2008 OLYMPIC BRONZE MEDALIST VYACHESLAV GLAZKOV TO TAKE ON MARK “OAK TREE” BROWN ON JULY 14TH AT THE ARENA IN PHILADELPHIA

PHILADELPHIA (JULY 1, 2010)—Yet another medalist from the most recent Olympics has been added to a special night of boxing on Wednesday night July 14th at The Arena in South Philadelphia as heavyweight bronze medalist Vyacheslav Glazkov will take on the immensely popular Mark “Oak Tree” Brown in a bout scheduled for six rounds.

This show will be the first in the brand new Comcast Boxing Series that will be televised around the country and is promoted by No Limits Promotions

The main event will feature undefeated Israeli sensation, Ran Nakash taking on former Light Heavyweight champion Lou Del Valle in a bout scheduled for ten rounds.

Glazkov of Lugasnk, Ukraine could have done better than the bronze but an elbow injury forced him out of the competition just before his third fight.

As a pro, Glazkov has been perfect as he is 5-0 with three knockouts. He has spread out his victories as he has won two fights each in Russia and Ukraine with his remaining win coming in the Dominican Republic.

In his last bout, the twenty-five year old scored a third round stoppage over Ivan Shvayko on April 24th in Kiev Ukraine.

Brown of Salem, New Jersey has a record of 15-3 with seven knockouts.

He is one of the most popular fighters in the tri-state area with his gregarious personality and antics outside the ring.

In the ring, Brown won his first seven bouts before being stopped by then undefeated knockout artist Joey Abell (6-0) on July 7, 2006.

After that first defeat, Brown won eight consecutive fights which included his incredible come from behind stoppage victory over then undefeated Tony Grano (14-0-1).

Already down multiple times, Brown came back in the eighth and final round to stop Grano and claim the vacant WBF title.

After one more victory, Brown has dropped his last two fights. He was stopped by former world title challenger Fres Oquendo (29-5-1) and his last bout, Brown almost pulled off another miracle finish in the rematch with Grano.

After losing just about all of the first nine rounds, Brown dropped Grano in the tenth and final round but was unable to stop Grano in the rematch the took place on March 12th.

That bout is just one of the seven world class bouts scheduled for July 14th.

In the main event, Nakash (24-0, 18 KO’s) will battle former light heavyweight champion, Del Valle (36-6-2, 22 KO’s) in what will be by far Nakash’s toughest foe to date.

In the eight round co-feature, 2008 Olympic Gold Medalist, Felix Diaz (5-0, 3 KO’s) of Santo Domingo, DR will take on Corey Rodriguez (4-1-1, 3 KO’s) of Saint Anthony, Minnesota

In an intriguing Middleweight bout, Maks Liminov (12-0, 8 KO’s) of Prokopyevsk, Russia will take on battles tested Phil Williams (11-3-1, 10 KO’s) of Minneapolis, MN in a bout scheduled for six rounds.

Former world Jr. Amateur champion, Joey Dawejko (3-0, 1 KO) will take on Keon Graham (2-2) of Akron, Ohio in a four round Heavyweight bout.

Oz Goldenburg (1-0) of Tel Aviv, Israel will battle pro debuting Kenny Brown of Philadelphia in a four round Lightweight bout.

William Miranda (1-0) of Allentown, PA will take on debut Carmello Marrero of Reading, PA in a four round Heavyweight bout.

Former Penn State Offensive Lineman, Imani Bell of Philadelphia will be making his pro debut against Levay King (0-2) in a four round Heavyweight bout.

Tickets for this memorable night of boxing are priced at $100, $75, and $50 and can be purchased at following locals:

Peltz Boxing (2501 Brown Street) 215- 765 -0922
The Arena (7 West Ritner St.) 267-687-7560
Joey Eye 267-304-9399
Don Elbaum 610-933-7510




Mosley – Mora is on for September 18th in Los Angeles


According to Dan Rafael of espn.com, former three division world champion, “Sugar” Shane Mosley will take on former Contender Season one and Jr. Middleweight champion Sergio “The Latin Snake” Mora on September 18th at The Staples Center in Los Angeles.

“With Shane, you have somebody who fights everybody and with Sergio you have a guy who has really wanted a big challenge,” Said Golden Boy CEO Richard Schaefer. “It’s a fight he’s wanted for a long time and to do it in his backyard on Mexican independence weekend makes it an even more meaningful fight for him. For Shane, he loves fighting at Staples Center and he is looking forward to this fight as well.”

“Ten years ago, Sugar Shane Mosley fought a young man from East L.A., Oscar De La Hoya, at Staples Center,” Schaefer said. “We felt if we could bring Shane back there 10 years later against another top Hispanic fighter, Sergio Mora, who is also from East L.A. and who also has history at the Staples Center, it would be a great fight to anchor our big card on the holiday weekend. It’s the perfect fight for Los Angles and will cap a week of great activities to celebrate the 200th anniversary of Mexican independence.”

“We were supposed to spar one time back around 2003 or 2004 when I was up in Big Bear [Calif.] and I was looking forward to that,” Mora told ESPN.com. “He has the fastest hands I’ve ever seen in person or on TV. I was suited up to spar with him, but they didn’t need me that day. I wanted to work with him, but they had too many sparring partners. Now we’re supposed to fight for real. I like it that way.”

“We want to make it a great, fun card,” Schaefer said. “We’re still discussing having fights on the pay-per-view from Mexico.”

“I went through three camps before the Green fight,” Mora said. “It was a good comeback fight. I got hit, I got in some rounds and I got the stoppage. It was enough for September. I am really excited and motivated for the fight.”

“I told Richard when I signed with Golden Boy that I was willing to fight at 154 pounds as long as I had 10 weeks to get ready,” he said. “This is more than 10 weeks and I have already had six weeks of camp getting ready for Candelo. So I’ll take a week or so off and then get back in camp. I’m bringing in my nutritionist, Robert Ferguson, and as long as he’s on board and I have 10 weeks, I can make the weight and feel strong.”

“Shane Mosley has been counted out too many times, so I am not going to count him out at all,” Mora said. “I am not going to go by that performance at all.”

Photo by Chris Farina/Top Rank




Casimero to battle Garcia

It has been exclusively revealed to 15rounds.com that WBO Interim Light Flyweight Champion Johnreil Casimero 14-0(8) will make the his first defence of the title he won last December against Ramon Garcia 12-1-1(8). The fight will take place in Mazatlan, Mexico on 24 July. Casimero 20, sprang to prominence when he scored a stunning eleventh round stoppage over Cesar Canchila. The native of Cebu, controlled the bout through out dropping the vastly more experience Canchila 5 times through the bout before gaining the win. It will be Garcia’s first title fight, though he comes from a fighting family his brother Raul is a former IBF Strawweight holder. If all goes well Casimero may face Ivan Calderon in late August in Puerto Rico.




Tyson show’s his fury, senior that is!!!!–WATCH ON GFL


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It was a case of repeat or revenge since last year’s controversial points decision in favour of the giant Manchester heavyweight Tyson Fury, local lad John Mcdermott was hoping to avenge a loss that he and many in the fight game felt belonged rightfully to himself in a controversy that had shades of Henry Cooper -Joe Bugner from 1971.

Entering the ring Mcdermott was hyped up just a little as he hammed it up to the crowd, bent on destruction it seemed more than anything, while Fury remained calm and collected and awaiting the opening bell.

In my preview you will have read that I favored Mcdermott to win and do so far more easily than the first meeting.

I could not have been more wrong and if Fury a fighter who looked green a little at times, then he did prove otherwise, as he certainly did turn the form book on it’s head, ripped it up and chucked the aforementioned in the waste paper basket!

In the opener Fury looked like a changed man from there first meeting, as he found his range and the target with nice swift combination’s behind the left jab, before connecting with some decent right hands over the top, Mcdermott could only take what was coming his way and I found it rather surprising considering that going into this Fury had hardly sparred much as he showed plenty of the aforementioned.

Mcdermott pressured as Fury circled his much shorter opponent, one right that Mcdermott did land spurred Fury into action as he cleverly turned John before unloading with a flurry, but Mcdermott a durable type brushed off any of the effects, later on a little showboating from Fury in the form of an half decent Ali shuffle almost cost him his footing a few seconds later as he almost tripped over more off balance than anything.

