a decision was still possible.

Acosta carried some momentum into the final two rounds, but it was apparent he was running low on gas. Hovhannisyan closed stronger, though both fighters had some great moments in action-packed tenth-round. When the final bell sounded, both fighters found themselves on the shoulders of their team members.

In the end, it was Acosta’s team that would be disappointed. Scores read 95-93 twice for Hovhannisyan, with the lone dissenting judge having 96-92 for Acosta. With the victory, Hovhannisyan will likely find himself ranked in the top fifteen by one or more of the major sanctioning organizations.

“I’m very happy to get the win,” said Hovhannisyan. “Acosta can still fight. I think my conditioning played a great role in my performance, but at this level you need to be good in all facets. This fight was definitely a great learning experience for me.”

In the televised co-feature, Roman Morales (11-0, 6 KOs) of San Ardo, California used his size and skill advantages to move past tough Alexis Santiago (11-3-1, 5 KOs) of Phoenix, Arizona via eight-round unanimous decision.

It was apparent from the early going that Morales, 122, was not going to be much affected by the punches Santiago, 122, landed. Morales, who normally displays stellar defense, was more willing to take one in order to landed his three or four-punch combinations. Though outgunned, Santiago made it a fight and stood up to some hard shots. Only one was able to put him down, as a picture-perfect left uppercut from the southpaw stance dropped Santiago in the third.

By the final two rounds, it looked as though Santiago may not make it to the final bell. Towards the end of the final round, Santiago showed his grit again as he fired and traded with the still strong Morales. It turned out to be a treat for the fans despite the lopsided scores of 80-71, 80-72 and 79-72.

“I thought this was a good performance,” said Morales. “I’m glad I could go eight hard rounds because that is what I expected. I got a little tired, but I knew I had to keep working. I’ll be back in the gym soon and I’ll be ready to fight whoever my team wants me to.” Next up for Morales is tough Jonathan Alcantara on August 24th at the Tulare County Fairgrounds in Tulare, California.

Jonathan Maicelo (17-0, 10 KOs) of North Bergen, New Jersey by way of Callao, Peru demolished normally durable, but aging former title challenger Daniel Attah (26-12-1, 9 KOs) of Washington, District of Columbia by way of Calabar, Nigeria inside of three rounds.

Maicelo, 135, pressed the action, landing with power shots in regularity from the opening bell. By the third, Attah, 135, was on the way out. Maicelo landed a straight right upstairs to score a knockdown moments into the round. The veteran Attah returned to his feet, only to take more punishment from Maicelo, who closed the show with a right hook-left hook combination. Referee Lou Moret called a halt at 2:45 of the third.

Longtime local favorite Rufino Serrano (13-4) of Santa Maria, California by way of Morelia, Michoacan de Ocampo, Mexico did what he does and boxed his way to a six-round unanimous decision over Rob Diezel (8-5, 3 KOs) of Seattle, Washington.

Diezel, 125 ½, attempted to match boxing skills with the adept Serrano, 125 ½, from the early going. While Diezel did well in the opening stages, Serrano’s class took over as the rounds progressed. However, Diezel was never in any trouble, unless you count a cut he suffered from an accidental head clash. Serrano took all three cards 59-55.

In a fight where somebody’s ‘0’ had to go, nobody’s did as winless Edgar Alvarado (0-1-1) of Riverside, California and winless Erick Prado (0-2-1) of nearby Santa Maria battled to a draw in a slugfest. From the opening stanza, Alvarado, 157 ½, and Prado, 161, fought their hearts out much to the delight of the packed house. Prado landed the cleaner shots in the early rounds, but Alvarado often closed better by landing his own telling blows. By the look of things, Alvarado needed to take the final round and he did so in impressive fashion. Scores read 40-36 for Alvarado, 39-37 for Prado and 38-38 to force the draw. The only unfortunate result is neither fighter gets their deserved first victory.

Tureano Johnson (10-0, 7 KOs) of Atlanta, Georgia by way of Nassau, Bahamas made short work as was expected against inactive journeyman Arturo Rodriguez (12-12, 8 KOs) of Tijuana, Baja California, Mexico. Johnson, 160, outworked Rodriguez, 159, by applying pressure with punishing shots to the body and head. Finally, Johnson dropped Rodriguez with a clean uppercut, which ended matters. Referee Marcos Rosales called a halt at the 1:49 mark of round one.

Johnson’s next bout was already scheduled, as he will take on DonYil Livingston (8-1-1, 4 KOs) of Palmdale, California in an eight-rounder on August 10th ESPN2 undercard at the Morongo Casino Resort & Spa in Morongo, California.

In the walkout bout, which was reduced from eight rounds to six, Francisco Santana (13-3-1, 6 KOs) of Santa Barbara, California cruised to a unanimous decision over journeyman Larry Smith (10-12, 7 KOs) of Dallas, Texas.

Smith, 150, looked to stay at range with his long wingspan from the outset. However, it was the onrushing Santana, 148, that dictated the fight. Santana, a recent Manny Pacquiao sparring partner, threw combination with short hooks and chopping shots from over the top.

Halfway through the fight, Smith began to concentrate more on posturing and mugging for the crowd than attempting to win the fight. In the end, Smith managed to duck and dodge enough to last the distance. Scores unsurprisingly read for Santana, 60-54 and 59-55 twice.

For the first time in his illustrious career, world renowned ring announcer “Generous” Joe Antonacci handled those duties for a West Coast event, in addition to conducting post-fight interviews for the off-TV fights.

Boxing returns to the Chumash Casino Resort on September 21st for another Gary Shaw Productions-promoted edition of Shobox: The New Generation.

Photos by Dwight McCann/Chumash Casino Resort

Mario Ortega Jr. can be reached at ortega15rounds.com.




Video: Interview with Roman Morales



Rising super bantamweight prospect Roman Morales impressed with an eight-round unanimous decision over tough as nails Alexis Santiago in his Showtime debut at the Chumash Casino Resort in Santa Ynez, California on Friday. The young fighter spoke to 15rounds.com moments after the win. Morales (11-0, 6 KOs) of San Ardo, California fights again August 24th in Tulare, California.




Video: Interview with Rodolfo Tapia



Rodolfo Tapia, trainer and father-figure to unbeaten super bantamweight Roman Morales, spoke to 15rounds.com moments after his young charge improved to 11-0 with a dominant decision over tough Alexis Santiago at the Chumash Casino Resort in Santa Ynez, California on Friday. Morales (11-0, 6 KOs) of San Ardo, California fights again August 24th in Tulare, California.




Hovhannisyan Steps Up Against Former Champ Acosta

SANTA YNEZ, CALIFORNIA — In tonight’s edition of the Showtime prospect series Shobox: The New Generation, unbeaten Art Hovhannisyan aims to make the move into contender status against former lightweight title holder Miguel Acosta in a ten-rounder at the Chumash Casino Resort. In the co-feature, rising super bantamweight Roman Morales takes a litmus test against tough Alexis Santiago in an eight-rounder. Fighters weighed in Thursday at the casino.

Hovhannisyan (14-0-2, 8 KOs) of Glendale, California by way of Gyumri, Armenia has not seen action since a cut-shortened technical draw against former featherweight champion Cristobal Cruz last August. Prior to that false start, Hovhannisyan made his name off of a eye-opening sixth-round stoppage of heralded Archie Ray Marquez in June of last year. Hovhannisyan, who scaled 132-pounds for tonight’s lightweight bout, appears to be taking a big step up in class against Acosta, depending on what the former champion has left in the tank.

Acosta (29-5-2, 23 KOs) of Santiago de Leon de Caraca, Miranda, Venezuela is best remembered for scoring a minor upset of previously unbeaten Urbano Antillon to claim the interim version of the WBA Lightweight title in July of 2009. Acosta bumped off Paulus Moses a year later to get full recognition as champion before eventually running into Brandon Rios and losing his title via an entertaining tenth-round stoppage. In his last appearance, Acosta tasted the canvas three times against Richard Abril en route to a twelve-round decision defeat last October. Acosta scaled 134-pounds Thursday.

When the originally scheduled junior middleweight attraction between Julian Williams and Said El Harrak was a late scratch, the Morales-Acosta bout was elevated from televised opener to co-feature. Looking to make the most of the exposure is super bantamweight prospect Morales (10-0, 6 KOs) of San Ardo, California. Morales, making his premium cable debut, has quietly built himself a reputation as one the top prospects in the country and appears primed for a coming-out party. Morales, fighting for the sixth time at the Chumash Casino Resort, weighed-in at 122-pounds on Thursday.

Santiago (11-2-1, 5 KOs) of Phoenix, Arizona gained a small measure of notoriety in defeat last July. In a Telefutura-televised main event, Santiago gave well publicized prospect Randy Caballero his toughest test to date, although the scorecards did not accurately reflect his effort. If there is a red flag on Santiago’s resume, it would be an eight-round majority decision loss to .500 fighter Evaristo Primero this past February. Santiago also came in at the super bantamweight limit of 122-pounds.

In other action off television, Francisco Santana (12-3-1, 6 KOs) of Santa Barbara, California returns to his home area against perennial opponent Larry Smith (10-11, 7 KOs) of Dallas, Texas in an eight-round light middleweight bout. Santana, coming in off of a hard-fought decision defeat to unbeaten Jermell Charlo last October, scaled 148-pounds. Smith, loser of his last six to quality guys, came in at 150-pounds.

Touted Jonathan Maicelo (16-0, 9 KOs) of North Bergen, New Jersey by way of Callao, Peru takes on faded former contender Daniel Attah (26-11-1, 9 KOs) of Washington, District of Columbia by way of Calabar, Nigeria in an eight-round lightweight bout. Despite his advanced boxing age, Attah still usually provides rounds even against quality opponents. Maicelo, a celebrity in Peru, has been taken the distance in three of his last four outings. Maicelo and Attah both scaled the division limit of 135-pounds.

Longtime venue favorite Rufino Serrano (12-4) of Santa Maria, California by way of Morelia, Michoacan de Ocampo, Mexico takes on Rob Diezel (8-4, 3 KOs) of Seattle, Washington in an six-round featherweight bout. Serrano, who scaled 125 ½, comes in off of a one-sided defeat to tonight’s co-main eventer Roman Morales this past March. Diezel, who weighed-in at 125 ½-pounds as well, has strung together three straight wins since a first-round knockout defeat to Ramon Valadez last year.

Edgar Alvarado (0-1) of Riverside, California hopes to erase the memory of his pro debut as he goes up against Erick Prado (0-2) of nearby Santa Maria in a four-round light middleweight battle. Alvarado, stopped in one by Thomas Turner in April, scaled 157 ½-pounds Thursday. Prado, a split decision loser in his two bouts to Louis Rose and Victor Manuel Medina respectively, weighed-in at 161-pounds.

Recently signed by Gary Shaw Productions, Tureano Johnson (9-0, 6 KOs) of Atlanta, Georgia by way of Nassau, Bahamas will take on Arturo Rodriguez (12-11, 8 KOs) of Tijuana, Baja California, Mexico in a four-round middleweight bout. Johnson, a 2008 Bahamian Olympian, weighed-in at 160-pounds. The 36-year-old Rodriguez ended a nearly seven-year layoff with a third-round stoppage of winless David Orozco on June 1st. On Rodriguez’ resume: a second-round stoppage loss to a 5-0 Miguel Cotto in 2001 and a first-round knockout loss to a 20-0 Paul Williams in 2003.

Tickets for the event, promoted by Gary Shaw Productions, are available online at StarTickets.com.

Quick Weigh-in Results:

Lightweights, 10 Rounds
Hovhannisyan 132
Acosta 134

Super Bantamweights, 8 Rounds
Morales 122
Santiago 122

Light Middleweights, 8 Rounds
Santana 148
Smith 150

Lightweights, 8 Rounds
Maicelo 135
Attah 135

Featherweights, 6 Rounds
Serrano 125 ½
Diezel 125 ½

Middleweights, 4 Rounds
Alvarado 157 ½
Prado 161

Middleweights, 4 Rounds
Johnson 160
Rodriguez 159

Photos by Tom Casino/Showtime

Mario Ortega Jr. can be reached at [email protected].




Video: Interview with Mia St. John



One of the three most famous women in the history of prizefighting, Mia St. John packed them in at the Downtown Club in Fresno, California on Tuesday for the press conference to officially announce her rematch with Christy Martin, which takes place August 14th at the Table Mountain Casino in nearby Friant. St. John (46-11-2, 18 KOs) of Oxnard, California came up short, but established herself as a legitimate pro in their 2002 encounter. The former champion spoke to 15rounds.com about the fight, which is being billed as her last.




Video: Interview with Christy Martin



Legendary women’s fighter Christy Martin returns to the ring August 14th in a rematch against Mia St. John at the Table Mountain Casino in Friant, California. Martin (49-6-3, 31 KOs) of Orlando, Florida will be defending the WBC Light Middleweight title in what could be the last fight for both women. Martin spoke to 15rounds.com after their formal press conference at the Downtown Club in nearby Fresno on Tuesday.




Video: Christy Martin-Mia St. John II Press Conference

Two of the most recognizable names in women’s boxing history were in Fresno, California at the Downtown Club on Tuesday to formally announce their August 14th rematch at the Table Mountain Casino in nearby Friant, California. Martin (49-6-3, 31 KOs) of Orlando, Florida will be giving St. John (46-11-2, 18 KOs) of Oxnard, California an opportunity to take her WBC Light Middleweight title as well as avenge a 2002 decision defeat.




Fortuna Makes a Statement

LAS VEGAS, NEVADA — Rising featherweight prospect Javier Fortuna flashed the speed, athleticism and power that combine to make him one of the most talked about prospects in the game in a two-round destruction of former champion Cristobal Cruz at the Hard Rock Hotel & Casino on Friday night.

Fortuna (20-0, 15 KOs) of Oxnard, California by way of La Romana, La Romana, Dominican Republic came out swinging in the first before eventually landing a left on the top of Cruz’ head to score a knockdown. Cruz (39-14-3, 23 KOs) of Tijuana, Baja California, Mexico got up and looked to hold, but wound up tripping to the canvas, which was ruled a slip. Cruz returned to his feet, but was soon rocked by a wild left. Fortuna, almost coming out of his shoes with some of his swings, shortened up on a right to Cruz’ ear that hurt the Mexican late in the round.

Fortuna, 129, continued to rely on his left to great effect in the second. Fortuna, the WBA #3/IBF #6/WBC #8 ranked featherweight, hurt Cruz, 128, with a left hand over the top early in the round. Seconds later, Fortuna decided to lead with his left, which came at Cruz like a laser. Cruz, clearly not coping with Fortuna’s speed, tried to roughhouse and grapple, but Fortuna made room with a backwards step and landed a hard short left to drop the Mexican flat on his face. Referee Robert Byrd counted, but his efforts were not really necessary. Time of the stoppage was 2:22 of the second round.

With the kayo, Fortuna became the first to stop Cruz in nearly ten years. Though Cruz his not the same fighter that defeated Orlando Salido to claim a featherweight strap four years ago, Friday’s win was an impressive result for Fortuna nonetheless.

What looked to be a solid, competitive co-feature on paper turned out to be a one-sided drubbing, as Magomed Abdusalamov (15-0, 15 KOs) of Oxnard by way of Makhachkala, Republic of Dagestan, Russia remained perfect with a second-round stoppage of Maurice Byarm (13-2-1, 9 KOs) of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

Both landed some sweeping shots in the early going, but Abdusalamov, 229, appeared to be unfazed by anything Byarm, 239, managed to land. By the end of the first, Abdusalamov had broken through Byarm’s guard as the Philadelphian covered up in a neutral corner. When the bell rang to end the first, Byarm had weathered a storm, but found his corner as if he was taking a sobriety test after a few too many drinks.

Abdusalamov’s corner saw Byarm’s struggle to find his stool, and instructed their man to come out and finish his opponent. Abdusalamov landed a crushing left that put down Byarm, who gamely rose before referee Tony Weeks could finish his count. However, it was just a matter of time before Abdusalamov flurried, forcing Weeks’ hand for the stoppage at 36 seconds of the second round. With the win, Abdusalamov retains his WBC USNBC Silver Heavyweight title and will likely find himself in the WBC’s top fifteen world rankings next time they are released.

Still searching for his first professional knockout, local favorite Rocco Santomauro (9-0) of Las Vegas pleased the crowd on hand in taking a four-round unanimous decision over awkward southpaw DeWayne Wisdom (2-4, 1 KO) of Indianapolis, Indiana.

Santomauro, 124 ½, pressed perhaps looking for the stoppage and came close to scoring a knockdown in the second round, but Wisdom, 125, was never in any serious danger. After closing the show in the fourth, Santomauro went on to win by scores of 40-36 and 39-37 twice.

Sampson Boxing prospect Ronald Gavril (3-0, 2 KOs) of Los Angeles, California by way of Bucharest, Romania gave the crowd little time to warm-up in the show’s opener, as a series of unanswered punches were enough to warrant a stoppage in referee Joe Cortez’ eyes against Kenneth Taylor Schmitz (2-3, 1 KO) of Saint Joseph, Missouri.

Gavril, 167, pressed Schmitz, 169 ½, from the early going, eventually forcing him against the ropes. Schmitz did little more than cover up for a half round. Realizing such, Gavril kept throwing until Cortez leaped in at the 1:53 mark of the first. Though he did not appear hurt, Schmitz seemed at peace with the referee’s call.

In what became a four-round war of attrition, William Mitch Williams (6-2-1, 4 KOs) of Jackson, Michigan survived a rocky third round en route to a four-round unanimous decision over Manuel Otero (2-4, 1 KO) of Peralta, New Mexico in the walkout bout.

Williams, 181, controlled the first two rounds before Otero, 184, caught him in the third. Williams was in trouble, but made it out of the round. Otero left nearly all he had in the third, leaving little to get him through the fourth and final round. Williams, rejuvenated, punished him for most of the three minutes, but the New Mexican resident made it the distance. Despite his solid third round showing, all three judges gave the fight to Williams via shutout, 40-36.

Mario Ortega Jr. can be reached at [email protected].




Fortuna in the Spotlight as he takes on Former Champ Cruz

LAS VEGAS, NEVADA — Tabbed by boxing insiders as one of top prospects in all of the sport, undefeated Javier Fortuna looks to make a statement against one of the longtime measuring sticks in the lower weight divisions, former featherweight champion Cristobal Cruz in tonight’s ESPN2-televised main event emanating from the Hard Rock Hotel & Casino. Fighters for the five-bout card weighed-in Thursday at the casino’s Vanity Night Club.

When the originally scheduled main event of Marvin Sonsona-Luis Cruz was scratched, the spotlight shifted from a former champion and contender to what was to be the co-feature, featuring one of boxing’s likely future stars. Fortuna (19-0, 14 KOs) of Oxnard, California by way of La Romana, La Romana, Dominican Republic has been impressive since stepping up his level of competition in March of last year.

Derrick Wilson was one of the first fellow prospects to discover Fortuna’s power, as he lasted into the eighth round before the bout was stopped after his fourth knockdown. Most recently, previously unbeaten Yuandale Evans had the unenviable task of attempting to halt Fortuna’s ride to prominence. Evans, well regarded as a U.S. amateur, failed to make it out of round one against the pride of La Romana. Now Fortuna will attempt to do the same against a former world champion for the first time in his career.

Cruz (39-13-3, 23 KOs) of Tijuana, Baja California, Mexico became one of the unlikeliest world champs back in October of 2008 as he edged Orlando Salido to claim the vacant IBF Featherweight title via split decision. After three defenses, Cruz ran up against a reinvigorated Salido and lost the rematch and his title in wide unanimous decision in May of 2010. In his last time out, in a bout that was televised by ESPN2, Cruz failed in an attempt at claiming the WBC Silver 130-pound title from Juan Carlos Burgos this past February. Cruz weighed in for the ten-round bout at 128-pounds Thursday, while Fortuna made 129.

Both fighters seemed pumped for the fight at yesterday’s press conference. “It’s a tough fight,” admitted the WBA #3/IBF #6/WBC #8 ranked featherweight Fortuna. “I know he has a lot of experience, but this is my time.” Cruz on the other hand sees the fight as a potential launching pad into the next chapter of his career. “I am ready for anything tomorrow night because I am hungry to be world champion again,” proclaimed Cruz.