Mcdermott kept plodding in trying to get inside the long reach of Fury, however if Fury was impersonating Ali doing the shuffle than Mcdermott was Tyson’s Frazier, and what with the heat it could have been Manila all over again!

Mcdermott again caught Fury with a solid right, but it was yet again Fury who kept Mcdermott on the end of the jab, Fury was almost using it like a tape measure via a battering ram naturally, has he boxed finding his range, Mcdermott could’nt for some reason find his or Tyson.

In the third Fury started to fight more as he dug in close, electing to box when he decided to stand off, just keeping in reach of his subject, even at one time holding the rope and jabbing ala Muhammad Ali v Alfredo Evangelista back in 1977, however a short burst of shots seemed to hurt Mcdermott just before the bell as he fell into the ropes, a right uppercut proving the decisive punch in that last little combination.

Fury in the fourth began to stand his ground and get in the trenches, a battle of the Somme was being fought as both soldiered in close and banged away, Fury noticeably was tiring more so in this round and things did get rather a bit messy as both continuously clinched.

Sitting there at ringside was British heavyweight champion Derek Chisora, taking in his next possible challenger, though my good friend and corner man Lennie Lee reckons Chisora’s next assignment should be against Commonwealth champ Sam Sexton in a rematch of there thriller from 2007! watch out for both as one will surely happen soon, a interview I did with Len on these pages coming real soon my friends!

Back to the fight, and Fury {19st 4lbs} continued to dominate with good solid combination’s, Mcdermott seemed to be having problems getting going and for the best part of the first four rounds Fury was taking a considerable lead, though it seemed he started to breathe a little from the second onwards his work proved the fresher of the two.

However it was in the sixth that Mcdermott {18st 2lbs} found his way back into the contest, Frank Maloney one of the old school, and the only promoter I’ve ever seen who stands by the ring like an Army officer giving his troop his orders was there taking every punch his man was, even ducking some and then between the ropes during one particular interval between rounds, it resembled something out of a Rocky film or one of those much older black and white films from the forties or earlier when the promoter is telling his charge ‘now listen real good kid’ Hollywood it might not have been, but we were in Brentwood!

Mcdermott seemingly was fighting on memory at times, but though outweighed by a good couple of stone it was showing as Mcdermott was just plodding forwards though landing it seemed like Fury was not being troubled.

It was at the start of the sixth corner man Jim Mcdonell slapped his charge Mcdermott on the money {chin} and tried to instill some much needed enthusiasm into his man, it seemed to work as Mcdermott came to life, a big right slammed into Fury’s chin, but things became messy, even some fans booed which I felt was wrong, obviously just fans and not connoisseurs of boxing.

Fury was looking tired even more so, gum shield knocked out, Tyson found himself backed to the ropes as the Essex man threw himself forwards, getting into a clinch or four ref Parris had to part the two for persistent holding and gave Fury a ticking off, when the two did part though it was Mcdermott who drew first blood, a short double left hook inside opening a cut over Fury’s right eye that coursed down the side of his handsome countenance, distress signals seemed to show a little on the gigantic northener’s face but despite the cut he battled through to the bell.

Round seven saw Mcdermott try a little more as he seemed a little like a bull to a red rag, the red rag being the aforementioned laceration on his opposing protagonist, as he as he started to throw more punches coming forwards, though tired his resistance and determination were dogged, just like the guy who he facially resembles a little Don Cockell from the 1950’s who fought, the great Rocky Marciano for the World’s title back in 1955, and in true British bulldog spirit kept coming, Fury himself grunted as he let go with a flurry of leather, and with both tired Fury seemed to hold some more and ref Parris took off a point for his only crime, which the pro Mcdermott crowd cheered.

In the eighth both locked horns to begin with, soon after Fury got on his bike, as Mcdermott dug in as Fury missed with a wild uppercut that would have knocked out the guy in the fourth row had it landed, lucky I was ringside!

Both kept in close, and obviously tired it was a case of who wanted it more, and there it was in that square of all squares where titles are won and lost, where men come of age, it was here that Tyson a twenty one year old finally did so, a short flurry dredged up from his fighting soul followed by a short right hand to Mcdermott’s chin deposited the Essex man to the floor in his own corner towards the end of the round, the legitimacy of the punch was questionable as it was possibly more exhaustion than anything that paid a contributing factor in the actual knockdown, however Mcdermott showed the fighting heart of a champion as he got up at ‘six’ with ref Parris holding his gloved fists, the bell rang, was this another twist in the tale of the Fury-Mcdermott saga?

The ninth saw Mcdermott bravely get stuck in, as if to take away the psychological edge off of Tyson’s previous success, however there was no questioning each man’s desire, as both came in landing big rights to each other’s chins, Fury’s punch had more telling power and Mcdermott paid a second visit to the canvas as he rolled on to his back, battling to get to his haunches Mcdermott again got to his feet at ‘six’ where third man Parris gave him a standing eight before allowing him to continue, unbelievably showing a true grit and determination of any fighter I’ve seen Mcdermott ploughed forwards into his tormentor even throwing caution to the wind, however the likes of John Mcdermott don’t know when there beat and going beyond the call of duty he got involved, however a short right from Fury sent John down a third time, sitting there taking the count Mcdermott arose at nine and has he did tottered unsteadily on tired legs, prompting Parris to wave it over at the 1:08 second mark as Fury celebrated, Fury had shut up the critics it seemed but still there remain questions about Fury’s stamina.

Fury embraced his father, former pro Gypsy John Mcdermott as both father and son celebrated, it was an emotional Fury at the post fight interview who despite complaining of the seering heat, it was this heat that could’nt dry the tears in the giant’s eyes as he paid tribute to his father and also dedicating the belt to his father who was as proud as punch of his sibling.

Mcdermott it seems will be remembered sadly as the nearly man of the heavyweight division of the last couple of years, with out a doubt he beat Danny Williams and was jobbed first time around, and then the heartbreak of the first fight with Fury, even Stevie Wonder would have given it to Mcdermott that night last September, in essence Mcdermott was more than just an English champion he was an uncrowned one unofficially! {if that makes any sense}

Has Fury’s hand was raised Derek Chisora left the building to escape any post fight banter, or comments, but I was keeping an eye on Chisora through out the fight and I noticed a concerned look on his face, more so when Fury was on top of Mcdermott, as Chisora left for a safer passage it seemed the Danny Williams that Mcdermott got turned back by in two unsuccessful attempts was clearly not the man from those nights that Chisora took the title from at Upton Park last month, a new face has come onto the heavyweight championship scene domestically, though many are still doubting Tyson’s true championship credentials if he were to eventually square off with the brash Chisora, I sure ain’t one of them.

And one who would echo my very thoughts was at ringside afterwards almost causing a scene of his own, it was Fury senior long after Tyson had gone to get the wash and brush up treatment, Gypsy John was at ringside shouting aloud ‘who did Chisora beat? Danny Williams was past his best, I’d fight Derek Chisora, his running from my boy I’ll fight him myself” before further adding “Get behind your boxers more than your footballers, Chisora won’t fight my boy” I did butt in myself as I exclaimed “here, here!” the house was listening, no it weren’t the house of commons, though Gypsy John ranted like an M.P would as he spoke up for his son and his right about one thing and the way the England football team have disappointed us, maybe Gypsy John has a valid point, well I ain’t gonna argue with him am I?, for the record Chisora bought his Lonsdale belt earlier to the ringside in a silver case that the fictional character of the much loved comedy series ‘only fools and horses’ ‘Del boy’ would have been proud of surely, though this was no case of knocked off watches, I wonder though is time running out for the real life ‘Del boy’ if Tyson get’s his shot that is?

And talking earlier of Hollywood, Brentwood and the record, or has the lyrics go to the ‘Only fools and Horses’ theme it could be more a matter of in your mush Del boy, than Shepherd’s Bush mush!
Or in the words of Boycie, ‘evening Del boy’ or could that be good night Derek?

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Also featured on the undercard was a exciting tussle between Crawley lightweight prospect Ben Jones and Welshman Lee Selby over six rounds.

Selby bearing a slight resemblance to former British super featherweight king of the 1980’s, the late Najib Daho, boxed nicely in the opener as he got on the move scoring with nice combination’s on the advancing Jones, however in the second both got involved in some good give and take sessions, both sported bloody noses from the aforementioned exchanges.

In the third Jones started off quickly and begun to find the target as Selby started to look tired as the Crawley man continued to pressure the Welshman, as he did in the next stanza, the fourth.

In between rounds former decent pro and manager Chris Sanigar gave Selby a wake up call in the form of a slap, it was one that would have bought back memories to that of the night’s Sky commentator Johnny Nelson when Brendan Ingle did a similar thing when Nelson was performing below par against one Arthur ‘stormy’ Weathers back in 1990, now if only he’d done that several months earlier that year in Nelson’s no show against the then W.B.C cruiser king Carlos Deleon!

Selby seemed to react to the warning administered by his charge and boxed better over the next couple of rounds, but Jones continuously pressured and at the bell it was Selby who was awarded a decision that I felt Jones had done more than enough to have taken, as referee Jeff Hinds scored it 59-57, I had it a similar margin but in the adjudged losers favor, no one in the crowd seemed to share in my disbelief, maybe I’m a lousy judge {please don’t read my preview to the main event}
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Up at heavy, Olympic bronze medalist David Price kept on track with a easy one round demolition job of flabby and rather rotund looking Paval Polokovic who tipped the scales at 17st 10lbs, five pounds heavier than the much taller better built Price, whom looked in absolutely fabulous condition.
Both took it easy to begin with, but Price once he did get started was looking at the obvious target, the flabby midsection of the bull necked but inept Paval Polokovic, shortly after wards Price switched the attack to the head, a big left hook over the top sent the visitor to the canvas for a count, though despite beating the count Polokovic was not even in the argument, though he gamely tried to make a fight of it, he attacked Price but came unstuck again as a flurry of hard short shots inside reintroduced Polokovic to the canvas, on arising yet again he seemed to nod his head almost in surrender, but when ref Richie Davies waved it over, it was then he seemed to remonstrate a little, as Price chalked up another win at 1:42 of the opener.

For the record at the time of the stoppage Polokovic’s purse was withheld, it seemed fitting enough what with the mugging I had just witnessed in the minute and forty odd seconds of boxing!
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Another heavyweight hope Tom Dallas who sported a slight growth of beard looked in good shape at 16st 10lbs, and looked a million dollars in the opening couple of rounds against that warhorse of warhorse’s Daniel Peret the rotund but very durable Norwegian who has given many a heavy from these shores an interesting nights work.

Dallas threw some lovely fast combination’s as he used a nice solid left jab before whipping in right hands, on the bull like Peret, Dallas even managing to hurt the Norwegian with a big right hand as he almost sagged into the ropes as he started to mix his punches to both head and then body effectively, another big right later on in the opener had Peret all at sea and almost on the next boat home, but that wily old fox from way of Norway found a way to the bell.

In the second Peret did try but was finding it an almost impossible task to catch the much taller leaner Dallas with anything of any real note, over the rest of the duration of the bout things became a little tedious in all fairness as Dallas and Peret started to maul and hold and despite some nice boxing in the early rounds, things did become a little ragged and Peret as he ussually doe’s made it to the final gong but went down a points loser by 60-54.
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Newly crowned Southern Area champ Larry Olubamiwo didn’t hang around himself in his English title eliminator with Dave Ferguson, this match naturally was for the the winner of Fury-Mcdermott, strangely enough the latter match up was also an eliminator for the British title held by the flash, cocky Derek Chisora, more on him later, take your pick as to who fight’s who and when, now that’s anyones guess?

Larry a big puncher whom promoter Frank Maloney has likened to the legendary ko artist Earnie Shavers {praise indeed} for his power came out looking to fight his fight and pressure the taller bald headed Ferguson who threw some wild right hands that missed by the proverbial mile or ten, Larry a whopping 18st 10lbs looked in good shape and even more so that bit more polished with his shots, though he does keep that chin a little too high when attacking, in the past as I did mention in my preview of the show, Larry does ‘wing em’ for my liking and doe’s look just a tad too crude, however the crudeness was’nt as evident this time around and has he pressured the tall geordie Larry caught Ferguson with a series big overhand right’s that felled Dave for full count as he as good as sat out the count until getting up, but it was too late as the ref counted ‘ten’ although Ferguson had the misfortune of getting counted out at just 1:52 of the first round, one would feel if he had gotten up and continued such misfortune would have been metered out more so by the Hackney based Olubamiwo.
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Down at fly Lewis Pettitt looked an easy winner over veteran centurian Delroy Spencer who was easily outfought and out thought over four rounds.

Pettitt got in close to begin with and made Delroy hold before backing up the veteran with a good flurry of leather.

In the second things livened up more so as both got involved in some good exchanges, but it was Pettitt who was that bit more accurate and seemed better in every department and was the rightful winner of a clear easy 40-36.
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The show’s opener proved a fairly decent encounter as Crayford’s Menay Edwards took on Carl Wild from Sheffield over six rounds at super middle.

To begin with funnily enough both fighters were sent to different corners after the announcements before the opening bell, it’s okay guy’s there was no infringement by either protagonist, both were in the wrong corners of the ring apparently, but strangely enough each and every respective bout from there on, there was no changing of the corner let alone the guard, well not until the main event that is!!!!

Edwards mixed in a good array of shots to start with as he backed Wild to the ropes, a mixture of uppercuts and hooks thrown in quick bursts had the Sheffield man covering, before Wild tried with some hooks of his own, but for the best part it was Edwards who was the busier throwing an assortment of punches on the inside, every now and then allowing Wild to come forward as he countered with hooks and a stiff left jab, Wild did now and again throw a burst but Edwards was that far more imaginative and much, much busier throughout the eighteen minutes of pugilism and deservedly took an well earned points verdict on ref Jeff Hinds card of

At the bell Edwards wore a fake crown on his head, eerie you may ask as Frank Maloney’s first World champion was also from Crayford, don’t worry guy’s I think it’s safe to say it’s there that the similarities end, but hey you never know….watch this space!
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Also at super middle, Tony Hills took on Philip Townley, looking confident throughout Hills from Southampton used a decent southpaw jab as he took control from the center ring as Townley soaked everything coming his way.

Straight lefts were banged in also for good measure behind the left jab that hit home like a form of Chinese water torture as each jab thudded in with accuracy, before switching more so in the second round with swift southpaw rights to Philip’s midsection.

One arcing southpaw right had Townley over, but he was up straight away and more off balance than anything as ref Hinds wiped his gloves and ruled a slip, however later on Hills begun to back up Townley with accurate shots as the latter threw the odd shot back mostly hitting thin air, each round replicitated the previous one as Hills was far too gifted for Townley who was in survival mode for the best part of the fight although he did attack briefly in the final session, it was rather short lived as he resumed the role of surivor as he moved around as Hills punctuated his dominance as he had done from the start.

Hills could be one to look out for, time will tell naturally!
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Also meeting up before and after with Maloney’s behind the scenes team it really was a pleasure to meet James J Russell and Andy Scott, myself and Russell started trying to out do each other with boxing questions, the final score was a resounding one in favour of…….hey buy my book when it comes out and if you enjoyed this little trip down to Brentwood with yours truly, you’ll love the book oh yeah and it’s there that you’ll find out the score and I’m not talking about the one between England and West Germany though it’s nearer to that mathematically.

Michael Angelo Serra




100 Years Since Johnson-Jeffries


Sunday, July 4th marks the 100th anniversary of the Jack Johnson-James J. Jeffries World Heavyweight title fight. In the history of our sport, perhaps only the 1938 Joe Louis-Max Schmeling rematch surpasses the bout in terms of historical significance. Johnson was the controversial first black heavyweight champion, having defeated Tommy Burns in Australia less than two years prior. Spearheaded by famed writer Jack London, racially-motivated calls rang out from all over the country for the former champion Jeffries, retired since 1904, to return to the ring and unseat Johnson.

Promoter Tex Rickard had hoped to place the fight in Jeffries’ hometown of San Francisco, California, but the controversial nature of the fight and the sport of boxing in general at the time forced it out of the state. Rickard quickly found Reno, Nevada to be an excellent fit, as many east-west railroads met in the city. Rickard had a specially constructed stadium erected to host the fight, which would be known as the ‘Fight of the Century.’