In the televised co-feature, promoter Sampson Lewkowicz’ heavyweight prospect Magomed Abdusalamov (14-0, 14 KOs) of Oxnard by way of Makhachkala, Republic of Dagestan, Russia takes on what looks to be the toughest assignment of his pro career in Maurice Byarm (13-1-1, 9 KOs) of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania in a ten-round bout. Byarm was last seen as he took on undefeated prospect Bryant Jennings on short notice, losing a competitive ten-round decision televised by NBC Sports Network this past January. Abdusalamov, the WBA #13 ranked heavyweight, scaled 229-pounds Thursday, while Byarm weighed-in at 239.

The rest of the card is filled out by three four-round bouts. Local favorite Rocco Santomauro (8-0) of Las Vegas takes on DeWayne Wisdom (2-3, 1 KO) of Indianapolis, Indiana in a featherweight scrap. Santomauro, who has never fought outside of Las Vegas as a pro, scaled 124 ½-pounds. Wisdom, fighting for the fourth time this year, weighed-in at 125-pounds.

William Mitch Williams (5-2-1, 4 KOs) of Jackson, Michigan takes on Manuel Otero (2-3, 1 KO) of Peralta, New Mexico in a four-round cruiserweight contest. Williams, hoping to extend his five-fight unbeaten streak, weighed-in at 181-pounds. Otero, fighting for the first time this year, came in at 184.

Promising super middleweight prospect Ronald Gavril (2-0, 1 KO) of Los Angeles, California by way of Bucharest, Romania will take on Kenneth Taylor Schmitz (2-2, 1 KO) of Saint Joseph, Missouri in a four-rounder. Gavril, a top AIBA amateur from 2007-2010, weighed-in at 167-pounds. Schmitz, fresh off of a four-round unanimous decision loss to undefeated Antowyan Aikens on June 1st, scaled 169 ½-pounds.

Tickets for the event, dubbed “Moment of Truth” and promoted by Sampson Boxing and Greg Cohen Promotions, are available online at HardRockHotel.com.

Quick Weigh-in Results:

Super Featherweights, 10 Rounds
Fortuna 129
Cruz 128

WBC USNBC Silver Heavyweight Championship, 10 Rounds
Abdusalamov 229
Byarm 239

Featherweights, 4 Rounds
Santomauro 124 ½
Wisdom 125

Cruiserweights, 4 Rounds
Williams 181
Otero 184

Super Middleweights, 4 Rounds
Gavril 167
Schmitz 169 ½

Mario Ortega Jr. can be reached at [email protected].




Video: Paul Nave Goes Before the Commission

With the hope of returning to the ring this fall, 51-year-old veteran fighter Paul Nave went before the San Rafael Park and Recreation Commission in San Rafael, California on Thursday night. Additional members of the community voiced their approval of the proposed event as well. At the conclusion of the meeting, the Commission voted to give their consent for a live professional boxing event to take place at Albert Park Field in San Rafael this September, where Nave promoted and fought last fall.




Hargraves Invades Minnesota in Return on Saturday

Light middleweight prospect and former amateur standout Richard Hargraves ends a fourteen-month layoff many miles from his hometown of San Francisco, California as he takes on Michael Faulk in a six-round featured attraction at the Black Bear Casino Resort in Carlton, Minnesota this Saturday night.

Hargraves (2-0-1, 2 KOs) turned pro way back in December of 2009 with a quick stoppage over John Dunham in Sacramento, California. Unfortunately for Hargraves, the 2009 U.S. Championships bronze medalist at 152-pounds, finding willing opponents has been a difficult task as he has attempted to advance his career.

“I couldn’t really land a fight,” explains the frustrated Hargraves. “There were a few guys that didn’t want to fight me and that’s pretty much what it was. When you don’t have a promoter it is a little tough to get in the game and stay in the game, as opposed to somebody that is promoted. Unlike myself, they already have everything set in place.”

Hargraves, whose size creates an imposing figure for any prospective opponent able to make 151 or so pounds, admits it has been hard to keep an eye on the prize with fights failing to materialize. “It is a little hard to stay motivated,” admits Hargraves honestly. “There are times when you just want to let go. When you are an amateur, you train hard every day because you can get a fight on any given day, so you stay ready. But as a pro, you want to tone down and let your body have a little rest. So I did lack a little motivation, but luckily some guys at the gym helped keep me motivated by the way they fight. So when you go to the gym and you are not motivated, those guys will cut you up. And I don’t want to get beat up at home too much.”

Luckily for Hargraves, Saturday’s bout came together with plenty of time for him to prepare both mentally and physically. “Fighting at 151, this is the first fight for me in a year and a couple of months and I am very excited,” Hargraves told 15rounds.com just moments before boarding his flight on Thursday morning. “I had a good month and a half of training camp. My body feels good and mentally I feel good. This is my first six-round fight I am just excited to go out here and not leave it in the judges’ hands. Be more active, be first, be last. Be great on defense and if I see the opportunity to get him out of there, get him out of there.”

The sport’s critical eye has been focused squarely on scoring in recent weeks, and by fighting Faulk (2-1) of Saint Paul, Minnesota near his home base, Hargraves could potentially be at risk for some home cooking, an idea not lost on the Californian.

“In the wake of the Pacquiao-Bradley decision, that weighs more heavily on my mind,” says Hargraves. “On national TV, that type of stuff can happen. But this is the sport we live in and the sport that we love and that is part of the game. To counteract all that, if I can knock him out, then I’m going to knock him out and take it out of the judges’ hands. But if the knockout don’t come, then just be more active, land more punches and do the best that I can. I just have to make it so impressive to where the judges can’t deny me.”

In Faulk, Hargraves goes up against a guy with some amateur credentials and only one loss on his ledger, which came at the hands of an undefeated prospect in Dominic Wade back in May of 2010 at middleweight. The San Franciscan, who fights out of the increasingly famed Straight Forward Club under Ben Bautista, does not underestimate his opponent.

“I think that if I am on my game, I should be able to beat him 80, 90 percent of the time,” explains Hargraves. “I just have to go out there and execute. I’m not taking anything away from the guy. He’s pretty good. He’s got good hand speed and he’s long in the limbs. But other than that, he’s a decent fighter and I did see him at the nationals one year. So he has to be pretty good to have won his state and go out to the nationals. But it’s going to be the battle of the 2s and one of us want to get win number three. And I want it more than he does, so that’s how it’s going to have to be.”

Tickets for Saturday’s event, promoted by Draw Events, are available online at Ticketfly.com. The bill, which includes eight total professional bouts, features unbeatens Cerreso Fort and Dave Peterson in the eight-round main event for the Minnesota State Light Middleweight title.

Mario Ortega Jr. can be reached at [email protected]




Paul Nave Appeals to his Community


Hoping to bring professional boxing back to his home area by staging the second ever such event at Albert Park Field in San Rafael, California this fall, longtime local favorite Paul Nave is reaching out to his community for support. Nave has promoted all five of his own fight cards since his ring return in March of 2009 under his Liberty Boxing Enterprises promotional banner. All five of the events, which have featured Nave himself as the main attraction, have gone on without incident.

Nave has released the following statement as he prepares to make his case to the San Rafael Park and Recreation Commission, which will decide if the event can take place at the park:

To Whom It May Concern:

As a community member, if you enjoyed the Professional Boxing Event at Albert’s Park last summer and or would support the opportunity to attend a Nave Boxing Event at Albert’s Park this September, 2012, please join us in attending the San Rafael Park and Recreation Commission hearing this Thursday, June 21, 2012 at 7:00 PM.

The hearing is at the San Rafael Community Center, 618 “B” Street, San Rafael, CA 94901. Our intent is to tell/show the Commission the event went well last year and there’s community support for another event this year.

Thank you for your consideration. If you have any questions, please feel free to contact me at [email protected]

All the best always,

Paul Nave
“The Marin County Assassin”

Mario Ortega Jr. can be reached at [email protected]




Looked like a Pacquiao Landslide, but the Math Says No it wasn’t

I did not score the Manny Pacquiao-Timothy Bradley Jr. fight two Saturdays ago. Having felt cheated out of a chance to be outraged like most everyone else last weekend, I decided to score the fight during its televised replay as part of HBO’s World Championship Boxing broadcast last night. In addition to tabulating my card for the first time, I decided to critique the cards of Duane Ford (115-113, Bradley), C.J. Ross (115-113, Bradley) and Jerry Roth (115-113, Pacquiao) on a round-by-round basis. My findings were somewhat unexpected.

Firstly, my scorecard read 117-111 for Pacquiao. I gave “the Pride of the Philippines” rounds one through nine, marking rounds three, seven, eight and nine as rounds that could be argued for Bradley. I gave rounds ten through twelve to Bradley inarguably.

My biggest issue with folks that take umbrage to a “controversially” scored fight, is that they rarely take into account how many rounds in a given bout which could be scored for either fighter. Even though I had it wide for Pacquiao on my card, if Bradley had been given the benefit of my four close rounds, I would have had it 115-113 for Bradley.

The folks at HBO made analyzing the three officials’ cards easy, as in typical fashion, they displayed each judge’s card after each round. Having had four arguable rounds, those are the rounds where the judges could have had it for either fighter and I would not take a demerit against their final score.

Of the rounds I found to be poorly scored, Duane Ford had three of them, but one was actually a Pacquiao round I found to be puzzling – round eleven. Ford also had rounds one and five for Bradley. Counting Ford’s highly questionable rounds, it would be a one-point swing for Pacquiao, meaning in my eyes he should have handed in a card that read 114-114.

C.J. Ross called two rounds for the wrong guy, giving rounds two and five to Bradley. The two-point swing in favor of Pacquiao means this card should have read 115-113 for Pacquiao, not Bradley.

Jerry Roth missed the ball just once in my estimation, as he scored the second round for Bradley. This means his score should have been one round wider for Pacquiao at 116-112.

Boxing is a sport where winners are decided based on human interpretation, which means there is plenty of room for error. The Manny Pacquiao-Timothy Bradley Jr. WBO Welterweight title bout was not the worst scored fight of the century, decade or even this year. Four out of the twelve rounds could have been scored for either fighter, a swing which makes several final scores acceptable.

I may be in the minority, but in breaking down the scoring round-by-round, I find little fault with the three judges currently being put under the microscope. Ford, the most outspoken of the three in recent days, had the worst night, which he may have even realized by the time round eleven came around. But in the end, Ford is human and boxing is boxing. We’ve seen computerized scoring, such as in the Olympics, and I’d take Ford over that any day of the week.

    POSTSCRIPT

Speaking of human error, that applies to us the viewer as well. Many of us had an invested interest in the outcome of the June 9th bout. Whether it was our love for a national hero, our simple desire to see the two mega stars of the sport enter a ring against one another without a recent defeat on their record or financial – we watch fights with preconceived notions and emotions.

This past April I stood in a Las Vegas media room and heard Top Rank head Bob Arum tell his publicist he had Brandon Rios a winner on points over Richard Abril. I need no replay to tell me there is no way Rios should have left the Mandalay Bay with a decision win on that night. Giving Mr. Arum the benefit of the doubt, and let’s say his financial connection to a Rios win had no bearing on his card, than it must have been his preconceived expectation that Rios would win that swayed his opinion of the fight. Maybe that has a lot to do with his outrage this time too.

Photo by Chris Farina/Top Rank

Mario Ortega Jr. can be reached at [email protected].




Tarver and Kayode Fight to a Draw

CARSON, CALIFORNIA — Returning from an eleven month layoff, former light heavyweight champion Antonio Tarver failed to muster up enough offense to claim victory over a still raw cruiserweight contender in Lateef Kayode at the Home Depot Center on Saturday night.

Excluding Tarver’s lone foray into the heavyweight division, Kayode (18-0-1, 14 KOs) of Hollywood, California by way of Lagos, Nigeria presented the largest and strongest opponent the veteran had met in his career. However, one might think it was a challenge a younger Tarver (29-6-1, 20 KOs) of Tampa, Florida would have surpassed.

Tarver, 198, started out tentatively as he refused to let his hands go at all in the opening rounds. Kayode, 199, put those rounds in the bank based on output alone as none of his shots did any damage.

Tarver, the WBO #6/IBF #10/WBC #12 ranked cruiserweight, came out of his shell in the third, as he loaded up and landed a left uppercut. Kayode took the blow well, but Tarver came back to land a straight left, punctuating the round.

Again the WBA #2/WBO #8/IBF #9 ranked Kayode took the fourth and fifth rounds on his output, but the Nigerian did not hurt Tarver with anything as the former champion seemed to put his offense in his pocket.

Tarver sprung back into action in the sixth, as a short left counter for Tarver made Kayode’s legs stumble back. Another left counter for Tarver landed clean in the follow-up, but Kayode did land one back late in the round. Tarver decided to let go with a nothing shot after the bell, which prompted Kayode to go after him for a second before referee Wayne Hedgepeth separated them.

Kayode strangely implemented some shuffling footwork to start the seventh. Tarver began landing left hand counters with great regularity as the round continued. One short left in particular rocked Kayode back. The Nigerian came back with some body blows while Tarver covered up before the bell.

Tarver went back to his left hand in the eighth, landing it mainly as a lead rather than a counter. Tarver landed another straight left that seemingly had Kayode briefly in trouble. Kayode did come back late in the round with a cracking right that may have broken through the guard.

Kayode slapped at Tarver’s body to start the tenth. Tarver retorted with a light-hitting flurry after a Kayode fall was ruled a slip. The final two rounds lacked action, as neither fighter acted as though the fight was on the line. Kayode especially went into run mode to start the twelfth. In the end, one judge had it 115-113 for Tarver. Another judge had it 115-113 the other way. The third judge forced the draw with a 114-114 tally.

“Everybody knows I won this fight,” proclaimed Kayode after the fight. “He won because he works for Showtime. Let’s go to HBO or my country and fight again.” Tarver was even more adamant that he won, “I beat the guy all night. I dictated every round. I landed clean shots and he was sloppy and slapped all night.” Hinting that he may have underestimated Kayode, Tarver said, “Maybe I fought down to his level, but I don’t know.”

In the co-main event, middleweight contender Peter Quillin (27-0, 20 KOs) of Hollywood, California may have booked himself a crack at the 160-pound title with a clear-cut ten-round decision over light middleweight champion Winky Wright (51-6-1, 25 KOs) of Saint Petersburg, Florida.

After a throw away first round, Wright continued to block most of Quillin’s leads and follow-ups in the second round. Towards the end of the round, Quillin backed into a corner, which enabled a conservative Wright to land one or two clean blows.

Wright, 159, had his moments in the third round as well, landing left hand leads. Quillin, 159.6, still struggled to get off as the round came to a close. Quillin, the WBA #5/WBO #7 ranked middleweight, walked into a stiff jab early in the fourth. However, by the end of the round Quillin began to land, mostly with the second or third punches of his combinations.

Early in the fifth, a straight left landed for Winky to set up combination with Quillin in the ropes. Quillin fired back as Wright gave ground an dropped the former champ with a right hand. Outside of a strong ninth for Wright, the fight was Quillin’s the rest of the way. Late in the eighth Quillin hurt Wright with a right uppercut, as the Floridian’s vaunted defense struggled to protect against a strong middleweight.

Wright came out throwing to start the ninth and outworked Quillin to sweep the round with the judges. But it was far too late to think about taking a decision, and Wright never did have the power to pull out a fight late, especially at 160-pounds. Quillin, who appeared to be holding back on his right, which he had fractured late last year, stil managed to land over the top of Wright’s jab over and over.

In the end, all three judges gave the fight to Quillin by the deservedly wide scores of 97-92 and 98-91 twice. The win could make Quillin a marketable option for the most recognized middleweight Sergio Martinez if his team feels he is ready for such a fight. Obviously after a three-year layoff, the loss puts Wright’s career in doubt. “I think I need to be at 154 if I fight again,” admitted Wright after the fight.

In defense of his WBA 154-pound title, Austin Trout (25-0, 14 KOs) of Las Cruces, New Mexico boxed his way to a somewhat lackluster twelve-round decision over WBA #3 ranked light middleweight Delvin Rodriguez (26-6-3, 14 KOs) of Danbury, Connecticut by way of Santiago de los Caballeros, Dominican Republic.

After a feeling out round, Rodriguez, 151, had one of his better rounds in the second as he landed the only telling blow. Trout, 152.8, settled in and found his range by round four, as Rodriguez struggled to find his way around the jab and long reach of the champion.

Trout continued to peck away at Rodriguez from the outside in the fifth and sixth. Finally in the seventh, Rodriguez found his way in, but Trout proved to be an elusive target with his upper body and head movement. After avoiding Rodriguez’ shots upstairs, Trout would get back out at range.

Rodriguez found a bit of success as he stepped with Trout to land some of his better shots in the ninth. However, without going back downstairs, Rodriguez allowed Trout out of danger. Trout unloaded more of his arsenal in the tenth with a quick combination followed by a straight left that snapped Rodriguez’ head back.

Unfortunately for the fans watching ringside and on television, both fighters saved their best for the last 30 seconds of the fight. The first big exchange was won by Trout with a hard right hook. Another good exchange closed the fight which ended with a chorus of boos. Scores read 117-111, 118-110 and 120-108 for Trout.

Despite controlling the majority of the fight, Trout did little to endear himself to the mostly Hispanic crowd on hand. With Mexican star Saul Alvarez seated ringside and on the hunt for a September opponent, it was the Hispanic audience that Trout needed make an impression on in order to make that fight a financial possibility.

With a near perfect performance, Leo Santa Cruz (20-0-1, 11 KOs) of Lincoln Heights, California by way of Huetamo, Michoacan de Ocampo, Mexico claimed the IBF Bantamweight title recently vacated by Abner Mares with a near shutout over a game but outgunned Vusi Malinga (20-4-1, 12 KOs) of Johannesburg, Gauteng, South Africa.

What turned out to be a fairly one-sided contest actually began with some entertaining and competitive rounds. Both Santa Cruz, 117, and Malinga, 117, had their moments in the first three rounds.

Santa Cruz, the IBF #4/WBO #14 ranked bantamweight, appeared to have a clear edge in power over the IBF #1 ranked Malinga while the two landed punch-for-punch to open the fight. The battle was fought on the inside for the majority of the early rounds, which both fighters seemed to welcome.

Santa Cruz continued to place hard shots effectively while maintaining a solid defensive guard against Malinga’s counters in the fourth. Most effectively, Santa Cruz’ left to the body began to slow down Malinga’s offense.

As the rounds progressed, Malinga continued to have problems getting around the Winky-like guard of Santa Cruz. With the sting and velocity out of Malinga’s punches, Santa Cruz began to unload with four and five-punch combinations by the middle of the fight.

Midway through the eighth, Santa Cruz’ unrelenting body attack forced Malinga to pause for thought and perhaps make him think twice about his dedication to the bout. Further evidence of such was Malinga’s late exit from his stool to start the ninth.

After concentrating almost solely on Malinga’s body, Santa Cruz opted to mix in some head shots late in the fight. The stubborn Malinga continued to be a willing foe despite the punishment. No one will ever accuse Malinga of being quitter, as the South African stood his ground until the final bell, firing back everything he had. Too bad for him he ran into an emerging bantamweight star in Santa Cruz. Scores read 119-109 and 120-108 twice for the new IBF 118-pound champion Santa Cruz.

Former super middleweight title challenger Sakio Bika put himself back on the map with a tenth-round stoppage of streaking Dyah Davis (21-3-1, 9 KOs) of Coconut Creek, Florida to claim two regional titles.

Bika (30-5-2, 21 KOs) of Los Angeles by way of Douala, Cameroon controlled the bout at the outset, landing clubbing blows and utilizing his usual roughhouse style. Davis, 167.6, finally landed one clean blow to end the round, but Bika, 166.6, followed back with a clean overhand right that may have hurt the son of Howard Davis Jr.

The WBC #16 ranked super middleweight Bika continued to time his wild right hands to great effect in the second. Davis, WBC #4/WBA #10/IBF #11 ranked 168-pounder, tried to box more, but had trouble avoiding Bika’s long arms and wide swings.

Davis began to show the signs of Bika’s punishment as the Cameroonian pounded away at him to close round five. Even when he missed, Bika managed to hurt Davis with his left hand while falling inside.

After his best round in the ninth, Davis’ fortune reverted back to form as he as cut from an apparent Bika right hand. Bika seemed to be gathering himself for a second wind, as he shut his output down for the most of the three minutes.

Rejuvenated to start the tenth, Bika quickly pressured Davis into a corner before uncorking a huge overhand right that began problems anew for Davis. Bika continued to swing away and landed another right that almost dropped Davis. Finally after chasing Davis across the ring to another corner, Bika flurried for a stoppage at 1:40 of the tenth and final round.