July 4, 1910, less than 50 years since the end of the Civil War, Johnson would take on “The Great White Hope” in a bout scheduled for 45 rounds. Where the United States stood racially at the time, made the fight much bigger than boxing. That much goes without saying. However, it is interesting to note that the fight would have been significant under any circumstances. Well into the late 1960’s, Nat Fleischer would rank Jack Johnson as the greatest heavyweight champion of all-time. Fleischer, co-founder of The Ring Magazine in 1922 and its editor-in-chief until he passed away in 1972, rated him ahead of Jack Dempsey, Joe Louis, Rocky Marciano and the early reign of Muhammad Ali. Who did Fleischer rank second behind Johnson? James J. Jeffries.

The fight itself would end brutally one-sided. The time away from the ring had eroded Jeffries, who according to some reports had ballooned up to 300-pounds in his retirement. Johnson, in his physical prime, would pound away on the would-be white man’s hero for fifteen rounds before dropping him twice, the first two knockdowns of Jeffries’ career. According to some sources, it would be former champion James J. Corbett, who had been shouting back-and-forth with Johnson all fight, that would order Rickard, acting as the referee, to stop the fight.

With the press fanning the flames with their coverage of the bout, race riots would break out all over the country over the result. It would be Jeffries final bout. Johnson would go on to defend his title just once more in the U.S., before being convicted of violating the Mann Act, or “transporting women across state lines for immoral purposes.” Johnson was convicted even though the instances which prompted the charges took place before the Mann Act went into effect. Johnson was sentenced to one year and one day in prison, but skipped out on bail and left the country.

After two defenses in France, and a non-title bout in Argentina, an aging Johnson would lose the title to Jess Willard in Havana, Cuba. Johnson fought on for four years, in Spain and Mexico, before returning to the U.S. and turning himself in on July 1920. Johnson was imprisoned until July 9, 1921.

Johnson returned to the ring nearly two years after his release, fighting into his fifties. Johnson, known to drive at high speeds, died on June 10, 1946 in a car crash in North Carolina. Johnson was reportedly headed to New York to witness Joe Louis, the next black fighter to fight for and claim the heavyweight title, defend his laurels against Billy Conn.

In recent years several attempts have been made to exonerate Johnson of his violation of the Mann Act. Most recently, in April of 2009, Senator John McCain of Arizona and Representative Peter King of New York appealed to President Barack Obama for a posthumous pardon for Johnson. However last December, the U.S. Justice Department recommended against the pardon, as Justice Department pardon attorney Ronald Rodgers wrote King a letter which stated it is general policy not to process posthumous pardon cases for the reason that pardon resources “are best dedicated to requests submitted by persons who can truly benefit from a grant of the request.” President Obama has not made a public comment on the matter.

Reno-based promoters Terry and Tommy Lane of Let’s Get It On Promotions have organized a centennial celebration weekend to honor a monumental event in both the history of boxing and our country, Jack Johnson vs. James J. Jeffries. It had been the original hope that the weekend would celebrate the pardon of Johnson, as well as commemorate the 100th anniversary of the fight.

In any event, the jam-packed weekend begins this Friday with a gala hosted by boxing commentators Al Bernstein and Rich Marotta. Beginning Saturday morning, several discussions will be held by noted authors and journalists, leading in to a live boxing event held at the Grand Sierra Resort & Casino, headlined by former IBF Light Flyweight Champion Ulises Solis and televised by Fox Sports Net and Fox Sports en Espanol. On Sunday, an honorary ten-count will take place using the original ring bell at the original fight site.

For more information on the series of events, visit JohnsonJeffries2010.com.

Mario Ortega Jr. can be reached at ortega15rds@lycos.com.




JOHN MOLINA, JR. TAKES HIS POWER ON THE ROAD IN THE MAIN EVENT ON ESPN2 ‘FRIDAY NIGHT FIGHTS’ON JULY 9

SHERMAN OAKS, CA (June 29, 2010) – The toll road of redemption can be long and dangerous, but nevertheless a necessary one. On Friday, July 9, John Molina, Jr. (20-1,16 KOs) will look to make his opponent pay the price as he forges forward to take the WBO/NABO Lightweight Championship from undefeated “Hammerin” Hank Lundy (18-0-1, 10 KOs) as the 12-round main event on the “Let Freedom Ring” card presented live on ESPN2 Friday Night Fights.

NABO #9-rated Molina who is promoted by Goossen Tutor Promotions, rebounded from his sole loss last year against former WBO/NABO lightweight champion Martin Honorio, with two solid wins just one month apart from each other earlier this year. Stated Molina, “I am excited to get back on television and I will make sure I stay there. You learn a lot more in defeat then in victory regardless of the circumstances and it is the worse feeling in the world. I will do everything needed to do in the ring so I never feel like that again.”

“Lundy talks a lot and as far as I’m concerned he can keep it up. As a matter of fact, I like it. It’s been very amusing. I’m going to do my talking in the ring and he’ll know what I mean when I walk away with the belt. I have respect for him and what he has accomplished but come fight time nothing will stop me. I am going to do what I have to do to be victorious.”

The event is promoted by Jimmy Burchfield’s Classic Entertainment and Sports, Inc. (CES) at the Twin River Event Center in Lincoln, R.I. with the Lundy-Molina bout promoted in association with Goossen Tutor. Check your local ESPN2 listings for time.




Q & A with Katsunari Takayama


Former two time Strawweight World champion Katsunari Takayama 23-4(9) embarks on his attempt to add the IBF Strawweight championship to the WBC & WBA he’s already won. He’ll fight in South Africa against local Tshepo Lewele in a title eliminator. Takayama 27, previously held the WBC crown briefly in 2005 for four months & WBA Interim title from late in 2006 until he fought full champion Yutaka Niida in a bid to unify the WBA championship in April 2007. Though he’s been a pro since 2000 and has fought many of the top fighters in and around his weight class he still remains a top contender rated 10 by the IBF & 11 by the WBO. Here’s what he had to say.

Hello Katsunari, welcome to 15rounds.com

Anson Wainwright – Firstly you recently signed to fight under the ALA Boxing Promotional company. How did this move come about? What can you tell us about this deal, it’s especially interesting because few Japanese fighters leave Japan and fight for other company’s outside there homeland?

Katsunari Takayama – As for the relationship with ALA Boxing Promotional, our team developed a good relationship with them through the daily practice at ALA Gym. Then, that contract was concluded.

Anson Wainwright – It’s reported you will fight Lucky Lewele in an IBF Eliminator at the end of August in South Africa. What can you tell us about this, is it the case? If so what do you think of Lewele?

Katsunari Takayama – As for the fight with Tshepo Lefele, we plan to hold it in Johannesburg in South Africa on August 27. The contents reported by news agencies are correct. I think I can win the fight with Tshepo Lefele.

Anson Wainwright – Japanese fighters don’t normally fight for a title that’s not by the WBC or WBA. However that’s what your attempting to do. Can you tell us about this move, it seems pretty ground breaking?

Katsunari Takayama – I have a dream of winning titles in 4 leagues and several classes. The Japanese commission does not approve IBF and WBO, and so we have no choice but to leave Japan to actualize my dream. Then, we are taking the first step. As for boxing weight classes, I am okay with 105 lb. Of course, I am thinking about the 108-lb class, too.

Anson Wainwright – You’ll of been off over a year by the time you fight Lewele, how are you preparing yourself for such a big fight without ring rust coming into play? Who will you spar with?

Katsunari Takayama – As for practice and adjustment, I plan to do one-month training at ALA Gym from June 21, and make final adjustments in Japan.

Anson Wainwright – Can you tell us about your team, who is your manager, trainer & Promoter?

Katsunari Takayama – Manager: Ken Matsumoto, Chief trainer: Hiroaki Nakade, Physical trainer: Hideki Aoki & Promoter: ALA Promotions

Anson Wainwright – You have fought three of the best Strawweights of the last few years Eagle Kyowa, Yutaka Niida & Roman Gonzalez unfortunately you lost to them all. Can you assess how good each one was for us? Who was the best of them? Who was the best boxer & who hit the hardest?

Katsunari Takayama – The strongest boxer I have ever encountered is Roman Gonzalez.

Anson Wainwright – Can you tell us about your younger days growing up in Osaka and how you first came across Boxing and the path you have since taken?

Katsunari Takayama – I was motivated to start boxing after the following experience. Invited by my friend, I visited a boxing gym. My first boxing practice was all new and enjoyable to me, and since then, I have been addicted to boxing.