With the win, Bika claimed Davis’ NABF Super Middleweight title as well as the vacant WBO Intercontinental Super Middleweight belt, which almost guarantee him top ten rankings with the WBC and WBO.

In the last fight before the televised portion of the show, lightweight prospect Sharif Bogere (23-0, 15 KOs) of Las Vegas, Nevada impressively dismantled Manuel Leyva (21-7, 12 KOs) of Downey, California by way of Ensenada, Baja California, Mexico inside of two rounds.

Bogere, 137.2, dropped Leyva, 137.4, with a straight right on the inside late in the first. Leyva moved just enough to avoid a first-round stoppage, but all he did was delay the inevitable. In the opening moments of the second, Bogere dropped Leyva again, this time with a left hook. Leyva gamely rose, but found himself against the ropes on the receiving end of a Bogere flurry. With referee Zac Young looking in, Bogere landed a clean uppercut that prompted a stoppage at 38 seconds of the second.

To no great surprise, Omar Figueroa (17-0-1, 14 KOs) of Weslaco, Texas made short work of career opponent Tyler Ziolkowski (14-16, 8 KOs) of Saint Joseph, Missouri in the second fight of the evening. The Golden Boy promoted-Figueroa, 138.4, ended matters with his first clean shot, a left hook to the body. Ziolkowski, 137.6, writhed in pain on the mat as referee Thomas Taylor counted him out at 2:00 of round one.

In the opener for tonight’s marathon card, Juan Reynoso (1-0) of Tampa, Florida hammered out a four-round unanimous decision in his pro debut over game Beau Hamilton (0-2) of Montague, California. Reynoso, 153.2, promoted by Antonio Tarver’s A.T. Entertainment, was clearly the better schooled and conditioned fighter. Hamilton, 154, was never in any trouble, but failed to land anything telling in the twelve minutes. Scores read 39-37 and 40-36 twice for Reynoso.

Photos by Esther Lin/Showtime

Aldwayne Simpson contributed to this report.

Mario Ortega Jr. can be reached at [email protected]




All Set for “Four Warned”

LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA — Saturday night the Home Depot Center in nearby Carson hosts the highly anticipated four-fight Showtime-televised card headlined by the cruiserweight clash between Antonio Tarver and undefeated Lateef Kayode. Fighters for the mega event, which includes two world title bouts and the return of former champion Winky Wright, weighed-in Friday mostly at Nokia Plaza at L.A. Live.

In his last fight (a ninth-round stoppage over Danny Green in Australia last July) former world light heavyweight champion Tarver (29-6, 20 KOs) of Tampa, Florida reignited belief in his career. However, since that time Tarver has seemingly concentrated less on becoming the world’s top cruiserweight and more on his Showtime broadcast duties. It was during that role that the somewhat trumped up storyline for tomorrow’s fight was created. Broadcasting several of Kayode’s recent outings, Tarver has been less than complimentary of the Nigerian’s performances. Despite his many available options, Tarver, the WBO #6/IBF #10/WBC #12 ranked cruiserweight, opted to put his money where his mouth was and take on Kayode rather than pursue one of the numerous belt holders in the division.

Kayode (18-0. 14 KOs) of Hollywood, California by way of Lagos, Nigeria burst on the public scene with a string of knockouts against modest opposition in 2010, before promoter Gary Shaw upped his class of opponent last year. The result was three straight decision wins, including a horribly scored bout with unheralded Nicholas Iannuzzi that could have gone either way. The WBA #2/WBO #8/IBF #9 ranked Kayode aims to add the most significant name by far to his win column Saturday as he takes on the former world light heavyweight champion.

Tarver, who risks his IBO Cruiserweight title in the twelve-rounder, scaled 198-pounds. Kayode, who forwent a mandatory bid against WBA titleholder Guillermo Jones in order to make Saturday’s bout, scaled 199-pounds Friday.

In the intriguing co-feature, former unified light middleweight champion Winky Wright finally ends his three-year hibernation against up-and-coming middleweight contender Peter Quillin in a ten-round middleweight bout.

Wright (51-5-1, 25 KOs) of Saint Petersburg, Florida was last seen back in April of 2009, as he lost a clear-cut decision to Paul Williams. In the years since, Wright has turned down or backed out of several proposed bouts seemingly due to their low profile. However, recent quotes indicate that Wright senses his time is limited, and thus he agreed to fight Quillin.

For his part, Quillin (26-0, 20 KOs) of Hollywood, California capped a busy 2011 with one of his better victories – a sixth-round stoppage over prospect Craig McEwan last November. Quillin, often mentioned as a possible opponent for recognized middleweight kingpin Sergio Martinez, aims to stamp his ticket to a big money fight at the expense Wright on Saturday. Depending on how much the layoff hinders Wright, Quillin, the WBA #5/WBO #7 ranked middleweight, appears to be up against his toughest challenge to date.

After weighing less than one pound over the contracted 160-pound limit during his first and second attempts at Nokia Plaza, Quillin weighed-in officially at 159.6 during his third attempt, which took place at the Torrance Marriott South Bay in nearby Torrance, California. Wright weighed-in at 159-pounds.

In yet another intriguing bout, WBA Light Middleweight Champion Austin Trout (24-0, 14 KOs) of Las Cruces, New Mexico finally gets a chance at impress on a big stage as he aims to make the third defense of his title against the determined WBA #3 ranked Delvin Rodriguez (26-5-3, 14 KOs) of Danbury, Connecticut by way of Santiago de los Caballeros, Dominican Republic.

Trout claimed his belt with a twelve-round unanimous decision over Rigoberto Alvarez back in February of last year. Now with title defenses over dangerous David Lopez and an overmatched Frank LoPorto under his belt, Trout hopes to solidify his claim to the throne with an impressive premium cable victory Saturday. Standing in Trout’s way is Rodriguez, fresh off of his impressive schooling of Pawel Wolak in their rematch last November. Rodriguez, who came up just short in a welterweight title bid three years ago, scaled 151-pounds. Trout originally came in at 154.8-pounds, but reweighed-in at the Torrance Marriott at 152.8.

In the Showtime opener, Leo Santa Cruz (19-0-1, 11 KOs) of Lincoln Heights, California by way of Huetamo, Michoacan de Ocampo, Mexico vies for the vacant IBF Bantamweight title against Vusi Malinga (20-3-1, 12 KOs) of Johannesburg, Gauteng, South Africa.

The IBF #1 ranked Malinga, who like Santa Cruz comes from a fighting family, is the fighter that helped provoke Abner Mares’ move up to 122-pounds. Malinga was Mares’ mandatory challenger, but the rising star opted to vacate the belt rather than take on the little known South African. Santa Cruz, the IBF #4/WBO #14 ranked bantamweight, weighed in at 117-pounds, as did Malinga.

In a bout to be televised by sister network Showtime Extreme before “Showtime Championship Boxing” goes on the air, super middleweight contenders Sakio Bika and Dyah Davis will battle it out in a scheduled ten-round with two minor titles on the line.

Bika (29-5-2, 20 KOs) of Los Angeles by way of Douala, Cameroon is still looking to rebound from his one-sided defeat in a failed title bid against Andre Ward back in November of 2010. In his lone fight since, Bika moved past sub .500 Alfredo Contreras via cut-induced third-round stoppage last December.

Davis (21-2-1, 9 KOs) of Coconut Creek, Florida has worked his way to a three-fight win steak, which should really be a four-fight win streak, since his loss to Aaron Pryor Jr. in 2010. Should he move past Bika, the WBC #4/WBA #10/IBF #11 ranked Davis could be knocking at the door of a major title opportunity. Davis weighed 167.6-pounds, while Bika scaled 166.6, for their NABF and WBO Intercontinental Super Middleweight title bout.

Another face familiar to Showtime viewers, Sharif Bogere (22-0, 14 KOs) of Las Vegas, Nevada will take on journeyman Manuel Leyva (21-6, 12 KOs) of Downey, California by way of Ensenada, Baja California, Mexico in a ten-round light welterweight bout. Bogere, a lightweight by trade, scaled 137.2-pounds, while Leyva came in at 137.4.

Another lightweight prospect Omar Figueroa (16-0-1, 13 KOs) of Weslaco, Texas was not forced to sweat down to his fighting weight as he stays busy against journeyman Tyler Ziolkowski (14-15, 8 KOs) of Saint Joseph, Missouri in a six-round light welterweight bout. Figueroa, who is already scheduled to fight another journeyman on June 23rd at the Staples Center across the street, weighed-in at 138.4-pounds. Ziolkowski, who has the distinction of suffering second-round kayos at the hands of both Omar and Julio Cesar Chavez Jr., came in at 137.6-pounds.

In the opener, debuting Juan Reynoso of Tampa, Florida will meet Beau Hamilton (0-1) of Montague, California in a four-round light middleweight bout. Reynoso, a part of the Antonio Tarver camp, weighed-in at a chiseled 152.2-pounds. Hamilton came in at 154-pounds, seven pounds north of where he was for his debut two months ago.

Tickets for the event, promoted Golden Boy Promotions, A.T. Entertainment and Gary Shaw Productions, are available online at AXS.com.

Quick Weigh-in Results:

IBO Cruiserweight Championship, 12 Rounds
Tarver 198
Kayode 199

Middleweights, 10 Rounds
Wright 159
Quillin 159.6

WBA Light Middleweight Championship, 12 Rounds
Trout 152.8
Rodriguez 151

IBF Bantamweight Championship, 12 Rounds
Santa Cruz 117
Malinga 117

NABF Super Middleweight Championship
WBO Intercontinental Super Middleweight Championship, 12 Rounds
Bika 166.6
Davis 167.6

Light Welterweights, 10 Rounds
Bogere 137.2
Leyva 137.4

Light Welterweights, 6 Rounds
Figueroa 138.4
Ziolkowski 137.6

Light Middleweights, 4 Rounds
Reynoso 153.2
Hamilton 154

Mario Ortega Jr. can be reached at [email protected].




Video: Brandon Rios Post-fight Press Conference

Too drained to take the podium at the post-fight press conference, Brandon Rios sat down with media for a brief interview session after his controversial victory over Richard Abril on Saturday night at the Mandalay Bay Resort & Casino in Las Vegas, Nevada. Rios (30-0-1, 22 KOs) of Oxnard, California answers questions about the selection of Abril as his opponent, failing to make the lightweight limit, the fight itself and his immediate future. Also, Rios’ trainer Robert Garcia gives his take on the fight and the decision to schedule the bout at lightweight limit.




Grand Larceny: Judges Victimize Abril in Vegas

LAS VEGAS, NEVADA — Though he did not make it look pretty, huge underdog Richard Abril appeared to be on his way to claiming the vacant WBA Lightweight title over a lackluster Brandon Rios after twelve rounds at the Mandalay Bay Resort & Casino on Saturday night. But then the judges’ scores were read.

After a feeling out first round, Abril’s plan became readily apparent in the second. The WBA’s interim titleholder looked to place one or two hard shots at range and smother Rios any time the fight came in close. Rios landed one right uppercut inside, but Abril caught the former champion coming in several times and looked to have taken the round.

Rios (30-0-1, 22 KOs) of Oxnard, California began to try and rough up Abril on the inside in the third, but his punches were vastly ineffective. Abril (17-3-1, 8 KOs) of Miami, Florida by way of Isla de la Juventud, Cuba had a solid fourth, as he began measuring the shorter Rios with his left and landing solid rights. The lead right became a weapon as well for Abril, 135.

Rios, 137, may have deserved the fifth as Abril became too defensive. Rios did not land anything to great affect either, but he carried the action for most of the three minutes. Abril, the WBA #1 ranked lightweight, took the sixth on all three cards with an early offensive rally. Rios, the WBA #3 ranked lightweight, took to his jab for the only time in the fight late in the frame, but it was not enough to win back the round.

The seventh seemed to be another clear round for Abril, however two judges ended up giving it to Rios. Abril landed a lead right twice in the early going and kept good distance, tying up Rios when he got in close. Abril was warned for holding by referee Vic Drakulich, before landing another solid combination to close out the round.

By the eighth the fight had fallen into a familiar pattern. Rios would fall in and lean on Abril, throwing tired shots over his own shoulders. Abril blocked most of the blows inside, before stepping out and throwing one or two of his own as Rios looked to lean in again.

Despite all the trash talk and press conference shoving matches, neither fighter ever showed any desire to really hurt their adversary. Round after round, Rios’ winging shots looked drained of any power. Despite Abril’s effective punch selection throughout frames eight thru eleven, there was not a consensus round scored for the Cuban import by the three judges during that third of the fight. When Abril closed up shop a bit in the final round all three judges did agree to score it for Rios.

Both fighters did show good sportsmanship in the immediate aftermath of the final bell, as Abril offered his glove and Rios gave him a hug. Much to the dismay of everyone on press row, two veteran judges, Jerry Roth and Glenn Trowbridge, had the fight for Rios, 117-112 and 115-113 respectively. Judge Adalaide Byrd scored it right, 117-111 for Abril.

The post-fight press conference, which was held back until after the conclusion of the Juan Manuel Marquez-Serhiy Fedchenko fight broadcast from Mexico, never really took place. Top Rank execs explained that Rios was too drained to take the podium and instead a brief question and answer session took place at a media table.

It remains to be answered if Rios is still on the dance card for Marquez in July.

Making his case for a Marquez meeting, rising junior welterweight contender Mike Alvarado (33-0, 23 KOs) of Thornton, Colorado turned back a determined effort from Mauricio Herrera (18-2, 7 KOs) of Lake Elsinore, California en route to a ten-round unanimous decision.

Herrera, 140, opened well as his apparent plan was to smother the power of Alvarado, 140, while placing his own shots when the openings were presented. Herrera, the IBF #7 ranked 140-pounder, evaded enough of Alvarado’s attack to perhaps take the round. However it was apparent that Alvarado, the WBO #3/IBF #9/WBA #11 ranked light welterweight, held a decided edge in power.

Alvarado began to take over the fight in the second as Herrera could not keep the range he needed to stay out of harm’s way. Herrera was constantly throwing his shots, even while backed against the ropes. However, when Alvarado would land the effect on Herrera was much greater.

And so the fight went. Herrera bravely throwing, and gaining fans, but Alvarado landing the blows that win rounds. After a seventh round in which Alvarado was more selective with his output, Herrera’s face began to resemble hamburger meat, prompting a post-round look-in from the ringside physician.

In the eighth, a two-punch combination rattled Herrera into the ropes. Just when a stoppage looked eminent, the Lake Elsinore resident again offered back to close out the round. After another in between round visit from the doctor, Alvarado let off the gas a bit in the ninth, giving Herrera a brief reprieve.

Incredibly Herrera had a solid tenth, fighting on instinct perhaps more than anything else. Alvarado appeared to be a bit punched out as Herrera persevered through another two or three hard head shots to outwork him in the final round.

In the end, Alvarado deservedly took all three cards by scores of 99-91, 97-93 and 96-94. “I want Marquez,” pronounced Alvarado after the fight. “I deserve Marquez, I’m ready for Marquez and I have no weight issues.” Alvarado’s last line was an obvious knock on Rios, who has been mentioned as the leading candidate for a July meeting with Juan Manuel Marquez.

In the opening bout of the pay-per-view broadcast, Mercito Gesta (25-0-1, 13 KOs) of San Diego, California by way of Mandaue City, Cebu, Philippines worked his way to an eighth-round stoppage of awkward Oscar Cuero (15-8, 12 KOs) of Cartagena, Colombia.

Gesta, the WBA #7 ranked lightweight and WBO #8 ranked 140-pounder, was forced to chase Cuero, 138, around the ring for much of the early rounds. When Gesta, 137, did manage to pin Cuero against the ropes or in a corner, the Colombian quickly wrapped his long arms around the Filipino contender, leading to a point deduction in fifth.

As the sixth opened, Cuero decided to fight and had a fairly decent round pressuring Gesta, who only landed in spots. Cuero’s momentum was fleeting, as a rising right body shot gave Gesta his first knockdown in the bout in the seventh. Cuero got up slow and tackled an onrushing Gesta to the canvas. The extra time helped Cuero come on for a moment. But after taking a few clean head shots, Gesta smiled and nodded at his tiring foe.

Early in the eighth, a cuffing right near Cuero’s ear put him back on the mat. Cuero got up slow, prompting referee Robert Byrd to wave it off at the 1:38 mark.

Well regarded former amateur standout Eric Flores (1-0, 1 KO) of Inglewood, California topped his brother’s performance from earlier in the night with a 40-second technical knockout of Wilbert Mitchell (1-3) of Lake Dallas, Texas.

Flores, 139, came out fast, eventually landing a straight right hand, which he soon followed with a short left in close. Mitchell, 137, fell back into a neutral corner, where Flores followed and flurried him to the mat. When Mitchell got up, referee Tony Weeks saw something in his eyes he did not like and quickly waved off the bout.

Light welterweight prospect Terence Crawford (16-0, 12 KOs) of Omaha, Nebraska took an apparent step-up in class and impressively met the challenge as he dismantled Andre Gorges (11-3, 6 KOs) of Windsor, Ontario, Canada by way of Baghdad, Iraq inside of five rounds.

Crawford, 142, was clearly just too quick for Gorges, 141, from the early going. Gorges was game, but was countered at nearly every opportunity throughout the bout. After wearing Gorges down to the body, Crawford began to punish the Canadian resident upstairs in the fourth. A left hook on the inside wobbled Gorges’ legs and forced him down to a knee late in the round. With just seconds left in the round, Gorges survived to the bell, but returned to his corner on very shaky footing.

Early in the fifth, Crawford set up a vicious overhand right with Gorges against the ropes. Gorges was out even before the follow up left landed, which aided his slow fall to the mat. Referee Kenny Bayless stopped the bout 44 seconds into the fifth. Crawford’s win is especially impressive considering Gorges had gone twelve in a majority decision loss to soon to be ranked contender Albert Mensah last time out.

Light middleweight prospect Mikael Zewski (14-0, 10 KOs) of Trois-Rivieres, Quebec, Canada capped a patient, but effective offensive display with a sixth-round stoppage of Brandon Baue (12-6, 10 KOs) of Troy, Missouri.

Zewski, 153, mixed his attack well to both the body and head of Baue throughout the fight. The hook to the body as well as some well placed left uppercuts did damage from the early going, as Baue, 153 ½, became less willing to offer up as the fight wore on.

Finally in the sixth, a two-handed combination bothered Baue enough to bring him down to one knee in his own corner. Baue returned to his feet at the count of nine, but apparently looked dejected enough for referee Tony Weeks to stop the bout after a short series of unanswered blows at 2:46 of the sixth.

Anthony Flores (1-0, 1 KO) of Inglewood impressed in his professional debut with a scary first-round knockout of Gabriel Medina (1-1) of Hemet, California. Flores, 140, pressured Medina, 141, from the early going, ultimately using a left jab to set up a thunderous overhand right. Medina was out even before the back of his head bounced off the canvas. Referee Vic Drakulich rightly stopped the bout without a count at the 2:41 mark.

Former National Golden Gloves Champion Tremaine Williams (1-0, 1 KO) of New Haven, Connecticut put in a quick night’s work in his professional debut with a first-round stoppage of Jesse Anguiano (0-2) of San Antonio, Texas. Williams, 123, sent Anguiano, 121 ½, into a corner with a fast combination and the ensuing flurry sent Anguiano’s head through the ropes. Shortly after referee Robert Byrd separated the two fighters, Williams rushed in an put together a series of punches that prompted Byrd to rescue the stunned Anguiano from further punishment. Official time was 2:21 of the first.

Photos by Chris Farina/Top Rank

Mario Ortega Jr. can be reached at [email protected].




Rios Loses Second Straight Battle with the Scale

LAS VEGAS, NEVADA — Former WBA Lightweight title holder Brandon Rios forfeited an opportunity to regain his title as he again failed to make the lightweight limit of 135-pounds for his bout against Richard Abril tonight at the Mandalay Bay Resort & Casino. However, the grudge match will go on as scheduled, with the title on the line for Abril only. Fighters weighed in Friday afternoon at the casino’s Mizuya Lounge.

Rios (29-0-1, 22 KOs) of Oxnard, California of course was originally scheduled to fight Yuriorkis Gamboa tonight, before the Cuban’s unexpected pullout during the beginning of the promotion’s press tour. Before that tantalizing match-up began to materialize, Rios and his team had publicly declared he was going to move up to 140-pounds. Rios had failed to make the 135-pound limit for a title defense against John Murray last November, and even before that weigh-in the talk was he was done at lightweight.

Abril (17-2-1, 8 KOs) of Miami, Florida by way of Isla de la Juventud, Cuba entered into the mix after getting into a shoving match with Rios at a Florida press conference that Gamboa opted to no-show. Abril, the WBA #1 ranked lightweight and reigning interim belt holder, felt he should have been fighting for the vacant title from the start and voiced that opinion at the presser. Abril claimed that title with a twelve-round decision over former champion Miguel Acosta in Panama last October.

Rios, the WBA #3 ranked lightweight, scaled 137-pounds on his first attempt Friday. When Rios returned to give it a second try he ended up being a little heavier than the first time around. Abril, who only loses have come by split decision to Hank Lundy and Breidis Prescott, came in at the division limit of 135-pounds.

Due to the fact that Rios did not make the lightweight limit, it is not clear whether or not Abril will lose his interim title should he not win tonight. In correspondence through e-mail, WBA Executive Vice President Gilberto Mendoza Jr. informed 15rounds.com that the status of the interim title in the event of an Abril loss would decided in a meeting of the WBA’s directors.

Highlighting the undercard, light welterweight contender Mike Alvarado (32-0, 23 KOs) of Thornton, Colorado will take on once-beaten Mauricio Herrera (18-1, 7 KOs) of Lake Elsinore, California in a ten-round affair.

Alvarado comes in off of one of his better wins as he became the first to take down 140-pound contender Breidis Precott inside the distance last November. Alvarado, the WBO #3/IBF #9/WBA #11ranked light welterweight, has been taken to the final bell just once in his last six outings. Alvarado weighed in at 140-pounds Friday.

Herrera, the IBF #7 ranked 140-pounder, last saw action in June of last year. In that fight, Herrera took a controversial majority decision over prospect Mike Dallas Jr. However, the last time Herrera was in Las Vegas, he scored the most impressive win of his career. In January of 2011, Herrera stunned the crowd at the Cox Pavilion to take a decisive ten-round decision over previously unbeaten Ruslan Provodnikov. Herrera weighed in at 140-pounds.

Opening the pay-per-view telecast, touted Mercito Gesta (24-0-1, 12 KOs) of San Diego, California by way of Mandaue City, Cebu, Philippines takes on journeyman Oscar Cuero (15-7, 12 KOs) of Cartagena, Colombia in a ten-round light welterweight bout.

Gesta, the WBA #7 ranked lightweight and WBO #8 ranked 140-pounder, is coming off of a ten-round decision over former title challenger Ricardo Dominguez back in November. Though Cuero does not sport a very impressive record, he has not been stopped in almost four years, having gone the distance against notables Dannie Williams and Monty Meza Clay. Gesta weighed in at 138-pounds, while Cuero scaled 137.

Light middleweight prospect Mikael Zewski (13-0, 9 KOs) of Trois-Rivieres, Quebec, Canada looks to keep busy against Midwest journeyman Brandon Baue (12-5, 10 KOs) of Troy, Missouri in a bout slated for six or eight rounds. Zewski, a former amateur star, has been matched incredibly safe despite his credentials. The Canadian fought less than a month ago, scoring a first-round knockout of a 3-5 fighter in Atlantic City, New Jersey. Baue, who scaled 153 ½-pounds, has lost every time he has gone up against a remotely familiar name.

Terence Crawford (15-0, 11 KOs) of Omaha, Nebraska will take on Andre Gorges (11-2, 6 KOs) of Windsor, Ontario, Canada by way of Baghdad, Iraq in the most competitively matched bout off the off-television undercard. Their light welterweight bout is scheduled for six or eight rounds, depending on the distance of the other preliminary bouts. Crawford, who scaled 142-pounds, has been out of action since a September eight-round decision over Angel Rios in Atlantic City. Gorges, who scaled 141-pounds, is coming in off of a twelve-round decision loss to Albert Mensah last July.

Former amateur standout Eric Flores of Inglewood, California will make his professional debut against Wilbert Mitchell (1-2) of Lake Dallas, Texas in a four-round light welterweight bout. Flores, a top amateur and former member of the Los Angeles Matadors World Series of Boxing team, weighed in at 139-pounds. Mitchell, coming in off of his lone pro win, weighed in at 137-pounds.

Ingelwood’s Anthony Flores, Eric’s brother, will also be making his pro debut against Gabriel Medina (1-0) of Hemet, California in a four-round light welterweight bout. Flores, the slightly older of the two brothers, weighed in at 140-pounds. Medina weighed in at 141-pounds. Both Flores brothers are managed by Cameron Dunkin.

In the opener, 19-year-old former amateur star Tremaine Williams of New Haven, Connecticut will turn pro against Jesse Anguiano (0-1) of San Antonio, Texas in a four-round super bantamweight bout. Williams, the 2011 National Golden Gloves Champion at 123-pounds, came in at 123 on Friday. Anguiano, who lost his debut on March 24th via decision, weighed in at 121 ½-pounds.

HBO Pay-Per-View will broadcast the three main bouts followed by the WBO Interim Light Welterweight title bout between Juan Manuel Marquez and Serhiy Fedchenko from New Mexico City Arena in Mexico City, Distrito Federal, Mexico. TopRank.com will stream the preliminary bouts from Las Vegas live.

Tickets for the event, promoted by Top Rank, are available online at Ticketmaster.com

Quick Weigh-in Results:

WBA Lightweight Championship, 12 Rounds
Rios 137*
Abril 135

Light Welterweights, 10 Rounds
Alvarado 140
Herrera 140

Light Welterweights, 10 Rounds
Gesta 137
Cuero 138

Light Middleweights, 6 or 8 Rounds
Baue 153 ½
Zewski 153

Light Welterweights, 6 or 8 Rounds
Crawford 142
Gorges 141

Light Welterweights, 4 Rounds
Mitchell 137
Eric Flores 139

Light Welterweights, 4 Rounds
Medina 141
Anthony Flores 140

Super Bantamweights, 4 Rounds
Anguiano 121 ½
Williams 123

*Rios overweight, vacant title on the line for Abril only

Photos courtesy Top Rank
Alvarado-Herrera & Gesta-Cuero Photos by Chris Farina/Top Rank

Mario Ortega Jr. can be reached at [email protected].

Kaiser Permanente and Goodwill Southern California Reduce Carbon Footprint

Wireless News April 20, 2011

Wireless News 04-20-2011 Kaiser Permanente and Goodwill Southern California Reduce Carbon Footprint Type: News

Carrying everything from outdated cell phones to unwanted computers, Kaiser Permanente employees are determined to reduce their carbon footprint and Goodwill Southern California will be standing by with 24-foot trucks to properly recycle or dispose of the electronic waste, keeping it out of landfills. kaiserpermanentelocationsnow.net kaiser permanente locations

Celebrating a five-year Earth Day partnership, Kaiser Permanente and Goodwill reported that they have joined forces once again to commemorate Earth Day with e-waste collection sites at designated Kaiser Permanente Southern California facilities from Bakersfield to San Diego.

“Our e-waste event is one of the highlights of the year for me. It is truly remarkable to see the tons and tons of electronic waste that our employees, physicians, and members collect at each of our medical centers and regional offices. We started this event in 2007 as a means to assist the communities we serve in preventing harmful elements from getting into the local landfills. Through our partnership with Goodwill Industries, we are doing much more than that, we’re providing job opportunities to disabled individuals and helping to meet the broader definition of creating ‘healthy communities’,” said Richard D. Trogman, regional executive of support services, Kaiser Permanente Southern California region.

In the last two years, 65-thousand pounds of e-waste including old computers, monitors, printers, cables, video game consoles, and cell phones have poured into Kaiser Permanente-Goodwill collection sites. The groups said that that heap of electronic waste saved 2,887 cubic feet of landfill space which equals a pile of 41- thousand 2 liter soda bottles.

“We are thrilled to partner with Kaiser Permanente again this year in support of their commitment to green initiatives. Through these e-waste events, Kaiser Permanente and Goodwill Southern California are able to care for individuals, the community, and the earth. And that’s good for everyone,” said Douglas H. Barr, CEO and president of Goodwill Southern California. go to web site kaiser permanente locations

This year, the e-waste campaign has expanded to nine days and 30 Kaiser Permanente Southern California facilities. Kaiser Permanente- Goodwill noted that the region-wide annual event now also includes donations of clothes, books, shoes, toys, and small household items at some locations.

Kaiser Permanente’s e-waste collection campaign kicks off in Fontana, Anaheim, Irvine, Moreno Valley Hospital, and San Diego April 14 – 19. Continuing through April 22, the Company said that some of the other Kaiser Permanente locations collecting electronic waste include Bakersfield, Woodland Hills, Panorama City, Los Angeles, West Los Angeles, South Bay, Baldwin Park, Downey, Bellflower, and Riverside.

The Kaiser Permanente Southern California corporate headquarters in Pasadena (393 East Walnut Street, 91188) will wrap up this year’s e-waste campaign on Earth Day, April 22. Kaiser Permanente noted that employees will be able to drop off their old electronics between 7 a.m. – 2 p.m. Goodwill representatives will assist with heavy items, and will provide receipts for all donated e-waste goods they accept.

Kaiser Permanente is a health care provider and not-for-profit health plan.

GSC operates 66 retail stores, 42 attended donation centers, three campuses, and 27 program sites throughout Los Angeles (north of Rosecrans Ave.).

More Information:

www.goodwillsocal.org

www.kp.org/newscenter

((Comments on this story may be sent to [email protected]))

n/a




Mensah Shocks Katsidis

LAS VEGAS, NEVADA – Previously unknown Albert Mensah is unknown no longer after a hard-earned ten-round unanimous decision over proud warrior Michael Katsidis at the Hard Rock Hotel & Casino on Friday night. With the ESPN2-televised win, Mensah vaults into the world rankings, while the future of Katsidis’ career becomes uncertain.

Katsidis (28-6, 23 KOs) of Hollywood, California by way of Toowoomba, Queensland, Australia began the fight well. Moving up to junior welterweight from lightweight did not slow the always offense-minded Katsidis down one bit. Though his punches may not have had the same effect on a natural 140-pounder as they did on lightweights, on sheer output alone Katsidis controlled most of the first three rounds.

After finding his jab in the third, Mensah (25-3-1, 10 KOs) of Joliet, Illinois by way of Accra, Ghana came out of his defensive shell for a big fourth round. With each clean shot landed, Mensah, 140, seemed to gain confidence. Several shots snapped Katsidis’ head back and drew gasps from the crowd. Despite taking some really clean blows, Katsidis, 138, rarely took a step back.

Katsidis, who entered the bout as the WBO #8 ranked lightweight, bounced back midway through the fifth to again outwork Mensah, who had let off the gas pedal after a strong start to the stanza.

The sixth round provided a quandary for ringside scorers. Katsidis outworked Mensah by a wide margin, but not one of his shots stood out as something that really hurt his opponent. Mensah, despite languishing on the ropes the entire round, deserved the nod as he caught Katsidis with several hard head shots.

Mensah loaded up and landed several bombs in an action-packed seventh round. Just when Katsidis seemed to be in danger of going down, and with Mensah a bit punched out, the former interim champion rallied. Katsidis took Mensah to the ropes and placed some hard shots, before Mensah regrouped and landed one of his own.

After a solid eighth for Katsidis, Mensah came out determined in the ninth and landed well to the body. Mensah followed up with a series of head shots that seemed to bother Katsidis, who still refused to go into retreat. Mensah closed out a great fight with more solid blows upstairs in the tenth. The fight had opened eyes to Mensah’s ability, but only reaffirmed what everyone has known about Katsidis. One would be hard pressed to think of an active fighter with an ounce more heart than the Australian.

One judge had the fight even, 95-95, but was overruled by scores of 98-92 and 96-94 for Mensah. With the win Mensah successfully defended his IBF International Light Welterweight title, and will now find himself ranked when the sanctioning body releases their next world rankings.

Mensah had just one previous fight in the Unites States, a July win over once-beaten Andre Gorges in Illinois. “Not many people have known about him, but he was well known in his home country of Ghana, where he had held many titles,” explained Mensah’s promoter Cynthia Tolaymat of Chicago Fight Clubs Promotion. “But now after this exposure, I am sure everyone will know about him. We want to move him next, and as fast as possible, into world title position.”

In a jaw-dropping performance, Alan Sanchez (10-2-1, 4 KOs) of Fairfield, California ran through prospect Artemio Reyes (15-2, 10 KOs) of Colton, California via first-round knockout.

Sanchez, 147, hurt Reyes, 146, with a clean right early in the round and chased him about the ring, landing a right uppercut and several straight rights in succession. Finally the dazed Reyes succumbed and fell into the ropes, as referee Joe Cortez came in to stop the contest at 2:08 of the first round. Sanchez had dropped a highly competitive six-round decision to Reyes back in June of 2010.

In a rematch of an October 2011 draw, Cameron Kreal (1-1-2) of Las Vegas moved into the win column with a hard-fought four-round majority nod over Tyler Lawson (0-2-1) of Las Vegas. Lawson, 141, took as good as he gave much of the way, especially over the first two rounds. However, Kreal, 140, deservedly got the nod as he outworked Lawson in a solid scrap. Scores read 38-38 and 39-37 twice for Kreal.

In the last fight before the televised card, Alexis Hernandez (1-1) of Las Vegas by way of Mexico City, Distrito Federal, Mexico scored three knockdowns over the first three rounds to score a four-round unanimous decision over determined Sergio Lopez (0-1) of Las Vegas.

Hernandez, 123, rocked Lopez, 122, into the ropes to score a knockdown late in the first round. Lopez managed to quickly regroup and fought well in spots off the ropes, most notably uncorking a hard left hook that momentarily stopped Hernandez in his tracks. The following exchanged carried past the bell, with Hernandez’ late shots the most flagrant.

Lopez carried some momentum into the second, which he controlled in the opening moments. Just as the fight began turning his way, Lopez was caught in an exchange and dropped for the second straight round. Again, Lopez regrouped and returned fire to close out the round.

The third looked much like the second round, with Lopez doing well early before finding himself again on the mat. This time it was a Hernandez left hook that put Lopez on the canvas. After a strong fourth round for Hernandez, all three judges had the fight for him by scores of 40-35, 40-34 and 39-38.

In an entertaining welterweight bout, Yusmani Abreu (2-2-1) of Las Vegas survived some scary moments in the first en route to a four-round split decision draw with Brent Rodriguez (1-3-2) of Venice, California.

Rodriguez, 146, caught Abreu, 146, with a wide right hook that sent the local fighter across the ring and against the ropes. Rodriguez either felt referee Jay Nady was going to call a knockdown or decided to admire his work, because he failed to follow-up on the stunned Abreu. With seconds left, Rodriguez swung away, but did not land a punch as Abreu fell to the mat. Even though the earlier landed punches had something to do with the fall, Nady waved it off as a slip.

To his credit, Abreu shook out the cobwebs and battled back in the second and third rounds. Each fighter had their moments in the fourth and ultimately the official scorers were split on who they liked. Each fighter took one card 38-37, with the third card coming in even, 38-38.

In a free-swinging four-rounder, Edwin Reyes (0-0-1) of Nashville, Tennessee battled back over the second half of the fight to force a unanimous draw with Yosigey Ramirez (0-0-1) of Las Vegas.

Ramirez, 104, appeared to be the stronger puncher through two, as he and Reyes, 104, exchanged at close quarters. However, Reyes came on in the third, landing hard shots inside some of Ramirez’ looping swings. Reyes completely dominated the fourth, nearly dropping Ramirez with a well-timed combination. In the following minute, Ramirez evaded just enough shots to remain on his feet, and even landed some as Reyes momentarily punched himself out.

By the time the fourth was coming to a close, Reyes was again getting the better of the action. In the end, all three judges had the fight a 38-38 draw.

Before the ring lights had a chance to warm-up, Richard Quesada (1-0, 1 KO) of Havana, Cuba stopped Luis Monda (0-1) of Miami, Florida in the night’s opening bout. The southpaw Monda, 140, quickly found himself against the ropes on the receiving end of a straight right hand, which apparently had him second-guessing his chosen profession.

Quesada, 141, followed up with a right to the body that put Monda down to a knee. Before reaching his count of ten, referee Russell Mora decided call off the contest at 50 seconds of the first.

Copyright Photos by Mary Ann Owen

Mario Ortega Jr. can be reached at [email protected].




Delvin Rodriguez: Targeting the Champions at 154

Long one of cable television’s most exciting fighters, light middleweight contender Delvin Rodriguez and his team feel he is deserving of the big fight that has eluded him to this point in his thirteen-year pro career. Just last month, one such fight came close to coming to fruition, but evaporated in deflating fashion. Undeterred, and with the options plentiful in his weight class, Rodriguez has his sights sight on the rest of the division’s big names.

Back on February 10th, Rodriguez (26-5-3, 14 KOs) of Danbury, Connecticut sat down for an interview with ESPN’s Bernardo Osuna during a live Friday Night Fights telecast. As Rodriguez, also a commentator for ESPN Deportes, sat there he believed he was close to signing for a fight with Mexican superstar Saul “Canelo” Alvarez. When asked what was next for him, Rodriguez cracked a smile, hinting that such a big fight was coming close. Unfortunately for Rodriguez, about 30 minutes later, Osuna would come on air to report that Alvarez had signed on for a May 5th bout with Shane Mosley instead.

For Rodriguez the Alvarez fight represented not only the largest payday of his career and a chance to become a world champion, but also the opportunity to prove himself to the skeptical boxing public. “It was very disappointing because it was a fight where I would have been able to show the boxing world what I’m all about,” says Rodriguez. “At 147, I wasn’t 100 percent every time I stepped in the ring. I was feeling weak and I didn’t belong in the division because I was struggling with the weight class. I believe there is still a little bit of doubt in some people’s mind. Fighting “Canelo” would have been great. He is a star right now and it would have been the opportunity of a lifetime. So it was very disappointing.”

Perhaps making lost opportunity even harder to swallow was how close it came to becoming a reality. “From what I was being told, it was down to us and Mosley,” explained Rodriguez’ manager A.J. Galante. “There was nothing set in stone we were told. Obviously it would have been a huge opportunity and we were under the impression we were going to get the match. We were down to the final two and we were very excited for it. It would have been a great challenge.”

With Alvarez’ fight taking place as the co-feature to the Floyd Mayweather-Miguel Cotto main event on pay-per-view, the decision on his opponent likely came down to whose name would sell more buys and not necessarily which was the better fight. Mosley’s is a name recognizable to more casual fans than that of Rodriguez, who offered his opinion on the match-up when asked to put on his analyst cap.

“I think it is a fight that people are not really interested to see,” says Roriguez of Alvarez-Mosley. “This boxing world is all about the last fight. Whatever you do last is what people remember. Shane Mosley’s last fight, he was pretty much trying to survive. So I think people aren’t really interested in that fight and I think people would have liked to see me and “Canelo.” Unfortunately it didn’t go that way. It is just the politics of boxing.”

There is a stark contrast in the shaping of Rodriguez’ and Alvarez’ careers. As a welterweight, Rodriguez played the game the way it is supposed to be played. He gradually moved up in the rankings, fighting stiffer and stiffer competition until he was in position to fight in a title eliminator. He won his title eliminator and fought for a world title, losing a controversial decision. He was rightfully granted another eliminator, which he won, to get another crack a world title, which ended in a controversial draw. Again he fought in an eliminator, losing yet another controversial decision. On the other hand, Alvarez had a carefully managed run lead to a vacant WBC Light Middleweight title bout against a natural welterweight in Matthew Hatton last year. In his three defenses since, Alvarez has yet to meet a capable challenger still in the prime of his career.

“He’s definitely been the golden boy pretty much,” says Rodriguez of Alvarez. “They brought him up the right way, babying him. Everything he wanted he’s had come real easy, put right in his hand. There’s no doubt in my mind, the kid has talent. He’s a very strong kid. He’s very dedicated to the sport at this moment. He has the youth and the power, but honestly he hasn’t been tested. Shane Mosley is not on top of his game right now and he’s not in his best years, but he will test him. Shane does still have speed and Shane could hurt him. The kid has talent, but he just hasn’t been tested yet. We don’t know how he is going to react in a real fight and that’s what makes a fighter. A fighter that knows how to adapt in a fight and come back and we haven’t seen that from him yet.”