Anson Wainwright – What do you like to do away from Boxing? What hobbies do you have? What do you think you’d be doing if it was for Boxing to make a living?

Katsunari Takayama – I cannot lead my life without boxing, and so my lifestyle is filled with boxing.

Anson Wainwright – Who was your Boxing hero growing up? What fighters today do you admire and why?

Katsunari Takayama – I like Yoko Gushiken & Sugar Ray Leonard. I like boxing style of Sugar Ray Leonard

Best Wishes and thank you for your time

Anson Wainwright
15rounds.com




Jeff Gibson’s ELITE PROMOTIONS & Howard Davis Jr.’s FIGHT TIME PROMOTIONS Have Joined Forces!

KGC Marketing Team is proud to announce that two of the most sought after gentlemen in the fight game have come together to form a partnership and promote professional MMA events in South Florida. 1976 Boxing Olympic Gold Medalist, Boxing Director of Coconut Creek’s American Top Team, featured trainer on Spike TV’s “Ultimate Fighter”, Boxing Trainer for Season 11 TUF Champion Court McGee and recently seen on UFC pay per view as Chuck Liddell’s trainer; Howard Davis Jr.. And former World Kickboxing Champion, CEO of Elite Promotions who has been promoting professional boxing and mixed martial arts events in Florida for ten years while guiding many fighters on to become world champions, and providing an avenue for many MMA fighters to fight in the UFC & WEC. Over the last ten years Elite Promotions has been a part of many Sunsports, ESPN, HBO, and Showtime fights brought to South Florida. This partnership will definitely make a mark in the fight world!

JEFF GIBSON; “With our two promotion companies coming together our goal is to provide exceptional fights for the fans, and to give some of these young fighters the opportunity to grow and possibly fight in the UFC or WEC themselves someday. Utilizing our expertise and contacts in the fight game Howard and I can truly help a fighters dream come true.”

HOWARD DAVIS JR.: “This is a great opportunity to feature some of the latest talent in MMA. This partnership will help to make MMA a permanent staple in the South Florida community and it’s my pleasure to be a part of something so positive. Jeff Gibson and I are looking to put some quality and exciting shows that can help expose the next champ!”




Chavez and Duddy, eggs and deep water


SAN ANTONIO – Here’s something you didn’t know. Saturday afternoon round 3:30 P.M., a young Texas amateur named Adam Reynolds almost didn’t make his boxing debut at a 34-bout smoker in San Fernando Gym. Despite his youth and fitness, Reynolds’ blood pressure was too high for a ringside doctor to let him answer the opening bell.

The prospect of being struck in the face can play havoc with your heart.

Eight hours later, about a mile southeast of San Fernando, Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. put the finishing touches on the best match of his 42-fight career. It was a performance marked unexpectedly by Chavez’s relaxation under fire.

There’s something to be said for growing up around the sport. There’s something to be said for knowing boxing.

Saturday at Alamodome, before a few fans more than 8,000, Chavez headlined “Latin Fury 15” and beat Ireland’s John Duddy in an entertaining 12-round middleweight scrap that saw sustained action in every round. It also saw Chavez win by two proper scores – Judge Crocker’s 116-112 and Judge Lederman’s 117-111 – and Juergen Langos’ unacceptable tally of 120-108.

For those who watched on pay-per-view or the south side of the ring, if the Texas crowd sounded unenthusiastic, here may be an acoustical explanation. Alamodome, which is cavernous, was configured to seat fans in its northernmost 1/3. That meant cheers had to go through a curtain and then across 200 feet of emptiness before they could hit the south wall and reverberate back to themselves.

There were plenty of folks there, though, and they cheered plenty too. Some cheered the Chavez brand, recalling fondly the night 17 years before that Julio Cesar Chavez Sr. posted a record attendance number in Alamodome. Some, no doubt, went to see a Mexican child of privilege get his ass beat by a tough Irishman. But all were there, in part, because they had no idea what was going to happen.

Chavez was considered soft by even some of his admirers, heading towards the ring Saturday. Among those who didn’t admire him, there was a belief that a 12-round match absolutely favored any Chavez opponent but especially a man rugged as John Duddy. Both were wrong.

“We took (Chavez) into deep water,” Duddy said at the post-fight press conference. “And, yes, he can swim. He’s a tough kid. A tough kid.”

Duddy wore dark sunglasses as he spoke those words. He wore them because Chavez had left bruises and shallow lacerations around his eyes. And there was a good metaphor in those glasses for anyone who had been at Wednesday’s press conference.

There, Chavez sauntered on stage like a kid hoping to become a matinee idol – jeans, open-collared shirt, stylish blazer, sunglasses. Duddy, meanwhile, watched him in a business-casual getup of khakis, belt, dress shirt and green Chuck Taylors. The contrast was stark: Working class meets spoiled brat.

At Saturday’s post-fight press conference, on the other hand, Chavez wore no sunglasses. He didn’t hide the damage round his eyes Duddy’s fists had inflicted; he’d completed a rite of passage in his own mind from novelty to contender.

“Now I am more – how to say it,” Chavez said in Spanish, and he paused. “I am more convinced of myself.”

And to prove it, he employed self-deprecation – the sign of a secure identity. Asked what difference his new trainer Freddie Roach had wrought, Chavez said he’d just needed someone to take out of him the “huevón.”

“Huevón” is a wonderful Mexicanism. It begins with the Spanish slang for a man’s balls, eggs, adds the augmentative “ón” and suggests a man with balls so big he doesn’t bother himself with trying at anything. It’s like laziness on PEDs.

Roach took that from Chavez in their four-week training camp, transforming him from a lazy fighter. Saturday night, in the opening three rounds, Chavez retreated behind an occasional jab and let Duddy impose himself. But at the start of the fourth, confident Duddy could not hurt him, Chavez went out and began to walk the Irishman down.

Duddy couldn’t have asked for more. He got a fair battle with a man who would not run from him. Had you told Duddy before the fight that Chavez would stand in the middle of the ring and trade with him for nine rounds, Duddy might have said, “Then I’ll have me way with him.”

But he didn’t. Duddy managed to buckle Chavez with a counter right hand in the sixth round, but after that, Chavez’s confidence grew in proportion to Duddy’s age; one man got quicker while the other got older. Take nothing away from Duddy’s character, though. After losing the ninth badly enough to justify a stoppage, Duddy went on to win the 12th on one judge’s card.

But Chavez was not in danger. He was entirely untroubled. It surprised a number of folks at ringside. It didn’t surprise Freddie Roach.

“Not at all,” Roach said afterwards. “That’s how he is in the gym. I’m telling you, he knows the ring. He knows boxing.”

Now all Chavez needs is more discipline and some improved balance. He has the right teacher for that. And he has most of the tools he’ll need to contend.

Boxing is a harsh master, of course, but it’s also one that teaches those who wish to learn.

Look at Adam Reynolds. After a second opinion from a ringside nurse allowed his first bout to happen Saturday afternoon, Reynolds fought a tense opening round. But by the third, he was loosened up – enough to win his debut with a knockout.

Bart Barry can be reached via bbarry@15rounds.com

Photo by Chris Farina/Top Rank




SAN JOSE SHOCKER; Werdum makes Fedor tap out in first

Fabricio Wedum scored one of the biggest upsets in MMA history as he made the man who widely regarded as the number-one Pound for Pound fighter, Fedor Emelianenko tap out in the first round of their scheduled three round Heavyweight bout at the HP Pavilion in San Jose, California.

Emelianeko knocked Werdum down early in round one and then jumped on Wrdum. Werdum was able to get a triangle choke combined with an armbar that made the legend tap out for his first loss in over ten years.

The time of the stoppage was 1:09 for Werdum, 238 1/2 lbs of Marina Del Ray, CA and is now 13-4-1 with eight submissions. Emelianenko, 229 lbs of Stary Oskol, Russia and is 31-2-1.

“I am so very, very happy,’’ the six-foot-four Werdum said. “He is such a strong man. He is a great fighter. I would be glad to fight him again.’’

“One that doesn’t fall doesn’t stand up. I was concentrating on the strikes and made a mistake,’’ Fedor said. “I will have to go back and analyze what happened.’’