With Alvarez in the rearview for the moment, Rodriguez and his team are looking for a fight with one of the division’s other title holders or leading contenders. “I talk to our promoter Joe DeGuardia almost every day and I tell him we want the best guys out there,” says Galante. “In all four sanctioning bodies were are number five, so there are just four guys ahead of us to get to one of those [champions]. We will take on whoever, we are just looking forward. If a title eliminator is there, that is no problem. We are willing to do whatever it takes. We are definitely looking for a championship, and however we have to do it, that’s what we will do.”

Having paid his dues and never having had anything handed to him, Rodriguez remains determined for another chance to prove that he belongs with the top guys in his division. “We want to fight guys that are on top of us that are going to put us on the next step,” explains Rodriguez. “We don’t want to fight anybody underneath. I believe I have done my job already. I have been through the bad decisions, bad management, bad promotion. I have been through everything you can name in this career. I put in my work and I think I have proven myself. So I just want to go forward. I want to fight somebody that is going to take me to the next level and get me to that world title.”

Photo by Chris Farina/Top Rank

Mario Ortega Jr. can be reached at [email protected].




Video: Interview with Vicente Escobedo

Fighting before his local fan base, Vicente Escobedo scored three first round knockdowns of Lonnie Smith en route to the impressive stoppage victory at the Woodland Community & Senior Center in Woodland, California on Saturday night. With the knockout, the WBO #10 ranked lightweight and IBF #10 ranked 130-pounder netted the WBO NABO Super Featherweight title. Escobedo (25-3, 15 KOs) of Woodland spoke to 15rounds.com moments after the big win.




Escobedo Impressive in Hometown Return

WOODLAND, CALIFORNIA – With a world title opportunity potentially looming right around the corner, Vicente Escobedo thrilled his hometown crowd by scoring three first-round knockdowns en route to a stoppage over Lonnie Smith at the Woodland Community & Senior Center in the Telefutura Solo Boxeo main event on Saturday night.

Smith (14-3-2, 10 KOs) of Las Vegas, Nevada started out strong, backing Escobedo to the ropes and placing a couple strong body shots. The fight quickly turned midway through the first round, as Escobedo (24-4, 15 KOs) of Woodland found a home for two right hands and walked through Smith’s retort.

Escobedo, 129, soon backed Smith, 130, into the blue corner with a one-two and dropped “El Negro Mexicano” with the jab-right hand combination that followed. Smith got up smiling, but was soon deposited on the canvas with a right from over the top. This time Smith got up without a smile. Escobedo rushed in when the action resumed, catching Smith with a right hand. Smith caught himself on the middle ropes, but was quickly flurried to the mat again as referee Dan Stell leaped in to stop the fight. Official time of the stoppage was 2:20 of round one.

With the win, Escobedo, who entered the ring as the WBO #10 ranked lightweight and IBF #10 ranked 130-pounder, claimed the vacant WBO NABO Super Featherweight title, his first as a professional. “By now I thought I would have had about two world titles, but better late than never,” said Escobedo just after his win. “That is the way I look at it. I think it is just my time. I was a late bloomer, but now that I have had the experience of fighting the top fighters, the best out there, I have learned a lot and that showed tonight.”

Escobedo had fought in nearby Sacramento before, lastly in 2009, but never in his hometown of Woodland. “It was a good homecoming,” said Escobedo. “I wanted to give the people that. I think this is the best gift I could have given Woodland. To actually come to Woodland, in front of my friends and family and the people that have never been able to see me live, that was really special for me.”

Escobedo’s name has been mentioned as a possible opponent for reigning WBO Super Featherweight titleholder Adrien Broner, who is likely to see action on the May 19th Lamont Peterson-Amir Khan card in Las Vegas. Escobedo’s manager Rolando Arrellano acknowledged there have been talks in regards to Broner, but nothing is set regarding his fighter’s next move.

In a rematch, Manuel Avila (7-0, 2 KOs) of Fairfield, California remained unbeaten with a six-round unanimous decision over a fleet-of-foot David Reyes (2-2) of Montebello, California.

Throughout the fight, Avila, 118, played the role of counter-puncher, even as his trainer Al LaGardo implored him to press the action from ringside. In the end, his clean counter shots were more than enough to win the rounds over the unorthodox Reyes, 120, but it is likely Avila could have been more impressive had he put his corner’s advice to use.

While his offense came in short bursts, Reyes’ conditioning could not be questioned as any time Avila landed anything of significance, the Montebello resident would be well out of range by the time the young prospect attempted a follow-up attack. One of the more heated two-way exchanges came just before the final bell, as Reyes was cornered against the ropes.

In the end, two judges had the shutout for Avila, 60-54, while the third found a round for Reyes, 59-55. In their initial October meeting on the Bernard Hopkins-Chad Dawson undercard in Los Angeles, California, Avila downed Reyes in the third round, but had to settle for a four-round split decision victory.

In an entertaining six-round affair, Paul Mendez (7-2-1, 2 KOs) of Delano, California and Dmitry Chudinov (6-0-1, 3 KOs) of Los Angeles, California by way Serpukhov, Moscow Oblast, Russia fought to a majority draw.

Chudinov, 159 ½, found Mendez, 166, first, with a couple solid left hooks in the opening round. The taller Mendez began the fight in close, but opted to get on his toes late in the first round. Mendez tried to keep Chudinov at distance again in the second, but the Russian continued to set the tone with a higher output and level of aggression.

Mendez had a better third round, as he began to place his jab to greater effect and connected with a cracking left hook that drew a reaction from the crowd. Still the most telling blow of the round was thrown by Chudinov, who rocked Mendez with a left hook late in the frame. Mendez, a bit wobbled, covered up well, as Chudinov failed to land anything punishing in his follow-up.

Each fighter had their moments in the fourth, as Chudinov scored well early, but Mendez came on late with a nice series of combinations. Chudinov came out strong in the fifth, but Mendez weathered the onrush and controlled the action over the second half of the round. Chudinov continued to press forward in the sixth, but Mendez out landed him for stretches and kept the fight at his distance for much of the round. In the end, one judge had the fight 58-56 for Chudinov, but was overruled by the other two official scorers, 57-57.

Jonathan Chicas (5-0, 3 KOs) of San Francisco, California kept his unbeaten record in tact with a four-round majority decision over an undersized, but extremely determined Ephraim Martinez (4-2, 1 KO) of Buttonwillow, California.

Chicas’ natural size advantage was readily apparent in the early going, as the San Francisco resident fired rights and walked through the returns from Martinez, 137, a super bantamweight moving way up the scale. However, Martinez, who took the fight on short notice, made it clear he was in the fight for the long haul, as he came back with a solid right late in the round.

To the surprise of many seated ringside, it was Martinez that pressed the fight in the second, forcing Chicas, 140, to backpedal for much of the round. Chicas’ corner must have said something to wake him up in between rounds, as he came out blazing in the third. However, after a strong first half, Chicas was giving ground again to close the round.

Chicas started the fourth well, before Martinez caught him in close and backed him up with combinations. When Martinez punched himself out for a moment, Chicas regained control of the round late. After withstanding Chicas’ attack, Martinez called his opponent in and fired back to end the fight. One judge had the fight even, 38-38, with the other wo judges scoring it 39-37 for Chicas.

In the opening bout of the night, Harry Gopaul (1-2, 1 KO) of Sacramento, California moved into the win column while spoiling the professional debut of former amateur standout Payton Boyea (0-1) also of Sacramento via second-round stoppage.

Action was frantic at the outset, as Gopaul, 174 ½, and Boyea, 172, exchanged shots at close range in the first round. Gopaul got the worst of it in the early going and was soon dropped by a right hand. Gopaul managed to regain his footing in short order and charged back at Boyea, who did well to catch his adversary on his way inside.

The Sacramento natives came right out at each other to start the second, but this time it would be Gopaul that landed hardest, as he backed Boyea against the ropes with a one-two. With Boyea leaning back on the upper stands, Gopaul connected with a sweeping left hook that put his opponent in trouble. With Gopaul unloading his arsenal against the ropes, Boyea would fall out of the ring onto a ringside table from an apparent right hand. However, referee Edward Collantes waved off the knockdown and signaled it was a push.

Shortly after making it back into the ring, the shaky-legged Boyea was in trouble taking shots along the ropes. The unanswered series of blows that followed gave Gopaul his first official knockdown of the night. When Boyea returned to his feet, Collantes took a look and waved off the fight at the 2:02 mark of the second.

Photos by Erik Killin

Mario Ortega Jr. can be reached at [email protected].




Escobedo Returns Home for High Stakes Bout Tonight

CAPAY, CALIFORNIA – 2004 U.S. Olympian Vicente Escobedo is back in his hometown as he headlines tonight’s edition of Telefutura Solo Boxeo against Lonnie Smith at the Woodland Community & Senior Center in Woodland, California. For Escobedo the fight presents a risky proposition, as he is a name fighter in a division lacking such a commodity, but instead of a walkover opponent he meets the capable, upset-minded Smith. Fighters weighed in Friday night at the Road Trip Bar & Grill in nearby Capay.

Escobedo (24-3, 14 KOs) is back on Telefutura for the third straight time after his wide points loss to Robert Guerrero in late 2010. Last time out, Escobedo moved past faded and undersized former title challenger Rocky Juarez via ten-round unanimous decision last November. Though Escobedo has fought in nearby Sacramento eight times in his professional career, tonight marks his Woodland debut.

Smith (14-2-2, 10 KOs) of Las Vegas, Nevada has reeled off nine straight victories since he last suffered a defeat back in 2007. The one time previously that Smith stepped up in class, he controlled former fringe contender David Rodela over six rounds last April. Tonight’s bout marks a major step up, both in class and distance, as Smith, who will be fighting on his 25th birthday, has never had a fight scheduled for more than six rounds. Smith is scheduled to go ten tonight, as he and Escobedo vie for the vacant WBO NABO Super Featherweight title.

The word at the weigh-in Friday was that should Escobedo, currently the WBO #10 ranked lightweight and IBF #10 ranked 130-pounder, move past Smith tonight, he could find himself in against reigning WBO 130-pound champion Adrien Broner next time out. However, looking past Smith, a fighter with nothing to lose and everything to gain, would be a horrible misstep for the former Olympian. Escobedo weighed in at 129-pounds, while Smith scaled 130.

In the televised co-feature, Golden Boy Promotions’ super bantamweight prospect Manuel Avila (6-0, 2 KOs) of Fairfield, California moves up to the six-round distance for the first time as he takes on David Reyes (2-1) of Montebello, California in a rematch. Back in October on the Bernard Hopkins-Chad Dawson undercard, Avila floored Reyes in the third round, but had to settle for a split decision win. Fighting not to far from his Fairfield home, Avila aims to prove his superiority over Reyes once and for all. Avila weighed in at a career-low 118-pounds, while Reyes scaled 120.

An intriguing match on the undercard almost came apart at the weigh-in Friday, as Paul Mendez (7-2, 2 KOs) of Delano, California failed to make the contracted weight for his six-round bout against unbeaten former amateur standout Dmitry Chudinov (6-0, 3 KOs) of Los Angeles, California by way Serpukhov, Moscow Oblast, Russia. Chudinov weighed in at 159 ½-pounds. Mendez came in at 166-pounds.

Initially Chudinov threw his hands up and said there would not be a fight. But after some deliberation, Chudinov decided to go through with the fight and Mendez did not even have to sweat off any weight. When Chudinov appeared on the December card in Woodland, he took on a 180-pound version of Tony Hirsch, who had accepted the fight just before the official weigh-in.

Coming in off of his an impressive performance in Woodland last December, Jonathan Chicas (4-0, 3 KOs) of San Francisco, California takes on blown-up super bantamweight Ephraim Martinez (4-1, 1 KO) of Buttonwillow, California in a four-round light welterweight fight. Chicas, who scaled 140-pounds Friday, quickly dismantled former amateur star Paul Cano in under two rounds in December.

Martinez has fought as low as 118-pounds, and never heavier than 124 ¾ in his pro career. Martinez has been out of the ring since September 2010, when super bantamweight prospect Efrain Esquivas stopped him in five. Given the natural size disadvantage, it is hard to envision Martinez going the full four with the power-punching Chicas tonight.

In an all-Sacramento battle, former amateur standout Payton Boyea makes his professional debut against Harry Gopaul (0-2) in a four-round light heavyweight bout. Boyea, who is training under former world champion and legendary Sacramento boxing figure Tony “The Tiger” Lopez, weighed in at 172-pounds. Gopaul, who also has competed in mixed martial arts, weighed in at 174 ½-pounds.

Any remaining tickets for the event, promoted by Golden Boy Promotions, Don Chargin Productions, Paco Presents and Jorge Marron Productions, will be made available at the door.

Mario Ortega Jr. can be contacted at [email protected].




Lonnie Smith: “El Negro Mexicano” Takes Big Leap on Enemy Turf

Charismatic super featherweight Lonnie Smith is set to take a big step up in class as he goes to the hometown of world ranked contender Vicente Escobedo for a ten-round regional title bout at the Woodland Community & Senior Center in Woodland, California on Saturday night. For Smith and his team, the fight represents a calculated gamble, but also rare opportunity to enter the mix at 130-pounds in a big way.

Smith (14-2, 10 KOs) of Las Vegas, Nevada has been out of the ring since scoring a third-round stoppage of Eduardo Arcos in late July. However, Smith had been in the gym since the Monday after his last fight, refining his arsenal while his team tried to line up the right fight for him. “We’ve been working on a lot of stuff,” explains Smith, who has had considerable ring time with the likes of Joel Casamayor and prospects Darley Perez and Sharif Bogere among others. “I think we’ve worked on a lot of the downfalls in my game. I’ve seen some people that I like and how they fight, and I imitated them and now I mixed it in with my boxing and now I got a new me.”

In the months since his July win, several fights had fallen out and others were passed on by Smith. When his promoters Terry and Tommy Lane got the call from Don Chargin about the possibility of an Escobedo fight they brought the offer to Smith thinking he was likely going to pass, but were met with a very different response.

“When the fight was offered to my promoters, they called me,” recounts Smith. “I don’t know if they knew I was going to take the fight. They offered me other fights that I turned down. But when I heard the name Escobedo and the date March 3rd, I was like yeah, let’s do it.”

The fact that the offer came in about a month before the fight would take place was part of the reason why Smith surprised his promoters with his quick acceptance of the fight. “There were times I took a fight on two weeks’ notice,” says Smith. “If you never had a promoter before, you do have to be ready at all times. That’s the reason behind me always being in the gym.” Another reason Smith jumped at the opportunity was Escobedo was someone that was on his radar already anyway. “Escobedo was a guy on my list,” says Smith. “Actually, I even had Daniel Jimenez on my list, and Jimenez beat him. So I was like well, let’s do it.”

Though Smith has never been in with anyone of Escobedo’s caliber before, his confidence level going into this fight gave his promoter assurance this was the right time to take a chance. “Lonnie is really confident,” says Terry Lane, CEO of Let’s Get It On Promotions. “To him, the fight is just a formality. He is so confident this is going to be a step on the ladder to bigger and better things. He believes he is going to beat this guy that is way more experienced than him and has fought much better fighters than he has on Saturday. He believes he is going to beat him pretty easily.”

The last time the Lanes gave Smith a tough assignment, in the form of former fringe contender David Rodela last April, he displayed a similar level of belief in himself and went on to score a wide unanimous decision. “When we made that fight, he was extremely confident about taking the fight,” recalls Terry Lane. “Obviously, Rodela was a test and a step up, but Lonnie is diligent about taking the fights he thinks he can win. He researches everything he possibly can about fighters before taking a fight. He doesn’t take things just to take them. So when he wanted to take that so quickly, at some point as the promoter I have to have a little faith and trust about what my fighter feels about himself. If he feels he can take it and his trainer Skip Kelp feels he can take it and the rest of his team feels he can take it and win, then we will take the fight. He has the same sort of confidence going into this, which makes me feel this is a fight we should take.”

One of the fights Smith had passed on in the past was to go to the adopted hometown of ranked contender Eloy Perez and fight him for a regional title. On Saturday Smith will be heading into Woodland, the town in which Escobedo grew up and became one of the country’s top amateurs. However, Smith sees it differently. “Eloy never fought outside of California and Eloy wanted the fight in Salinas, California, and I didn’t want to go to Salinas to fight him,” explains Smith. “I wasn’t going to go there and fight him, so that was the choice. But I am going to knock [Escobedo] out. I am going to take the decision in my own hands. I’m not relying on anybody else to get me the fight.”

Saturday’s fight, which will be the televised main event of Telefutura Solo Boxeo, is for the WBO NABO Super Featherweight title, which essentially guarantees the winner a world ranking. While Escobedo is already ranked by the WBO and IBF and has fought for more significant titles in the past, this will be the first time Smith has had a crack at any belt as a professional.

“Every fight is just as important as the next fight, but this fight is important because this title puts me in the mix,” explains Smith, who has been known for his offensive-minded style. “I want this belt to have at the house. I want this belt to hold at night. It is going to be recognition for the time I have put in over these five years of being a pro, with all the mishaps that happen along the way, with fights falling out, bad managers or not having a promoter. Everything is going to work out after I knock this guy out.”

Should Smith claim the title on Saturday, he figures to be ranked highest by the WBO, whose current world champion is Adrien Broner. Though Smith cites Broner, a rising star in the sport, as a friend, it is a fight Smith would take under the right circumstances. However, Smith has always had his eyes on another title.

“I mean I would fight my sister if she got in the ring,” says Smith, who goes by the ring name of “El Negro Mexicano.” “This is a sport, but he is one of my friends. It’s not like I am gunning for Broner, just because Eloy decided to take a shot at him and got his ass cracked. I’m looking at the WBC champion [Takahiro Aoh.] Ever since I was a little kid, I have dreamed of having the green belt around my waist. To have another belt I am still in second place, that is how I feel. I want to fight Aoh out in Japan. He is a little maniac. He’s a beast. I respect him, but it doesn’t matter who has that green belt, I just want that belt.”

Obviously Escobedo comes first, but Smith plans to show the world his work in the gym has paid off and he is ready for the challenge. “The guy that fought Rodela was a crazy mad man,” Smith says of himself. “I was fixated on doing the best I could and I thought the best I could was to never stop punching. Now I am a little calmer. I have patience. That’s how we are going to come out here. Aggressive pressure, but I’ve found out the point of boxing is to not get hit. Hopefully everyone has seen me fight once or twice and they will have the chance to see that I have matured.”

    Notes:

-Smith, ever the self-promoter, would like for his fans reach out to him on Twitter @130lbBEAST and on Facebook at Facebook.com/elnegromexicano.

-Escobedo, a 2004 U.S. Olympian, last fought in his home area in 2009, when he dispatched a faded Kevin Kelley in under two rounds at the ARCO Arena in Sacramento.

– Tickets for Saturday’s event, promoted by Golden Boy Promotions, Don Chargin Productions, Paco Presents and Jorge Marron Productions, are available online at PacoPresentsBoxing.com or by calling Paco’s Authentic Mexican Restaurant in Woodland at 530-669-7946.

Photos by Stephanie Trapp/[email protected]

Mario Ortega Jr. can be reached at [email protected].

COLLEGIATE-COMMUNITY CAREER FAIR SEPT. 11, 12

US Fed News Service, Including US State News September 5, 2008 Darton College issued the following news release:

The City of Albany Civic Center, Albany State University, Darton College and Albany Technical College are hosting a two-day Collegiate-Community Career Fair to be held at the Albany Civic Center September 11 & 12. go to web site albany technical college

The Career Fair will be a unique two-day event that will target students and alumni on Thursday, Sept. 11, from 10-4 p.m. and then on Friday, Sept. 12, the event shifts to general job search candidates with or without a degree who are looking for employment. web site albany technical college

September 11 is dedicated to “Collegiate Candidates” seeking employment. Students will be admitted to this event free of charge.

Participants should bring their university/college ID and several copies of their resume and should dress appropriately as if going to an interview.

If Darton students need resume or interviewing help, please see Jason Swords in the Career Center in C-228 or call to set up an appointment at (229) 317-6449.




Promising Prospect: Manuel Avila

Emerging super bantamweight Manuel Avila enters a rematch with David Reyes on Saturday night aiming to show his superiority and in a way prove a unanimous verdict should have been rendered instead of the split decision that was announced after their initial October meeting. The bout takes place at the Woodland Community & Senior Center in Woodland, California – a short drive from Avila’s Fairfield home and will air on Telefutura Solo Boxeo, giving the young fighter a chance to further endear himself to both local and national fight fans.

The fact that Avila (6-0, 2 KOs) found boxing as a youth was really a fluke matter of circumstances. “My parents wanted to keep me off the street with sports like baseball and soccer, but they have off seasons,” recalls Avila. “Then when I was nine my dad asked me if I wanted to box and I said yes. So he told me that when I turned ten we’d go.” The elder Avila did not have any aspirations for his son to pursue boxing as a profession, it just happened to be a sport that would keep him busy year round.

Just days before his tenth birthday, Avila’s dad did take him to the local boxing gym, but his son was not eager to begin at first. “I saw some kids sparring and I got scared and didn’t want to do it anymore. I was told that I’ll work my way up, so I decided to do it, starting a day before my birthday.”

The gym his father took him to that day would be the same gym Avila would train out of his entire career, the Georgie Duke Sports Center in Vacaville, where he has trained under Al LaGardo. Shortly after hooking up with the young Avila, LaGardo would give his young pug a nickname that would stick. “My coach Al used to have this pro fighter named Tino Huggins,” explains Avila. “He said I looked just like him, so he told me from now on my name is Tino and it just stuck. Now everyone calls me Tino.”

Tino would get over his reluctance to spar and ten months after arriving at the gym, he would begin competing. Avila developed into one of the top amateurs in California, claiming a Silver Gloves title and placing third in the country at the 2008 Junior Olympic National Championships.

In 2009, Avila traveled to Denver, Colorado to compete at the USA Boxing National Championships. Unfortunately for Avila, his hopes for a national title would be dashed after a controversial disqualification in a preliminary round bout against Luis Rosa of East Haven, Connecticut. “They disqualified me for bowing, but I never did,” explains Avila. “The guy would grab my head and push me down but they called me for it.”

After the fight with Rosa, a few people, including an amateur boxing official not working that day, explained to a dejected Avila that there may have been an explanation for the disqualification. “I was told they weren’t going to let me win the fight because my whole uniform was the Mexican Flag and it wouldn’t look right when I’m representing the USA Team.”

In the immediate aftermath of his exit from nationals, Avila decided he wanted to turn professional. Unexpectedly for Avila, things started falling into place quite rapidly, as prominent manager Cameron Dunkin courted him before he was even old enough to fight in the United States. “It was amazing because I wanted to become a pro as soon as I turned 18 and when I was 17 I got a call from Cameron saying he wants to sign me,” remembers Avila. “I didn’t think people like me get discovered like that or sign by anyone at 18 coming from where I’m from.”

Eventually Dunkin signed Avila up with Golden Boy Promotions, who scheduled his debut for November 18, 2010 on the regionally televised Fight Night Club program emanating from the Club Nokia in Los Angeles, California. “I was excited to finally fight as a pro, but to me it was just another fight,” says Avila, who dominated Alexis Hernandez en route to a four-round unanimous decision that night.

In January of the next year, promoters Don Chargin and Paco Damian, who partner with Golden Boy on several of their Solo Boxeo dates, decided to bring boxing to Fairfield for the first time in many years and Tino Avila was a big reason why that decision was made. Unfortunately for Avila and his strong local fan base, his fight fell out at the weigh-in, as his late replacement opponent did not come close to the contracted weight. However, thanks in part to tickets Avila sold, the January event was such a financial success, Solo Boxeo came back to Fairfield the very next month. This time, Tino Avila fans would go home happy.

On that February night, Avila stopped Jose Garcia in the fourth round before a national television audience and of course his large local following. “It felt great being able to fight on TV and in front of my friends and family,” says Avila. “I felt like everyone has a lot of hopes for me. I wasn’t really expecting a KO because I didn’t know anything about this guy. I didn’t even find out he was southpaw until the fight started, but it was a real good feeling.

With the February event again doing well at the box office, Solo Boxeo came back to Fairfield for the third straight month that March and again Avila was on the bill scoring an impressive stoppage. This time it was limited journeyman Frank Gutierrez that would taste the canvas three times and fail to make it out of the second round against Avila.

Two months later Avila returned to Solo Boxeo as he traveled down Costa Mesa, California and scored a four-round unanimous decision over Jesse Padilla. One month later on June 24th, Avila came back to Fairfield for a non-televised decision over Salvador Cifuentes.

After keeping an incredibly busy pace for the first eight months of his career, Avila ran into some bad luck as a series of bouts would fall out on sometimes short notice. One such bout scheduled for September in Reno, Nevada would have to be cancelled as Avila attempted to get the additional necessary medicals required by the Nevada State Athletic Commission, but could not complete them all in time.

On October 15th, Avila returned to the ring on the undercard of the Bernard Hopkins-Chad Dawson card at the Staples Center in Los Angeles. As Avila stepped into the ring to fight unbeaten local David Reyes on the undercard of a pay-per-view for the first time, the Fairfield native claims the larger stage had no effect on him. “No, not at all,” says Avila. “I just felt like I was getting up there to the big times.”

According to most ringside accounts, Avila won the fight fairly clearly, as he even scored a knockdown in the third of the four-round bout. However, one judge had the fight scored for Reyes, 38-37. The other two had it for Avila, 39-35 and 39-36, giving Tino his sixth professional victory. After hearing the one card for Reyes, Avila feared for a moment he would be the victim of some home cooking. “I thought they were going to give the fight to him just because he was from there in L.A.,” said Avila. “I felt like I won every round.”

That brings us to this coming Saturday. Avila, fighting close to home for the first time in many months, feels he has a little something to prove in the rematch with Reyes. “This time there is doubt that I’m going to win every single round convincingly to show everyone that is watching,” says Avila.

With another win on Saturday, Avila will move one step further away from the kid that came to the gym to stay busy and one step closer to prominence as a professional boxer. As Avila continues to move forward in the sport, chances are some kids in the Vacaville area will walk through the doors of the Georgie Duke Sports Center hoping to be Coach LaGardo’s next “Tino.”

Tickets for Saturday’s event, promoted by Golden Boy Promotions, Don Chargin Productions, Paco Presents and Jorge Marron Productions, are available online at PacoPresentsBoxing.com or by calling Paco’s Authentic Mexican Restaurant in Woodland at 530-669-7946.

Photos by Stephanie Trapp/[email protected]

Mario Ortega Jr. can be reached at [email protected].




Dulorme Blows Away Ambriz in One


SANTA YNEZ, CALIFORNIA – Puerto Rican welterweight rising star Thomas Dulorme continues to impress ringside observers as he quickly disposed of Aris Ambriz inside of one round in the Showtime-televised main event at the Chumash Casino Resort on Friday night.

Dulorme (14-0, 11 KOs) of Carolina, Puerto Rico dropped Ambriz (16-3-1, 8 KOs) of Azusa, California hard with a sweeping left early in the first round. Ambriz, 144, rose from the mat, but was quickly backed against the ropes. Dulorme, 143, dropped Ambriz with the ensuing combination. Referee David Mendoza stopped the bout without a count at 2:12 of the opening round.

With the victory, Dulorme, the WBA #3/WBC #9/WBO #15 ranked welterweight, claimed the vacant NABF Welterweight title and appears ready for a step-up in the level of his competition.


In the televised co-feature, world ranked contender Jonathan Gonzalez (15-0, 13 KOs) of San Juan, Puerto Rico scored a ten-round unanimous decision over pugnacious Billy Lyell (24-11, 5 KOs) of Youngstown, Ohio.

Gonzalez, the WBO #8/WBA #9/WBC #13 ranked light middleweight, looked to be a full weight class bigger than Lyell in the ring – an advantage that largely told the story of the fight. Gonzalez, 156, was able to walk through the offense of Lyell, 153, and even when out landed, it was the Puerto Rican’s power shots that did most damage.

Through the first half of the fight, Gonzalez pressed Lyell back, eventually bloodying the Youngstown native’s mouth in the third. Even when in retreat, Lyell traded with Gonzalez punch-for-punch, but the young prospect would usually smirk in response.

Late in the fight, Gonzalez, who had hit the scales five times in order to make the contracted weight limit, went into a shell and allowed Lyell to have some moments.
Lyell controlled the ninth, even playing to the crowd, as Gonzalez mostly followed him around the ring.

Gonzalez snarled at Lyell’s opening volley to start the tenth and turned up his output level from the three previous rounds. In the end, all three official judges scored the late Lyell rally, but still had Gonzalez the winner by the wide margin of 98-92 and 97-93 twice.

Roman Morales (9-0, 6 KOs) of San Ardo, California scored five knockdowns en route to an impressive fourth-round stoppage of late replacement Ernie Marquez (9-10-2, 3 KOs) of Fort Morgan, Colorado.

Marquez, 120, took the fight on Wednesday and by the second round it was clear he was in over his head. After the fifth knockdown, referee David Mendoza waved off the fight at 2:23 of the fourth round. Morales, 120 ½, appears ready to tackle the next level.

Former amateur standout Roy Tapia (3-0, 2 KOs) of East Los Angeles, California made short work of Brice Yeniki (0-6) of North Las Vegas, Nevada with a devastating first-round knockout. Tapia, 123, pressured Yeniki, 120 ½, to the ropes, where he eventually uncorked a hellacious left hook. Yeniki was clearly out, and referee Marcos Rosales stopped the bout without a count at 2:34 of the first round.

Rufino Serrano (12-3) of Santa Maria, California by way of Morelia, Michoacan de Ocampo, Mexico boxed his way to his second career victory over longtime journeyman Rodrigo Aranda (8-17-2, 2 KOs) of Las Vegas, Nevada by way of Tabasco, Zacatecas, Mexico.

Serrano, 126, fought at close quarters in the first few rounds, which Aranda, 128, welcomed. However, Serrano’s edge in hand speed won out over Aranda’s determined attack. By mid fight Serrano settled into the jab-and-move style his following has been accustomed seeing over the years at the Chumash Casino Resort.

After a point deduction in the sixth for a low blow on Aranda’s hip, Serrano was awarded the unanimous six-round decision by scores of 57-56 and 59-54 twice. In December of 2010, Serrano dropped Aranda in the first round en route to another six-round decision.

In his second attempt at gaining a victory on U.S. soil, Azat Hovhannesyan (2-1, 1 KO) of Glendale, California by way of Yerevan, Armenia punished William Fisher (0-5) of Victorville, California before scoring the stoppage in the fourth round.

Hovhannesyan, 126, opened up in the second round with right hand leads against the southpaw Fisher, 128, to great effect. Hovhannesyan routinely rushed inside without caution, while Fisher pushed most of his punches. Hovhannesyan pummeled Fisher throughout the third as referee Marcos Rosales looked poised to stop it. Finally in the fourth, Hovhannesyan dropped Fisher near the ropes with a two-handed attack. When Fisher gamely rose, he was soon met with a right uppercut that snapped back his head and pressed Rosales to leap in and call a halt to the contest at 2:43 of the fourth.

Two amateur exhibitions opened the card, as Daniel Flores of the Paso Boxing Gym in Paso Robles, California took on Manuel Romero, also of the Paso Boxing Gym and Oscar Mendoza of the Santa Maria Boxing Club in Santa Maria, California met Manny Flores, also of Santa Maria Boxing Club.

Two additional amateur exhibitions took place later in the evening, as Evander Augustine of the Paso Boxing Gym took on Brandon Gutierrez of the Central Coast Boxing Club in Santa Maria and Rocky Natartez of the Santa Maria Boxing Club met Freddy Perez of Ray Baca’s Boxing Academy in Lompoc, California.

Photos by Tom Casino/Showtime

Mario Ortega Jr. can be reached at [email protected].

Regus launches Android app.

TradeArabia (Manama, Bahrain) February 26, 2012 (Date: Sunday, February 26, 2012 ) Regus, leading provider of serviced office accommodation, has launched an android app which allows users to search and map Regus locations globally. go to website free blackberry apps

The new app brings flexible work to the fingertips of over 250 million Android device users worldwide, said a statement.

It can also be used to book or inquire about Regus’ many flexible workspace options such as meeting rooms, day offices or video-communications suites in their local area.

The company previously launched an iPhone app in 2010 and a Blackberry app in 2011, the statement said.

“Our iPhone and Blackberry apps already enable over 30,000 daily users to plug into the Regus network while working on-the-move, and now our Android app ensures that users of Android devices have the same ability to connect to and access the Regus information, whenever and wherever they need it,” said Mark Dixon, CEO of Regus.

“The Regus Android app completes the full suite for our mobile applications portfolio, and with 700,000 new devices being activated every week, we are delighted to be accessible on the Android platform,” he said. here free blackberry apps

Designed and built by Wavana Interactive, the application enables professionals to search Regus’ global network to locate centers to suit their business needs.

Users can easily locate their nearest Regus location on-the-go using GPS (including filtering by facilities), find it on a map and get turn by turn directions, the statement said.

A full description of each Regus location, its facilities, photos and directions by road, public transport and air are provided and a range of enquiry options including tap calling, requesting call back or scheduling a visit to view a Regus location are available, it said.

Users can book a meeting room or day office, and share details of Regus locations with meeting attendees and colleagues.

Users can also watch YouTube videos that provide information about the company and its products, it said. — TradeArabia News Service Provided by Syndigate.info an Albawaba.com company




Dulorme Set for Replacement Ambriz


SANTA YNEZ, CALIFORNIA — Touted rising welterweight Thomas Dulorme aims to impress in his West Coast debut as he takes on Aris Ambriz in the ten-round Showtime-televised main event emanating from the Chumash Casino Resort Friday night. Fighters weighed in Thursday evening for the six-bout card.

After turning professional in Florida in 2008, Dulorme (13-0, 10 KOs) of Carolina, Puerto Rico returned to the States for three fights in 2011, highlighted by a comprehensive decision over former titleholder DeMarcus Corley in June. Dulorme, the WBA #3/WBC #9/WBO #15 ranked welterweight, capped his year with a nine-round unanimous decision over former title challenger Charlie Jose Navarro in Panama in October.

“I feel I got tested and taken into deep, deep water in my last fight against Navarro, but I learned to swim that night,” Dulorme told Showtime on Friday. Dulorme, who scaled 143-pounds Thursday, had been scheduled to begin his 2012 campaign against Jose Reynoso, but a training injury forced a change in opponents just ten days ago.

In stepped Aris Ambriz (16-2-1, 8 KOs) of Azusa, California (who had gone 0-1-1 against Reynoso) for Friday’s vacant NABF Welterweight title bout. Ambriz, who has rarely fought above 140-pounds, rebounded from a loss to well regarded Pier Oliver Cote with a six-round decision over Juan Santiago last June. Ambriz weighed in at 144-pounds at Thursday’s weigh-in.


In the televised co-feature, 2008 Puerto Rican Olympian Jonathan Gonzalez (14-0, 13 KOs) of San Juan looks to add former title challenger Billy Lyell to his list of credentials in a ten-round light middleweight bout.

Lyell (24-10, 5 KOs) of Youngstown, Ohio has become a favorite opponent of matchmakers since his shocking 2009 upset of John Duddy. The win over the previously unbeaten Irishman eventually landed Lyell cracks at the IBF and WBC Silver Middleweight titles, which the Ohio native lost fairly one-sidedly in distance bouts to Sebastian Sylvester and Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. in 2010 and 2011 respectively.

Gonzalez, the WBO #8/WBA #9/WBC #13 ranked light middleweight, impressed as he stepped up in class last time out with a one-sided ten-round unanimous decision over former contender Richard Gutierrez in June. Gonzalez had been scheduled to fight in November, but an illness forced his lengthy hiatus. “I got very sick and was in bed for two days,” said Gonzalez. “I probably still could have fought in November and I wanted to fight, but my team said ‘no’.” Gonzalez weighed in at 156 after several attempts, while Lyell scaled 153-pounds on his first try.

Super bantamweight prospect Roman Morales (8-0, 5 KOs) of San Ardo, California will make his fifth appearance at the Chumash Casino Resort against late replacement Ernie Marquez (9-9-2, 3 KOs) of Fort Morgan, Colorado in a bout slated for either eight or six rounds, depending on how long previous bouts last.

After a decorated amateur career, Morales had a stellar rookie year in 2011, posting eight mostly dominate victories. Despite his professional inexperience, Morales has shown the poise of a veteran throughout his early career. Marquez, who scored an upset of previously unbeaten former Olympian Yan Barthelemy back in 2008, took the fight on Wednesday. Morales’ original opponent Jonathan Alcantara had withdrawn with a wrist injury. Morales weighed-in at 120 ½-pounds, while Marquez scaled 120.

Local favorite Rufino Serrano (11-3) of Santa Maria, California by way of Morelia, Michoacan de Ocampo, Mexico will take on journeyman Rodrigo Aranda (8-16-2, 2 KOs) of Las Vegas, Nevada by way of Tabasco, Zacatecas, Mexico in a six-round featherweight contest. Serrano, appearing in a Chumash ring for the tenth time, scaled 126-pounds. Aranda, a loser of nine straight, weighed-in at 128-pounds. In December of 2010, Serrano dropped Aranda in the first round en route to a six-round decision.

Roy Tapia (2-0, 1 KO) of East Los Angeles, California will meet Brice Yeniki (0-5) of North Las Vegas, Nevada in a four-round super bantamweight bout. Fighting at the Chumash Casino for the third straight time, Tapia, the 2007 National PAL Champion at 125-pounds, appears to be easing into his pro career. If there is something to shoot for in tonight’s bout for Tapia, perhaps becoming the first to stop Yeniki would be the goal. Yeniki has gone the distance in all five of his defeats, including one against a then 3-0 Christopher Martin back in 2006.

Hoping his second appearance in the States goes better than his first, Azat Hovhannesyan (1-1, 1 KO) of Glendale, California by way of Yerevan, Armenia will take on winless William Fisher (0-4) of Victorville, California in a four-round featherweight bout. Hovannesyan retuned to Armenia to stop a no-hoper last September, having had lost a unanimous decision in his debut on U.S. soil in April. Hovhannesyan weighed-in at 126-pounds, while Fisher came in at 128.

Tickets for tonight’s event, promoted by Gary Shaw Productions, are available online at StarTickets.com.

Quick Weigh-in Results:

NABF Welterweight Championship, 10 Rounds
Dulorme 143
Ambriz 144

Light Middleweights, 10 Rounds
Gonzalez 156
Lyell 153

Super Bantamweights, 6 or 8 Rounds
Morales 120 ½
Marquez 120

Featherweights, 6 Rounds
Serrano 126
Aranda 128

Super Bantamweights, 4 Rounds
Tapia 123
Yeniki 120 ½

Featherweights, 4 Rounds
Hovhannesyan 126
Fisher 128

Photos by Tom Casino/Showtime

Mario Ortega Jr. can be reached at [email protected]




Reynoso on Injury

Yesterday it was announced that 140-pound prospect Jose Reynoso was forced to pull out of his scheduled ten-round bout against unbeaten Thomas Dulorme, which was to have taken place next Friday at the Chumash Casino Resort in Santa Ynez, California, due to a hip injury suffered in training. Reynoso, extremely disappointed to withdraw from the Showtime-televised bout, explained the cause of the injury to 15rounds.com today.

“I was hitting the double end bag and I slipped and fell on my hip,” explained Reynoso (15-3-1, 2 KOs) of Riverside, California. “I couldn’t get up and had to be carried to the car, where I was taken to the emergency room.”

In a Gary Shaw Productions press release, it was noted that Reynoso’s hip was popped back into place at the hospital, where a doctor informed him that he had suffered a hip contusion.

“I am sorry to disappoint everyone,” added Reynoso, who has impressively gone 5-0-1 since his last defeat, including wins over previously unbeaten Aris Ambriz and Hector Serrano. The fight with Dulorme would have far and away been Reynoso’s highest profile fight as well as his toughest test to date.

Dulorme (13-0, 10 KOs) of Carolina, Puerto Rico remains without an opponent as of now, though he will remain in the main event against a replacement. “My team is diligently looking for an opponent to step in,” said Shaw in yesterday’s press release. “Right now we have a few names that we’re looking at. An announcement will be made shortly.”

Photo by Carlos Baeza/Thompson Boxing Promotions

Mario Ortega Jr. can be reached at [email protected].




Sanchez Remains Unbeatable at Home


WOODLAND, CALIFORNIA — Rising prospect and local draw Alan Sanchez thrilled his vocal following yet again with a hard-fought eight-round unanimous decision over Alberto Herrera in the Telefutura Solo Boxeo main event at the Woodland Community & Senior Center on Friday night.

Sanchez (9-2-1, 3 KOs) of Fairfield, California entered the ring four times in 2011, three times in Fairfield and once in nearby Woodland. All four times Sanchez emerged victorious in fairly one-sided, but action-packed bouts.