Werdum may also have earned an immediate shot at STRIKEFORCE heavyweight world champion, Alistair “The Demolition Man” Overeem, whom he’s already defeated once. “I am ready to fight anybody,’’ Werdum said.

Cung Le got revenge as he stopped Scott Smith in round two of their scxeduled three round Middleweight fight.

Le nailed Smith with a spinning kick to the body that sent Smith down. Le jumped on Smith and punched Smith until referee Jason herzog stopped the bout at 1:46.

Le, 184 3/4 lbs of San Jose avenges his only defeat and is 7-1 with all wins coming by stoppage. Smith, 184 3/4 lbs of Elk Green, CA is now18-7-1

“I want to thank Scott Coker and SHOWTIME. I know what happened last time and was determined not to have it happen again. I knew I was in shape. I was pushed really hard during training. I was totally focused. I didn’t eat pizza. I didn’t eat chocolate for six or seven weeks.

Cris Cyborg retained the woman’s Middleweight title with a savage two round beating over a game Jan Finney.

Cyborg bloodied and battered Finney for most of the fight as she landed countless punches and knees but Finney showed no quit until the referee stopped the bout at 2:56 of round two of the scheduled five round bout. Cybor landed a staggering 146 strikes in the almost eight minute fight.

Cyborg, 144 1/2 lbs of Curitba, Brazil is now 11-1 with eight knockouts. Finney, 143 1/2 lbs of Springfield, OH is now 8-8.

“I was really surprised the fight wasn’t stopped in the first round,’’ said Cyborg after her 10th consecutive victory. “I know she was trying hard, but I could tell I was hurting her, especially when she was down and covering up like she was. But it is my job to keep fighting until the fight is over.’’

“I think this, being a world title fight, could have gone on a little longer,’’ she said. “If I was really hurt, I would have tapped.’’, said Finney

Josh Thomson choked out Pat Healy at 4:20 of round three in their scheduled three round Lightweight bout.

Thomson attempted to choke out Healy several times from multiple positions over the first two-plus round before locking in a rear naked choke in the final minute of the bout.

Thomson of San Jose is now 17-3-1 with nine submissions. Healy of Portland, OR is now 13-16




Firtha Shocks Grano, TKO’s him in 2

With the upset win over Travis Kauffman still fresh in his mind and his single loss recently avenged, Tony Grano was undoubtedly looking towards bigger and better things for himself in a wide open heavyweight division. It seems as though his opponent, the 6’6 258 pound Nicolai Firtha was brought in as a test to get Grano ready for the big boys of the heavyweight upper echelon. If it was, Grano failed miserably.

At the start of the fight, Firtha wisely used his longer reach and kept Grano at the end of his jab. Frustrated, Grano swung wildly with left hooks and ate even more jabs as a result. Each jab Firtha landed had an audible thud and Grano seemed at a loss as to how he would get inside. Eventually, he did manage to find his way inside and in his best moment in the fight, unleashed a string of body shots followed by a left hook, right hand combo that momentarily buzzed Firtha. For a fleeting second it seemed as if Grano was going to gain control of the fight. That second quickly passed when Firtha landed a chopping right hand inside that shook Grano up and had him backpedaling. A follow up right hand dropped Grano at the end of the round and as he rose, the bell to end round one sounded.

Round two was even worse for Grano who again had trouble getting inside and began to eat jab, right hand combos from the increasingly confident Firtha. Even in close Firtha took command, shoving around the smaller Grano and landing good shots inside. Grano seemed completely out of his depth as round two wore on and Firtha kept banging away, dropping Grano for a second time via another flush right hand. When Grano rose it was clear that he was out of it as he retreated to the ropes where Firtha tee’s off, landing perhaps more than 10 flush, unanswered head shots. As referee Dick Flaherty jumped in to stop the fight, Grano was trying gamely to fire back which prompted those in the audience to boo the stoppage. Though it may have seemed a bad time to stop the fight, Grano nearly fell from his unsteady legs after the fight was over and most likely would have been seriously hurt had the fight not been called. Time of the stoppage was 2:15 of round two.

Perhaps it was overconfidence that caused Grano to put in such a poor performance against the taller and heavier Firtha but the fact remains that Grano has been dropped in 4 of his last 5 fights; all but one against sub-par opposition. His chin is shaky at best and in a division where every fighter has the ability to end things with one punch, Grano’s future as a contender is unclear. Regardless of Grano’s stance in the heavyweight picture, all credit should be given to Firtha who came in thinking upset and backed it up with his fists. Firtha is now 18-7-1 7KOs while Grano slips to 17-2-1 13KOs.

In the bizarre co-main event, Hartford CT’s Mike Oliver earned victory via an 8th round DQ against Miami FL’s Mauricio Pastrana. The fight started well for Oliver who was more aggressive than usual, throwing multiple punches in combination and forcing the physically stronger Pastrana against the ropes. Pastrana had little to offer in return and mostly covered up and tied up for the first three rounds. In the fourth, it started to become obvious that Pastrana was getting frustrated as he began to try and rough Oliver up on the inside. This included trying to spin Oliver when the fighters were in a clinch and as a result, Oliver also began to get frustrated. The two exchanged at close range as the seconds to the fourth round dwindled down and when the bell finally rang, neither fighter let up. Referee Michael Ortega had to physically separate both fighters as they continued to wing punches.

Oliver switched over to boxing in the fifth and tried to create distance between himself and Pastrana who was content to eat shots for a chance to get inside. When he did get there, Pastrana seemed at a loss for what to do and again tried to maul Oliver in the clinch. During the 6th round Pastrana actually threw Oliver to the canvas in a clinch, prompting referee Michael Ortega to dock him a point. The dirty tactics continued in the 7th when Pastrana was again deducted a point for an infraction that was unclear to those sitting at ringside. Oliver came out of a clinch clutching his arm before Ortega took a point from Pastrana and it’s likely that he twisted Oliver’s arm in an attempt to slow his offense. Ironically Pastrana had been doing well earlier in the round by landing flush right hands inside and it’s likely that the only round he picked up on the scorecards was nullified by the point deduction. At the start of the 8th and final round, it was clear that Pastrana was too far behind to win on the cards and perhaps desperate and out of options, Pastrana again threw Oliver to the canvas when the two were in a clinch. Referee Ortega had seen enough at that point and DQ’d Pastrana at 43 seconds of the 8th. Regardless of the outcome, Oliver looked good in his performance and has begun to get himself back on track for a title shot. His record is now 24-2 8KOs. Pastrana, who deserved the DQ, drops his 7th fight in the last 8 and is now 35-14-2 23KOs.

Junior welterweights Edwin Soto (New Haven, CT) and Bryan Abraham (Schenectady, NY) battled to a 4 round majority draw in a fight that was as close as it’s verdict. From the onset Soto tired to press the action behind a jab, right hand combo but mid-way through the first Abraham began to counter him with well timed counter rights. Every round was close and scoring them depended on whether you favored Abraham’s harder counter shots, or Soto’s aggressiveness. In the end two judges favored neither, scoring the fight an even 38-38. The third judge had it 39-37 Abraham. Both fighters notch a draw to their records with Soto now at 4-0-1 2KOs and Abraham at 2-3-2 2KOs.

Up and coming light heavyweight prospect Joe Smith Jr. of Long Island, NY notched another impressive KO win to run his undefeated record to 5-0 5KOs. Smith’s opponent Walter Foster Jr. (4-3-1 4KOs) of Berkeley, MO was outgunned from the start and was put to the canvas via a right hand in the opening ten seconds of the fight. Foster, who was more off balance than hurt, tried to land a few right hands after getting up but was kept constantly out of position by the jabs and hooks of Smith. Smith also began to drop left hooks to the liver of Foster and it seemed only a matter of time before Smith overwhelmed him. That moment came in the second when Smith landed a left hook to the top of Foster’s head that dropped him on all fours. Foster rose on shaky legs and a follow up flurry from Smith was enough to convince referee Dick Flaharety to stop the fight. Time of the stoppage was 1:39 of round 2. Smith is swiftly becoming a prospect to keep an eye on and seems to have a bright future ahead of him.