On Friday, Herrera (8-4-1, 5 KOs) of Riverside, California fought the type of fight he needed to in order to be successful. Sanchez just made certain he was not. The shorter and shorter-armed Herrera, 146, took the fight to Sanchez’ chest, but was still outfought nonetheless. When Sanchez, 149, did get at range and keep Herrera on the end of his punches, the Riverside resident was even less successful.

Sanchez utilized a lead right from the early going. It was a punch that Herrera rarely had a remedy for from a defensive standpoint. After maintaining his distance for the first two rounds, Sanchez decided to exchange with Herrera at close range to end the third. Herrera managed to land his first few clean blows, but it was still a Sanchez round.


The fourth was perhaps the only round that Herrera won outright. Herrera, the younger brother of world ranked light welterweight contender Mauricio Herrera, briefly forced Sanchez to the ropes and kept the fight at close range for much of the round. Though he faded late in the stanza, Herrera did well early and got the best of a heated exchange late.

As the fight progressed, Sanchez would fight toe-to-toe in stretches, but eventually find a way to utilize his edge in reach. Sensing he was behind in the fight, Herrera came forward non-stop in round seven. However, Sanchez picked his shots well and landed clean whenever he let go with his hands. To his credit, Herrera fought hard until the end, but just did not have an answer for Sanchez’ size and reach.

All three official scorers, Dan Collins, Marty Sammon and Michael Tate, had the fight for Sanchez by the score of 79-73.


Guy Robb (7-0, 3 KOs) of Sacramento, California sent his large contingent of supporters on hand home happy with a dominant fifth-round stoppage over durable Hugo Ramos (3-11-2, 1 KO) of Palm Springs, California.

Heading into the bout, Ramos, 127, had been stopped only once, having gone the distance with prospects Randy Caballero, Jonathan Arrellano, Joel Diaz and Gabriel Tolmajyan. Robb, 127, predicted a knockout and decided early on a concentrated body attack was his best hope to make his prediction come true.

Ramos was fleet of foot early, but Robb began to land his right to the body by late in the first. It would be Robb’s go to punch throughout the fight, as Ramos continually covered up, leaving his body exposed. Though he clearly had the better boxing skills, Robb was quite comfortable mixing it up at close quarters as well.

By the fourth, Ramos was really feeling the effects of every right to his ribs. While he continued to swing away, the sting had really left Ramos’ punches as Robb relentlessly pursued him around the ring. Sensing his man was in trouble in the fifth, Robb upped his attack even more, eventually catching Ramos with against the ropes. Finally protected his body, Ramos left himself open for a series of clean blows to his head, which prompted referee Ed Collantes to stop the bout at 2:18 of the fifth.


Unbeaten light welterweight Jonathan Chicas (4-0, 3 KOs) of San Francisco, California looked impressive in spoiling the debut of heralded former amateur standout Paul Cano (0-1) of Clovis, California via second-round kayo.

Cano, 144, pressed the action early, but could not avoid Chicas’ counter right hands. Late in the opening round Chicas, 144, caught Cano with a right in an exchange. Two more overhand rights followed, the last one forced Cano to the mat for a knockdown. Cano appeared to have clear eyes as referee Ray Balewicz gave him a standing eight-count with seconds to go in the round. After one more Chicas overhand right, the round ended with Cano a bit shaky going to his corner.

Cano came out pressing again in the second, but again found himself on the end of a series of overhand rights in an exchange. After six straight overhand rights, Cano legs came out from under him as he fell back into the blue corner. Though he popped up quickly, Balewicz opted to stop the fight without a count. Time of the stoppage was 31 seconds of the second round.


In a battle between former sparring partners, Nicolas Balestra (2-1, 1 KO) of Sacramento outlasted Will Walters (0-3) of Sacramento en route to a third-round stoppage. Balestra, 146, and Walters, 146, came out at each other with no feeling out process from the opening bell. Walters boxed well early, but it appeared Balestra’s edge in power began to take over early in the third. Balestra’s right began to find a home without an answer coming from Walters. After a succession of rights by Balestra snapped Walters’ head back, referee Ed Collantes stopped the contest at 1:13 of the third.

In the opener, Oscar Godoy (4-1, 2 KOs) of Watsonville, California dominated journeyman Juan Carlos Diaz (7-16, 6 KOs) of Lakeside, California by way of Ciudad Nezahualcoyotl, Estado de Mexico, Mexico en route to a third-round stoppage.

After two one-sided rounds, Godoy, 150, really pressed the issue in the third. With Diaz, 152, covering up against the ropes, Godoy unleashed in combination and landed a damaging right that forced the Mexican to wilt against the third strand. With Diaz prone, Godoy continued to throw before referee Ray Balewicz waved off the bout at 2:44 of round three.


In the walkout bout, Dmitry Chudinov (6-0, 3 KOs) of Los Angeles, California by way of Serpukhov, Russia turned back the challenge of short notice opponent Tony Hirsch (12-5-2, 6 KOs) of Oakland, California via six-round majority decision.

Hirsch, who took the fight on a day’s notice and at his holiday weight, 180, was successful in spots in a bout that featured some hard to score rounds. Chudinov, 178, likely got credit for coming forward and for some clean punching on the inside. Hirsch fought off his back foot looking to counter the naturally larger Chudinov. Judges Dan Collins and Marty Sammon saw the fight 59-55 and 58-56 respectively for Chudinov. Judge Michael Tate had the fight even, 57-57.

Photos by Stephanie Trapp/[email protected]

Mario Ortega Jr. can be reached at [email protected].




Sanchez Back on Solo Boxeo

WOODLAND, CALIFORNIA — In the season finale of Telefutura Solo Boxeo tomorrow night, welterweight prospect Alan Sanchez will appear on the network for the third time this year as he takes on late fill-in opponent Alberto Herrera in the eight-round main event emanating from the Woodland Community & Senior Center. Fighters weighed in this afternoon at Paco’s Authentic Mexican Restaurant in downtown Woodland.

After taking his entire early career on the road, Sanchez (8-2-1, 3 KOs) of Fairfield, California will be fighting near home for the fourth consecutive time as he takes on Herrera (8-3-1, 5 KOs) of Riverside, California.

Sanchez comes in off of a dominate performance in June, as he battered durable Clint Coronel before forcing a cut-induced seventh-round stoppage in Fairfield. Sanchez is currently riding a three-fight win streak which began after a controversial draw against Luis Grajeda in September of last year. Sanchez had Grajeda down twice, but left San Diego, California with the draw in a fight he clearly deserved.

Herrera, the brother of world ranked contender Mauricio Herrera, ended a three-fight skid this past October with a six-round unanimous decision over previously unbeaten Marcus Robinson. Herrera took the fight with Sanchez on short notice, after originally scheduled KeAndre Gibson was forced to withdraw with a training injury. Herrera scaled 146, while Sanchez came in at 149-pounds at today’s weigh-in.

In the televised co-feature, Guy Robb (6-0, 2 KOs) of Sacramento, California will take on tough Hugo Ramos (3-10-2, 1 KO) of Palm Springs, California in a six-round super featherweight bout. Robb comes in off of his career-best win to date, a dominate six-round decision over heralded prospect Pablo Armenta this past September. Ramos has been in with many of the top featherweight prospects in the state and always held his own. Robb and Ramos both weighed in at 127-pounds.

In an intriguing match-up, unbeaten Jonathan Chicas (3-0, 2 KOs) of San Francisco, California will take on debuting former amateur standout Paul Cano of Clovis, California in a four-round welterweight bout. Chicas, who holds a win over former accomplished amateur and frequent Cano sparring partner Michael Islas, weighed in at 144-pounds. Cano, who has been one of the top amateurs in the nation at his weight class over the last two years, also weighed in at 144.

Nicolas Balestra (1-1) of Sacramento will take on former gym mate Will Walters (0-2) of Sacramento in a four-round welterweight bout. Balestra, a former MMA competitor, got into the win column with a four-round decision over Alex Vlas in November. Walters, who used to spar Balestra on a daily basis, is still in search of his first pro win after two hard-fought battles with Bret De La Torre in April and November. Walters and Balestra both scaled 146-pounds.

Dmitry Chudinov (5-0, 3 KOs) of Los Angeles, California by way of Serpukhov, Russia will take on rugged Tony Hirsch (12-4-2, 6 KOs) of Oakland, California in a four-round super middleweight bout. Chudinov, a 2008 World Cup Championships bronze medalist, weighed in at 169-pounds at today’s weigh-in. Hirsch, who took the fight on very short notice, will weigh in tomorrow.

Oscar Godoy (3-1, 1 KO) of Watsonville, California will take on journeyman Juan Carlos Diaz (7-15, 6 KOs) of Lakeside, California by way of Ciudad Nezahualcoyotl, Estado de Mexico, Mexico in a four-round light middleweight bout. Godoy, originally scheduled to take on Luis Sanchez, weighed in at 150-pounds. Diaz, who has dropped his last ten bouts, including nine to undefeated opponents, weighed in at 152-pounds.

Tickets for tonight’s event, promoted by Golden Boy Promotions, Don Chargin Productions, Paco Presents and Jorge Marron Productions, are available by calling Paco’s Authentic Mexican Restaurant in Woodland at 530-669-7946, Taqueria Guadalajara #1 in Woodland at 530-668-0628 or Travis Credit Union in Woodland at 530-668-0573.

Quick Weigh-in Results:

Welterweights, 8 Rounds
Sanchez 149
Herrera 146

Featherweights, 6 Rounds
Robb 127
Ramos 127

Welterweights, 4 Rounds
Chicas 144
Cano 144

Welterweights, 4 Rounds
Balestra 146
Walters 146

Light Middleweights, 4 Rounds
Godoy 150
Diaz 152

Super Middleweights, 4 Rounds
Chudinov 169
Hirsch*

*will weigh-in tomorrow

Mario Ortega Jr. can be contacted at [email protected].




Introducing Paul Cano


Troubled youth finds his way into a boxing gym and turns his life around. Yes, that is a story that has been told before, but there are reasons why it never gets old. There is something captivating about what boxing has done and can do to so drastically change lives for the better. Former amateur standout Paul Cano, who turns pro this Friday at the Woodland Community & Senior Center in Woodland, California, is yet another example of the positive impact the sport can have.

Before he found boxing at the age of fifteen, Cano, who grew up and resides in Clovis, California, was headed down a dangerous path. “I was a troubled kid,” recalls Cano. “I was getting in a lot of trouble in school and with my parents. I was stealing, gangbanging, doing a lot of drugs.”

First it was Cano’s brother Roman that took to boxing, at the behest of his parents. “They were getting into some trouble, and their dad kind of showed up at my PAL center,” recalls Pete Lopes, who ran the boxing program for the Clovis Police Athletic League and would go on to train both Cano brothers. “Me and Roman started working, and things started going well with him. Paul kind of figured it was working for his brother, so he decided to check out this Coach Pete guy and see what could happen.”

Almost right away Lopes could recognize qualities in Paul Cano that gave him the idea he had a fighter with potential on his hands. “At first I didn’t know what to make of him, because he was really quiet and didn’t say much,” remembers Lopes. “But I knew his brother had a lot of moxy, so I just kind of figured he was not too far off from his brother. And him being the youngest, he’s probably learned a lot from them. The minute we put him in the ring, he was really tough. He was raw and chunky and out of breath, but he was a tough, tough kid.”

When Cano first came to the boxing gym, he was a troubled kid that played lineman at about 220-pounds. Soon everything would change. “What boxing did for me was teach me a lot of discipline and also made a lot of my energy go from doing all those bad things to spending all my energy at the gym. So by the time I got home from the gym, I didn’t have time or energy to sneak out or do those other things. The whole change in my life was huge, everything from my relationship with my parents getting better, to me going back to church.”

With his new found discipline, Cano quickly got into shape and started to have success in the ring. “Within a couple months, he was sparring everyone in the gym and I noticed he was real addictive as far as the training was concerned,” says Lopes. “He worked really hard and lost a lot of weight quick. His first amateur fight was at 178-pounds and he stopped the guy.” By his eighth fight, Cano had won the California state tournament to advance to the 2008 Junior Olympics in Michigan, where he advanced to the quarterfinals at 138-pounds.

In 2010, Cano would take trips to Little Rock, Arkansas for the National Golden Gloves and Colorado Springs, Colorado for the USA Boxing National Championships, where he made it to the quarterfinals, losing to USA Boxing #1 ranked 141-pounder Pedro Sosa. “It was big for me, to see that boxing could take me not just around Fresno County, but to where I could go on a plane to another state where I had never been before,” says Cano. “It was huge for me to be over there and get that experience and to represent California. That was another big eye opener to be blessed to do something like that.”

Despite his success as an amateur, Cano and his team have always felt his style was much better suited for the pros. In addition, as Cano carved out his reputation in the amateurs, it became increasingly difficult to find willing opponents, so over the course of the last year especially Cano’s focus shifted more towards preparing himself for his debut and becoming a more experienced and technically sound fighter.

“We’ve definitely been in the gym for a long time,” says Cano. “We haven’t been traveling for competition as much, but we have been traveling to get good sparring and for training. We have had our minds set on the pros and becoming the best pro. We’ve been going up and down California getting the best sparring with champs.” In the last year Cano has shared the ring with world ranked contenders Eloy Perez and John Molina Jr. among others.

For his first pro bout, a four-rounder contested at 145-pounds, Cano is doing something most former national level amateur fighters never do and that is fight a 3-0 fighter, in this case Jonathan Chicas of San Francisco, California. The move is just one step in a larger plan for Cano and his team.

“We want to change the way boxing is a little bit,” explains Lopes. “We want to be the ones that will step up and say we will come to your backyard and fight you. I know who I have as a fighter. I know his reputation and I appreciate Jonathan Chicas in taking the fight, for stepping up, because it is a risk on his part. We really have nothing to lose. He has a 3-0 record and it would be really hard to find a 0-1 guy or a 1-0 guy that would be willing to fight Cano. We would literally have to get someone from another country, because everyone else knows him. We feel like we are between a rock and a hard place, but we also feel like we can win this fight and win this fight in convincing fashion.”

Cano is very much onboard with Lopes’ plan. “We are ready for anything,” says Cano. “My team and I, we’ve been training so hard. We know who we can beat and we know that we can beat Chicas. It was a surprise to us that he took the fight, but now that we know he is going to take the fight, we want to show boxing and the world that I am coming out. I am not ducking anybody. We are here to fight anybody at any time. We are here to come up and let everyone know we are the best. We are here to do the quick. We don’t want to fight any bums. We want to fight the best and let everybody know that we are the best.”

While success in the ring may be expected of Cano as he ventures into the pros, nothing in this sport is ever guaranteed. However, Cano has already succeeded in transforming his life, no matter how many wins or losses he amasses. “I am very proud of him and the professionalism he’s shown in his work ethic,” says his trainer Lopes. “He is just a quality individual and it makes me happy. It makes me hopeful that he is going to be a great example for other kids who have a life just like him, or have a life worse than him. That they can fall in love with something and people will help them, and help them evolve to be a good person and a professional. And that’s the most important thing, a professional.”

Tickets for Friday’s event, promoted by Don Chargin Productions, Paco Presents, Jorge Marron Productions and Golden Boy Promotions, are available by calling Paco’s Mexican Restaurant in Woodland at 530-669-7946, Taqueria Guadalajara #1 in Woodland at 530-668-0628 or Travis Credit Union in Woodland at 530-668-0573.

Mario Ortega Jr. can be reached at [email protected].




Mares Proves to be Elite

Abner MaresANAHEIM, CALIFORNIA — In the biggest fight of his career, Abner Mares fought the best fight of his career and perhaps validated some of his prior accomplishments with a comprehensive twelve-round unanimous decision in his rematch with former champion Joseph Agbeko at the Honda Center on Saturday night.

Mares (23-0-1, 13 KOs) of Hawaiian Gardens, California fought a smart fight and proved to have more dimensions than did Agbeko (28-4, 22 KOs) of Bronx, New York by way of Accra, Ghana.

Mares opened up in the second and got the crowd into the fight, as he forced Agbeko, the WBC #4/IBF #3/WBO #12 ranked bantamweight, to the ropes and landed well to the body. Despite holding a clear edge in the round, one Agbeko left appeared to be responsible for a small cut near Mares’ right eye. The small cut eventually became a big cut as the fight would progress, but Mares appeared to keep it out of his mind.

While Mares was balanced in his attack, Agbeko turned into a headhunter in the early going much to his detriment. More often than not, when Agbeko broke through and landed clean, such as he did with his left in the sixth, it only inspired Mares to turn up his offense. Closing the round, Mares landed the better shot in an exchange and follow with a solid right and a left hook shortly after.

Throughout the fight, Mares would continue to throw when most fighters would be satisfied holding on. With Agbeko leaning over or holding on, Mares would hit anything he could until referee Lou Moret would call a break or Agbeko would do something about it himself.

If there was a hope for Agbeko as the fight moved into its final third, it was Mares’ badly swollen and cut right eye. “King Kong” would catch Mares in the spot he needed to with one or two, but Mares defended it enough that it did not endanger his stronghold in the bout.

Rounds eleven and twelve featured some frantic action. Agbeko caught Mares with a clean right uppercut as the champion moved inside early in the eleventh. Mares seemed invigorated by the shot, and got the best of a two-way exchange, as he landed clean head shots to close out the round. Mares came out strong in the twelfth, and disappointingly Agbeko seemed to have no sense of urgency. Both fighters took the fight home in the final seconds, as they exchanged until the final bell.

All three judges scored the bout for Mares, 118-110, who retained his IBF and WBC Silver Bantamweight titles. “I’m happy my fans finally saw my true boxing skills,” said Mares after the fight. Due to the controversial rulings of referee Russell Mora in their first fight, Mares clearly had a desire to leave no bout who the better fighter was. “I proved I beat him the first time and I beat him again,” said Mares.


In the co-feature, Anselmo Moreno (32-1-1, 11 KOs) of Panama City, Panama retained his WBA Bantamweight title with a wide unanimous twelve-round decision over Vic Darchinyan (37-4-1, 27 KOs) of Sydney, New South Wales, Australia by way of Vanadzor, Armenia.

Moreno, 118, had some trouble getting off in the early going as he figured out the awkward style of Darchinyan, 117 ¾, but the Panamanian eventually settled into combination of boxing on the outside while holding his own on the inside.

Moreno opened the second with a straight left, but Darchinyan, the WBA #1/WBO #4 ranked bantamweight, came right back and forced Moreno into a corner. Moreno wisely moved out and returned to center ring. By the third, Darchinyan was clearly getting frustrated that he could not find Moreno with any consistency, as was evidenced when the challenger received a warning for hitting Moreno behind the head at the end of the round.

Darchinyan’s frustration boiled over again at the end of the next round, as he was deducted a point for throwing Moreno to the canvas. The champion had been holding Darchinyan’s right arm excessively before the throw.

Darchinyan appeared to be hoping to land one big shot that would change the fight, but it had to be disheartening that when he landed clean Moreno took his punch well. More importantly, Moreno knew how not to get caught by more than one in row. Midway through the fight, Darchinyan utilized an unorthodox technique of running into range and then firing his left. For the most part, the hard lefts flew over Moreno’s head.

After a couple of close rounds, Moreno landed in combination to start the eighth. With Darchinyan in a brief moment of retreat, Moreno hurt the challenger with two body shots. Darchinyan stemmed some of Moreno’s momentum late in the round, lastly landing a stiff left at the end of the round.

Moreno landed another solid combination in round nine that seemed to briefly stagger Darchinyan. To his credit, the former champion fought back may have deserved the round. The action was tense in rounds ten and eleven, as Darchinyan managed to keep Moreno off balance, but failed to land anything that could change the direction of the fight.

Moreno opted to box at range to open the twelfth as if he was protecting a big lead, which actually created an opening for Darchinyan. Midway through the round, Moreno went down from what looked like a punch from ringside, but was waved off as a slip by referee Raul Caiz Jr. Moreno was slow to get up from the fall, and was more stationary in the moments after returning to his feet. Still Darchinyan failed to land one of his wild lefts and Moreno moved around the ring to close the fight.

“I was going for big punches, but couldn’t find a home for my left,” admitted Darchinyan, after the bout. With the win, Moreno, who took the cards by the scores of 120-107, 117-110 and 116-111, successfully introduced himself to the U.S. television audience and added a recognizable name to his three-and-a-half year resume as a belt holder.

Eyeing the winner of one of tonight’s featured bouts, former titleholder Eric Morel (45-2, 23 KOs) of Madison, Wisconsin by way of San Juan, Puerto Rico did little to get any of the Showtime brass seated ringside excited about that prospect with a lackluster ten-round decision over Jose Silveira (12-5, 4 KOs) of Merida, Yucatán, Mexico.