Though he shares a famous last name, super middleweight Rick Dawson doesn’t possess nearly the same skill-set as his brother. His 4 round unanimous decision over Toledo, OH’s Jeremiah Jones was punctuated by a distinct reluctance on the part of both fighters to engage one another. Dawson was the fighter coming forward but did little in the way of punching. His best moments were found when he utilized his lead right hooks, a few of which he was able to follow with straight left hands. Jones fought like a scared fighter for the majority of the bout and did even less punching than the cautious Dawson. The final scores read 40-36 and 39-37 (twice) all in favor of Dawson who is now 2-0 1KO. Jones dropped his third fight in a row and stands at 1-4-1.

Junior welterweight Frankie Trader (7-0 2KOs)of Philadelphia, PA pot-shotted his way to a dull 4 round unanimous decision against Springfield, MA native Noel Gracia (2-4-1 1KO.) Trader landed nearly every punch he threw but was so sparing in his output that it made a dominant performance tedious to watch. Garcia attempted to land wild right hands but missed consistently and was never in contention at any point during the fight. Scores at the end of the scheduled 4 rounds were 40-36 across the board.

Local featherweight Luis Rosa of New Haven, CT won every second of his 4 round bout en route to a last minute stoppage of Seldon, NY’s John Passantino. Rosa opened up with a two fisted body attack and didn’t let up at any point during the fight. Passantino did well to soak up the punishment but offered little in return and finally took a knee late into the fourth. After he rose, a final flurry from Rosa was enough to convince referee Danny Schiavone to end the one-sided affair. Rosa improves to 3-0 2KOs while Passantino loses his debut and stands at 0-1. Time of the stoppage was 1:15 of round 4.

In the opening bout of the evening pro debuting Jonathan Vasquez (Fall River, MA ) sparked out fellow junior welterweight Carlos Hernandez (Bridgeport, CT) in the first round of a scheduled 4 rounder. A counter left hook early in the round dropped Hernandez mid-punch. Hernandez rose and continued fighting only to eat another vicious counter left hook that laid him prostrate on the canvas and in need of medical attention. After the ring was cleared, the official time of 2 minutes 18 seconds was announced and Vasquez got hear himself declared the victor for the first time in his fledgling pro career. Hernandez lost his second bout in as many appearances and will hopefully recover from the truly brutal knockout he suffered.




Chavez Jr. shows his mettle and surprises the Irish


SAN ANTONIO – By the 10th round, Mexican Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. was marching forward, legs wide, feet crossing over, left shoulder lowered and ready to fire a hook. He no longer respected John Duddy’s ability to hurt him at all. That says more about Chavez’s conditioning, chin and heart than it says about Duddy.

Saturday night in the main event of “Latin Fury 15,” before 8,172 Texans at Alamodome, Chavez (41-0-1, 30 KOs) went toe-to-toe with Duddy (29-2, 18 KOs), a throwback Irishman if there ever was one, handled him roughly and won a unanimous decision by scores of 120-108, 116-112 and 117-111, in the first 12-round fight of Chavez’s career. The 15rounds.com scorecard concurred, 117-112.

After two rather even opening rounds that might even have favored the Irishman, Chavez began to employ a jab that trainer Freddie Roach had implored him to learn in training camp. It worked, backing Duddy up and successfully keeping him off. Throughout the night, Chavez’s surprising speed, power and ability to relax while under fire proved the difference.

Duddy got the fight his people hoped for; much of the night Chavez stood in the center of the ring and traded with him. It was of no use, though, as Chavez was simply too young, too fit and too good for Duddy to figure him out.

“I fought a very strong fighter tonight,” Chavez said of Duddy. “A real warrior.”

Accompanied by his famous father to ringside, Chavez comported himself in every way as a main-event attraction on Saturday.

“There’s a new star in boxing!” said an elated Bob Arum after the match.

Duddy, a consummate sportsman, also offered praise to Junior.

“I thought it was a good fight,” he said in the ring after the cards were read. “I take my hat off to Julio Cesar Chavez.”


LEGENDS FIND A WAY
Although his name was only the second-most-famous in the ring Saturday night, Mexican Marco Antonio Barrera was easily its greatest fighter.

Facing Brazil’s Adailton de Jesus (26-5, 21 KOs) after a long layoff, Barrera (66-7, 43 KOs) found a way to neutralize the younger man and cruise to a decision victory by unanimous scores of 100-90, 98-92 and 99-91.

After a somewhat uneventful opening round, Barrera began the second with a commitment to the left hand – hook, uppercut, hook – that made his longtime fans smile. It also made De Jesus wince, as a Barrera left to the body quickly lowered the Brazilian’s right elbow and sent him spinning leftwards and away.

By the end of round 4, though, Barrera’s age and softness began to tell. Despite maintaining his placid expression from bell to bell, Barrera found himself clipped by left hooks that he would never have been hit with in his prime. He also forced his first clinch of the fight, validating the concerns of those who noticed his less-taut midsection at the Friday weigh-in.

But any veteran of 72 prizefights knows a few tricks, and Barrera – arguably the smartest fighter of his era – knows more than most. Without increasing the match’s pace, Barrera began to control it. He jabbed De Jesus on the way in, hooked him hard on the way back and rested in the moments between. Despite bloodying Barrera’s nose in the eighth, De Jesus, whose trunks rose practically to his sternum, often found himself reduced to complaining about low blows.

The match’s final two rounds brought no new action, and the fighters embraced afterward, both knowing whose performance had won the day.

In the co-main event of “Latin Fury 15,” Barrera proved himself an intelligent competitor who still resents the hell out of anyone who tries to hit him. And he can still easily beat b-level opponents. But as the old master approaches his 37th birthday, one wonders if he’ll not soon run out of reasons to fight on.

MARTINEZ WINS BATTLE OF SAN ANTONIO
Raul Martinez and Gabriel Elizondo may have come of age in the same amateur program, but they were in two different professional classes Saturday night.

Martinez (27-1, 16 KOs) came out scowling at Elizondo (22-4-1, 10 KOs), his friend and fellow resident of the Alamo City, and never relented throughout, winning every round, dropping Elizondo four times and eventually forcing referee Rafael Ramos to stop the match at 2:00 of Round 7.

After a competitive start to the fight, in the opening moments of round 3 Martinez saw Elizondo start a jab, took a step back and blasted him with a right-hand lead that buckled the veteran. Elizondo’s conditioning and pride kept him upright, though, and the next five minutes made a fairly even affair that nevertheless favored Martinez.

But early in the fifth round, an accidental collision of heads put Elizondo in an uncertain place. Ninety seconds later, both men started right hands, Martinez’s got there first, and Elizondo dropped to the canvas for a second time.

Round 6 began with a fight in the crowd, which brought Alamodome spectators to their feet, and ended with Elizondo being felled once more, this time by a Martinez left hook at 2:59. Elizondo rose again, though, and withstood Martinez’s onslaught for the first two minutes of the seventh.

But a last right cross from Martinez ended Elizondo’s night. Referee Ramos did not so much as begin his count, choosing instead, and wisely, to wave his hands over his head and declare Martinez the Texas junior bantamweight champion.

TORTOISE BEATS HAIR
Salvador Sanchez II came to Texas for the second time in 2010 and waged a battle of patronymic importance against a second Mexican named Villa, Saturday. Unluckily for Sanchez, Tomas proved twice the hombre Jaime was.

Texan Tomas Villa (23-7-4, 14 KOs) battered Tianguistenco’s Sanchez (19-4-2, 9 KOs) – the nephew of famous Mexican champion Salvador Sanchez – and chased him around the ring before ultimately decisioning him by unanimous scores of 77-75, 79-73 and 78-74.

Sanchez proved to have inherited little more than hair and charisma from his uncle Salvador, never establishing pop enough in his punches to keep Villa off him. But for a flurry every two or three rounds, Sanchez’s gloves slapped and his power wanted, and despite Villa’s plodding manner and predictable attack, Sanchez was unable to win a single round on all three judges’ cards.

Too bad. Sanchez had charmed San Antonio’s fight aficionados all week. His class as a person will be missed, even if his class as a fighter won’t be.

LEDEZMA KEEPS SAN ANTONIO UNDEFEATED
The last match on Saturday’s untelevised undercard saw a third battle of Texas, as San Antonio middleweight Emanuel Ledezma (9-1-1, 2 KOs) squared off with Houstonian Nelson Ramos (4-1, 2 KOs). As it turned out, Ramos’ 0 had to go, and Ledezma won a unanimous decision by scores of 39-37, 39-37 and 40-36.