After boxing and counter-punching his way through much of the first four rounds, Morel, 119 ½, opened up late in the fourth and through much of the fifth. Silveira, 119 ¾, held up well to Morel’s punches and offered back to little success. By the seventh, Morel went back to his jab-and-move style, much to the displeasure of the crowd. Though Silveira was game, he failed to force Morel to fight a fight that the Puerto Rican could lose. Two judges had it 98-92, while the third scored it 97-93 all for Morel.

Currently ranked WBA #6/WBC #9 at bantamweight and promoted by Golden Boy Promotions (the promoter of both Abner Mares and Anselmo Moreno), Morel has hopes his next fight is for a world title.

Former amateur star Frankie Gomez (12-0, 9 KOs) of East Los Angeles, California kept busy with a third-round knockout of an awkward James Hope (6-9-1, 4 KOs) of Rock Hill, South Carolina.

Hope, 137 ¾, looked to tie up Gomez, 138 ¾, as much as possible, which made for an ugly fight early. After two frustrating rounds, Gomez made room to land a devastating right that had Hope out before he hit the mat early in the third round. With no need to count, referee Tony Crebs immediately called a halt to the bout. Official time of the stoppage came at 53 seconds of the third.

In a bout fought forehead-to-forehead, Carlos Molina (15-0-1, 7 KOs) of Norwalk, California pounded out a hard-fought unanimous ten-round decision over Manuel Leyva (18-4, 10 KOs) of Downey, California. Though the scoring was justly wide for Molina, 137 ¾, the promising prospect met a willing adversary in Leyva, 139 ½.

After carefully picking his shots in the first, Molina staggered the southpaw Leyva with an overhand left at the bell to end round two. From that moment on, Molina was freer with his punches. As the fight progressed, Molina seemed comfortable standing on the inside, even if he had to take one from Leyva in order to land his own. Throughout the middle rounds, both fighters stood their ground and took turns taking their shots. Molina clearly held the edge in punching power, which gave him the edge round after round.

By the seventh, Leyva was finally giving up ground. Late in the round, Molina opened up and had Leyva in trouble in a corner. Molina uncorked a right hook at the bell that staggered Leyva, who looked lucky that time ran out when it did. Leyva managed to clear his head in between rounds and continued to take his shots until the end. The tenth featured one last two-way exchange to delight of the crowd. As far as “opponents” go, Leyva did his job of providing rounds and making Molina earn the decision, which came by scores of 100-90 and 99-91 twice.

Former title challenger Sakio Bika (29-5-2, 20 KOs) of Sydney, Australia ended a year-long layoff with a third-round stoppage of Alfredo Contreras (11-13-2, 5 KOs) of Los Mochis, Sinaloa, Mexico.

Fighting for the first time since being undressed by Andre Ward late last year, Bika, 168, forced a referee’s stoppage after opening up cuts over both of Contreras’ eyes. Bika, who held a clear edge in physical strength, threw wildly for much of the fight. In the third, Contreras forced some spirited exchanges, which Bika was happy to oblige. Unfortunately for the fans and Contreras, he came away with the two cuts that would ultimately cause the bout to be stopped, which referee Tony Crebs ruled came from legal blows. After the ringside physician looked over Contreras in the corner at the end of the third, Crebs waved off the bout.

A bout between middleweight prospect Omar Henry (11-0-1, 9 KOs) of Houston, Texas and Lester Gonzalez (12-5-3, 6 KOs) of San Diego, California ended before it ever really started.

After a nondescript opening stanza, Henry, 165 ¾, and Gonzalez, 163 ½, came together with their heads early in the second round. The result was a nasty gash opened up above Gonzalez’ right eyelid. After consulting with the ringside physician, referee David Mendoza called a halt to the bout. Official time of the stoppage was 57 seconds of round two. It will go down in the books as a technical draw.

Touted super bantamweight prospect Richard Contreras (9-0, 8 KOs) of Riverside, California battered Juan Sandoval (5-8-1, 3 KOs) of San Bernardino, California en route to a fourth-round referee’s stoppage in the night’s opening bout.

Contreras, 123 ½, pummeled Sandoval, 124, late in round three after rocking the journeyman with an overhand right. The bell saved Sandoval from a likely knockdown, but all that did was delay the inevitable. With Contreras swinging away at Sandoval in a corner early in the fourth, referee Tony Crebs elected to stop the mismatch. Time off the stoppage was 38 seconds of round four.

Photos by Tom Casino/Showtime

Mario Ortega Jr. can be reached at [email protected].




Dirrell in Line with Stoppage of St. Juste


SANTA YNEZ, CALIFORNIA — With an injury-induced fourth-round stoppage over Renan St. Juste in the Showtime-televised main event at the Chumash Resort Casino on Friday night, Anthony Dirrell became the mandatory challenger for the WBC Super Middleweight title currently held by Carl Froch.

The bout started tentatively for both fighters in the first before Dirrell (24-0, 21 KOs) of Flint, Michigan started to find a home for his straight right hand. The much-shorter St. Juste (23-3-1, 15 KOs) of Repentigny, Quebec, Canada found it hard to find his range or a way around Dirrell’s right in the early going.

The difference in power was evident in the second round, when Dirrell, 167, and St. Juste, 166 ½, exchanged hard left hooks. While Dirrell looked unfazed by the one he received, St. Juste was jolted back. St. Juste, who entered the bout as the WBC #2/WBO #4/WBA #13/IBF #15 ranked super middleweight, broke out of his shell a bit in the third. Unfortunately for the Canadian, he was still kept at a distance and could only wing wild shots at Dirrell, who patiently waited for such openings and usually made St. Juste pay for his poor judgment.

St. Juste found a home for a swinging left early in the fourth, but was soon stopped in his tracks when Dirrell found his body. Just as the fight started to get going, the top of St. Juste’s head crashed into Dirrell’s forehead. The accidental butt forced Dirrell to take a knee on the mat while referee Jack Reiss called for a timeout. The headbutt seemed to light a fire under Dirrell who went after St. Juste when action resumed, rocking him with a right hook.

With his opponent in trouble, Dirrell looked to unload. On unsteady legs and hoping to force a clinch, St. Juste reached to hold on to Dirrell. With St. Juste stumbling over, Dirrell opted to spin away, perhaps angling for the referee to call the fall a knockdown. When St. Juste got up from his awkward tumble, he emerged with an injured left shoulder. The wincing St. Juste, bent over with his left arm dangling, pointed out the injury to the referee who stopped the bout. The official time was 2:54 of round four.

While it may not have been the most satisfying way to win, Dirrell, who entered the bout as the WBC #1/WBA #2/IBF #14 ranked super middleweight, has to be happy with the end result. With the victory, Dirrell is now the mandatory challenger for the WBC title, which will be up for grabs in the Super Six World Boxing Classic tournament final between Carl Froch and Andre Ward on December 17th.


In the co-feature, IBF #14/WBO #14 ranked Jhonatan Romero (20-0, 12 KOs) of Cali, Colombia pulled off a minor upset against WBO #4/WBA #8/IBF #10 ranked 122-pounder Chris Avalos (19-2, 15 KOs) of Lancaster, California with a less than warmly received ten-round split decision.

Avalos, 121 ¾, was the aggressor throughout the contest while Romero, 121, consistently looked for one shot at a time. Avalos pressed early, but Romero had control for most of the first round. Romero backed Avalos up with a solid right and caught the Lancaster native with two more soon after. Just when Romero seemed to have the round, Avalos caught the Colombian with a head-snapping combination. Avalos followed his stunned opponent from one side of the ring to the other and dropped Romero with a two-fisted flurry at the bell to end the round.

Avalos seemed to carry the next two rounds with his higher output, while Romero looked to hold on the inside and wing wild shots at a distance. Occasionally Romero did land when he threw, most notably with a right uppercut from way outside in the second round.

Both fighters had their moments in the fourth. Romero found some success countering with hard shots of the ropes, and again found a home for his right uppercut. However, Avalos seemed to take all the shots well and was still the much busier fighter.

After some close middle rounds, Avalos stormed out in the eighth and rocked Romero against the ropes with a left hand. Much like late in the first round, Avalos followed-up with both hands as Romero tried to cover-up against the ropes. Though his head was snapped back a time or two, Romero withstood the flurry and remained on his feet.

After one of his worse rounds, Romero had one of his better rounds in the ninth. A one-two combination out of nowhere landed for Romero, who took advantage of a tiring Avalos and upped his offense. With the fight apparently on the table, Avalos and Romero exchange solid rights early in the tenth. Avalos still imposed himself as he had done for much of the fight, but when Romero would land they were often the harder shots.

In the end two judges favored Romero, 96-93 and 96-94 respectively, with one judge favoring Avalos, 96-94. Despite the close fight, the decision was loudly booed by the crowd.

In another closely-contested battle between a fighter from Colombian and a California resident, featherweight prospect Gabriel Tolmajyan (12-1-1, 3 KOs) of Glendale, California by way of Yerevan, Armenia scored the biggest win of his career over WBA #5/IBF #7 ranked 126-pounder Daulis Prescott (23-1, 17 KOs) of Barranquilla, Colombia via eight-round split decision.

A right-left combination which dropped Prescott, 127, in the fifth proved to be the difference in the scoring. Tolmajyan, 127, did not fully capitalize on the knockdown and allowed Prescott back into the fight, but banked enough rounds with the official scorers to take two cards, 76-75. The lone dissenting judge had the fight for Prescott, who was making his U.S. debut, 76-75.

2008 Colombian Olympian Darley Perez (24-0, 18 KOs) of San Pedro de Uraba, Colombia consistently pressured an outgunned Fernando Trejo (33-17-6, 19 KOs) of Jarrell, Texas by way of Mexico City, Distrito Federal, Mexico en route to a one-sided eight-round unanimous decision.

Trejo, 135, began the fight in an offensive mindset, but was quickly picked apart by Perez, 134, whenever he decided to throw. Perez, the WBA #4/IBF#9/WBO #10/WBC #13 ranked lightweight, was clearly the stronger fighter and did not appear too concerned by Trejo’s punches.

Perez had Trejo in the most trouble in the fourth as he landed a right uppercut that began a series of unanswered shots late in the round. Trejo managed to withstand the onslaught and battled his way off the ropes. If there was a knock to be made on Perez, it was that he seemed satisfied to take the decision, as Trejo continued to backpedal as the fight concluded. Perez simply walked down Trejo, but never really attempted to close the show. In the end, all three judges had the fight for Perez, 80-72.

Super bantamweight prospect Roman Morales (8-0, 5 KOs) of San Ardo, California continued to roll through his early career competition with a dominant six-round unanimous decision over Alejandro Castillo (4-2, 1 KO) of Denver, Colorado by way of Ciudad Cuauhtemoc, Chihuahua, Mexico.

After a cautious opening round, Morales, 120, settled in and began to punish Castillo, 119, in round two. Morales staggered Castillo with his right hand on three separate occasions in the round. With Castillo in retreat, Morales unloaded in combination as the round closed. With Castillo still feeling the effects of the previous round, Morales dropped the Denver resident with a right-left combination in a corner early in round three. When Castillo returned to his feet, Morales worked him to the body and head in an attempt to end the fight. Castillo caught a break when a double left hand that seemed to score a second knockdown was ruled a slip by referee Jack Reiss.

In rounds four and five, Castillo found his bicycle and managed to limit the damage Morales was able to cause. The occasional punch Castillo seemed to land just seemed to irritate Morales. In the sixth, Morales managed to pin Castillo in a corner, but Castillo stood up to the combination and lasted until the end. Scores read 59-54 and 60-53 twice for Morales.

Roy Tapia (2-0, 1 KO) of East Los Angeles, California scored a four-round unanimous decision over Jose Garcia (0-5) of Bakersfield, California. Outside of a sold round two for Garcia, 122 ¾, it was the clean punches of Tapia, 123, that carried the fight. Tapia was effective with well-placed counters throughout. Scores read 39-37 and 40-36 twice for Tapia.

Super bantamweight prospect Jonathan Arrellano (11-0-1, 2 KOs) of Ontario, California remained unbeaten with a six-round unanimous decision over always game Jonathan Alcantara (4-6-2) of Novato, California. In a fight that featured many two-way exchanges, Arrellano, 122, won over the judges with his higher work rate. Per usual, Alcantara, 122, made his opponent earn the victory, but in the end came up short against a touted opponent. Scores read 59- 55 and 58-56 twice for Arrellano.

In the walkout bout, Glenn Porras (27-3, 17 KOs) of M’lang, Cotabato, Philippines scored an eight-round unanimous decision over journeyman Adolfo Landeros (21-23-2, 10 KOs) of Hidalgo, Hidalgo, Mexico.

Porras, 120 ½, loaded up on wide left hooks to great effect all night against stationary Landeros, 122. Porras nearly scored a knocked with his left in the third as he wobbled Landeros against the ropes. When it looked as though the Mexican would go down, Porras backed away, which allowed Landeros the seconds he needed to survive.

To Landeros’ credit, he kept throwing back down the stretch of the fight and gave Porras trouble in spots in the final rounds. In the end it was a wide decision for Porras, 80-72 and 79-73 twice.

Photos by Tom Casino/Showtime

Mario Ortega Jr. can be reached at [email protected].




Dirrell-St. Juste Headlines Shobox


Having lost two years of his career while battling cancer, Anthony Dirrell hopes to make up for some lost time beginning tonight against world ranked Renan St. Juste in the Showtime-televised main event emanating from the Chumash Casino Resort in Santa Ynez, California. The twelve-round bout is sanctioned by the WBC as an eliminator, which means the victor will be put in line to eventually challenge the winner of the upcoming Carl Froch-Andre Ward unification fight.

Shortly after scoring a knockout in December 2006, Dirrell was diagnosed with non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma. Dirrell’s treatment and recovery kept him from training until September of 2008. In the three years since, Dirrell has reeled off eleven consecutive victories, most by stoppage and mostly against modest opposition. In his last bout, Dirrell (23-0, 20 KOs) of Flint, Michigan disposed of Kevin Engel inside of two rounds in July. Dirrell, the WBC #1/WBA #2/IBF #14 ranked super middleweight, weighed in at 167-pounds.

“It’s going to be a big fight,” said Dirrell on Thursday. “I’m ready mentally and physically. I’ve been training hard, working with my brother [Andre] and the team, Team Dirrell. I’m ready.”

WBC #2/WBO #4/WBA #13/IBF #15 ranked St. Juste (23-2-1, 15 KOs) of Repentigny, Quebec, Canada has only been campaigning at 168-pounds since last December when he scored the biggest win of his career: a second-round stoppage of Sebastien Demers. The victory completely turned around St. Juste’s career after an upset loss in his previous bout to Marcus Upshaw at middleweight.

“Being at 168 is better for me,” explains St. Juste, who weighed-in at 166 1/2-pounds. “It was difficult for me to make 160. I walk around in the 180s. At 168, I can keep my muscle and not worry about the weigh-in.”

The winner of tonight’s bout would be in line to eventually cash in on a money fight against the winner of the Carl Froch-Andre Ward WBC/WBA unification bout, which takes place later this month.

In the co-main event, WBO #4/WBA #8/IBF #10 ranked 122-pounder Chris Avalos (19-1, 15 KOs) of Lancaster, California takes on IBF #14/WBO #14 ranked Jhonatan Romero (19-0, 12 KOs) of Cali, Colombia in a ten-round super bantamweight bout.

Avalos moved up in the rankings with a ten-round unanimous decision over previously unbeaten prospect Khabir Suleymanov in June. The win marked Avalos’ third straight victory at 122-pounds after a weight-drained defeat at bantamweight against Christopher Martin in August of last year. Avalos scaled 121 ¾-pounds on Thursday.

Romero, a multiple-time former Colombian National champion, will be fighting outside of his home country for just the second time in his career. Avalos also represents a major step-up in class. The only notable name on the pro ledger of Romero came in his last bout on American soil, when he rose from a knockdown and scored a six-round decision over faded former super flyweight and bantamweight title challenger Cecilio Santos in June. Romero came in at 121-pounds Thursday.

2008 Colombian Olympian Darley Perez (23-0, 18 KOs) of San Pedro de Uraba, Colombia will take on veteran gatekeeper Fernando Trejo (33-16-6, 19 KOs) of Jarrell, Texas by way of Mexico City, Distrito Federal, Mexico in an eight-round lightweight bout.

Perez, the WBA #4/IBF#9/WBO #10/WBC #13 ranked lightweight, is coming off of a Showtime-televised win over Oscar Meza in September. Trejo, whose most notable victory came in 2005 over then-unbeaten Jose Armando Santa Cruz, was in the ring just a month ago. Trejo went the distance but lost a wide decision to lightweight prospect Jose Gonzalez in Puerto Rico. Perez weighed in at 134, while Trejo scaled 135-pounds.

Fighting for the first time outside of Colombia, WBA #5/IBF #7 ranked featherweight Daulis Prescott (23-0, 17 KOs) of Barranquilla, Colombia will take on once-beaten Gabriel Tolmajyan (11-1-1, 3 KOs) of Glendale, California by way of Yerevan, Armenia in an eight-round bout.

Prescott, the brother of Amir Khan-conqueror Breidis Prescott, would appear to be taking a step up in class. Despite his lofty rankings, Prescott has really yet to be even moderately tested as a pro. Tolmajyan has not exactly fought a who’s who, but has been impressive since dropping a four-round majority decision to still unbeaten Efrain Esquivas back in 2008. Prescott and Tolmajyan both scaled 127-pounds Thursday.

Glenn Porras (26-3, 17 KOs) of M’lang, Cotabato, Philippines will make his U.S. debut against journeyman Adolfo Landeros (21-22-2, 10 KOs) of Hidalgo, Hidalgo, Mexico in an eight-round super bantamweight bout. Porras, who came out to San Leandro, California to work with Nonito Donaire Sr. for this fight, weighed in at 120 ½-pounds Thursday. Landeros, 0-4-1 in his last five, scaled 122.

Super bantamweight prospect Roman Morales (7-0, 5 KOs) of San Ardo, California returns to the Chumash Casino Resort for the fourth time this year against Alejandro Castillo (4-1, 1 KO) of Denver, Colorado by way of Ciudad Cuauhtemoc, Chihuahua, Mexico in an eight-round bout. Despite having turned pro just this past February, Morales has quickly become one of the hottest prospects in the state. In his last ring appearance, Morales quickly dismantled Cain Garcia inside of two rounds in September. Castillo has yet to fight outside of Denver and enters tonight’s bout coming off of his lone defeat, a fourth-round stoppage suffered at the hands of Shawn Nichol in March of last year. Morales came in at 120-pounds to 119 for Castillo.

Super bantamweight prospect Jonathan Arrellano (10-0-1, 2 KOs) of Ontario, California will take on the always tough Jonathan Alcantara (4-5-2) of Novato, California in a six-round bout. Arrellano is fresh off the biggest win of his career, an eight-round decision over previously unbeaten Michael Ruiz Jr. to claim a minor title in September. Alcantara has consistently tested up-and-comers, including a draw with the aforementioned Ruiz. Arrellano and Alcantara both came in at the 122-pound super bantamweight limit at Thursday’s weigh-in.

In the opener, Roy Tapia (1-0, 1 KO) of East Los Angeles, California takes on Jose Garcia (0-4) of Bakersfield, California. Tapia, the 2007 National PAL Champion at 125-pounds, scaled 123 for his second pro bout on Thursday. Garcia, who has been matched incredibly tough in his career, weighed in at 122 ¾-pounds.

Tickets for tonight’s event, promoted by Gary Shaw Productions, are available online at StarTickets.com.

Quick Weigh-in Results:

WBC Super Middleweight Championship Eliminator, 12 Rounds
Dirrell 167
St. Juste 166 ½

Super Bantamweights, 10 Rounds
Avalos 121 ¾
Romero 121

Featherweights, 8 Rounds
Prescott 127
Tolmajyan 127

Lightweights, 8 Rounds
Perez 134
Trejo 135

Super Bantamweights, 6 Rounds
Morales 120
Castillo 119

Super Bantamweights, 6 Rounds
Arrellano 122
Alcantara 122

Super Bantamweights, 8 Rounds
Porras 120 ½
Landeros 122

Super Bantamweights, 4 Rounds
Tapia 123
Garcia 122 ¾

Photos by Tom Casino/Showtime

Mario Ortega Jr. can be reached at [email protected].