SON OF PHOENIX SHINES
Top Rank matchmakers are very excited about young Phoenix super lightweight prospect Jose Benavidez (7-0, 7 KOs), and Saturday, Texans got a chance to see why. Wasting little time without seeming to be in a hurry, Benavidez made quick work of Rhode Island’s Josh Beeman (4-7-2, 2 KOs), stopping him at 1:20 of round 1.

Benavidez, who is extremely tall for a fighter weighing only 138 1/2, kept Beeman at the end of a long jab before wading in with two hooks to Beeman’s body. The first shot, a right hook, did little more than tilt Beeman leftwards and open him for a second shot. And that was a left hook to the button, Beeman’s liver, that brought a decisively early end to the match and kept Benavidez’s perfect knockout record intact.

OH! HENRY
Houston’s Omar Henry (10-0, 8 KOs) began Saturday’s third fight by tearing out his corner and assaulting Idaho middleweight Hilario Lopez (12-10, 8 KOs), throwing a dozen unanswered punches in 30 seconds and showing why Texans are so excited about “O. Henry.” But as much as Henry committed to his punches, winging them with the baddest of intentions, he was unable to chop down Lopez.

Henry finally cracked the light-hitting Lopez’s granitic chin in round 4, dropping him with two minutes to go in the bout. Lopez would not be stopped, though, finishing the fight on his feet, despite bleeding from above his right eye. Still, the match was not close, and Henry won decisively, 40-34, on all three official scorecards.

LONE STAR SCRAPPERS
The evening’s second undercard match featured a theme similar to its first – two Texans swinging freely – as San Antonio super lightweight James Cantu (6-0, 3 KOs) matched up with Laredo’s Antonio Gamez 3-3-1, 1 KO) for four entertaining rounds. Ultimately, Cantu prevailed via unanimous decision scores of 39-36, 39-36 and 40-35, after dropping Gamez in round 3 and winning enough of each the match’s other three stanzas.

Saturday’s action began with a six-round Texas welterweight battle between San Antonio’s Jose Juan Fuentes (6-1, 3 KOs) and Fort Worth’s Rogelio Barron (12-7, 4 KOs). Fuentes started the match in every way the classier fighter but then found himself assaulted by right hands and hit the canvas in both rounds 1 and 3.

In the end, though, Barron’s conditioning betrayed him, and Fuentes dusted himself off to win by TKO at 1:12 of round 5, when a succession of unanswered right hands forced the referee’s hand.

As scheduled, Saturday’s first bell rang at 6:25 P.M. local time.




VIDEO: FEDOR/WERDUM WEIGH-IN




Cano decisions Leon

Despite fighting through a badly swollen left eye, Pablo Cesar Cano remained undefeated by scoring a ten round split decision over former three time world title challenger Oscar Leon in Mexico City.

Cano is now 20-0-1. Leon is 28-13.

Marco Antonio Periban scored a fifth round stoppage over Jason Naugler in a scheduled eight round Light Heavyweight bout.

The bout was halted as Periban landed ten successive blows but none of the shots were of major consequence.

The bout was halted at 1:37 of round five for Periban who is now 8-0 with five knockouts. Naugler of Canada is now 18-13-1.

Ivan Cano scored a first round stoppage over Adrian Quiroz in a scheduled six round Jr. Welterweight bout.

Cano dropped Quiroz with a wicked right hand and finished him off with another flush right that forced the referee to stop the fight.

Cano is 7-3 with five knockouts. Quiroz is 5-2




Chavez Jr. weight controversy “nothing to get excited about”


SAN ANTONIO – Friday afternoon at the Arneson River Theatre on the River Walk, Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. and Ireland’s John Duddy both made the 160-pound weight limit for their “Latin Fury 15” main event. Or at least Duddy did. Chavez didn’t. And then Chavez did.

“He was a little bit over,” promoter Bob Arum said afterwards of Chavez’s first trip to the scale. “Then they moved it back (to 160), and he still made it. Nothing to get excited about.”

But that’s exactly what members of the Duddy camp did, at least initially. After Duddy made 159, a crowd gathered for the weighing of Chavez, who climbed on the scale, came close enough to 160 for WBC officials, and then quickly walked to strength and conditioning coach Alex Ariza for the customary swigging of sportsdrink. But Duddy manager Craig Hamilton was unconvinced.

One of Duddy’s cornermen followed Chavez and blocked his path to rehydration, ensuring that if Chavez were in fact over-weight, it would be discovered upon his return to the scale – before he could attribute his missed weight to anything he’d since drank. All went well on Chavez’s second visit to the scale, though, and members of both camps left without further incident.

Friday’s weigh-in happened at a particularly charming spot along the River Walk. With fans gathered on grass-covered amphitheater steps before the stage, participants in the televised portion of Saturday’s card arrived via river taxi, floating up Rio San Antonio then disembarking to take the stage. Above a black “Furia de Mexico” banner hung the five Hugman Bells that commemorate the city’s founding Spanish missions – San Antonio de Valero (Alamo), San Jose, San Juan, Concepcion and Espada.

Also attending the weigh-in were co-main event fighters Marco Antonio Barrera – who weighed 141 pounds – and his opponent Adailton De Jesus, who made 138. Next to the scale were local attractions Gabriel Elizondo and Raul Marquez, two friends who will fight on Saturday’s broadcast; Elizondo weighed 114, and Marquez was a half pound heavier. Finally, Salvador Sanchez II – fighting Tomas Villa in “Latin Fury 15’s” first televised bout – took the scale and weighed 125 1/4, with Villa making 126 1/2.

Saturday’s card will happen at Alamodome and comprise a total of nine bouts. Doors open at 5:30 P.M., and the opening bell is scheduled to ring at 6:30. 15rounds.com will have full ringside coverage.




Coming up on GFL


Program Lineup Through Friday July 2
Date Sport Event Price
Fri Jun 25 17:30PM ET MMA Wild Bill’s Fight Night 28 $9.99 More info
Sat Jun 26 24:30AM ET Boxing Conspiracy Fury $FREE! More info
Sat Jun 26 18:00PM ET Boxing Amateur Boxing at Gleason’s Gym (Sat., 6/26/10) $FREE! More info
Sat Jun 26 19:30PM ET MMA PFC III PA Fighting Championships $9.99 More info
Wed Jun 30 20:00PM ET MMA Elite Championship Cage Fighting 12 $9.99 More info

MMA

Tuff Nuff – July 2
Fri Jul 2 22:00PM ET
Click here to watch this event on GoFightLive!

Tuff-N-Uff returns to the Orleans Hotel & Casino on July 2 with two eight-woman tournaments; Larry Mir,cousin of former UFC heavyweight champion Frank Mir, also headlines. The co-feature sees a rematch of an exciting but controversial contest from May 30, as Zach Grossman (1-1) meets Barry Prevost (2-2) for a second time.

Among the early favorites in the 125-pound bracket are Virginia’s Nicole Hess (2-1), North Carolina’s Jenn Yum (5-1) and fighting twin Jillian Lybarger (2-1). Hess, who meets Jenn Yum (5-1), is no stranger to title fights. All three of the MiKiDo MMA product’s fights have been contested with a title on the line, and Hess has delivered with first-round submissions in two of the three outings. Hess now looks to rebound from the first loss of her career after dropping a split-decision result to Audrey Pang this past November.

The winners of the first-round contests in both tournaments will return for the semifinal round on Aug. 6, while two new champions will be crowned in the Sept. 24 final round.

For full fight card and more details about this event, visit GoFightLive.tv or click here

Elite Championship Cage Fighting 12
Wed Jun 30 20:00PM ET
Click here to watch this event on GoFightLive!

Elite Championship Cage Fighting 12

For full fight card and more details about this event, visit GoFightLive.tv or click here

PFC III PA Fighting Championships
Sat Jun 26 19:30PM ET
Click here to watch this event on GoFightLive!

Steve Blackman the lethal weapon of WWF (WWE) fame is putting on PFC III PA Fighting Championships. The show features fighters from all over the country as well as several local talents, the 14 fight card is a mixture of amateur and professional bouts.

The co main events feature Shawn Daughenbangh taking on Lucas Emeigh for the middleweight title and Dennis Bermudez taking on Joseph Carroll. Bermudez trains out of Blackman MMA while Emeigh trains out of the Damage Inc camp in Johnstown PA.

For full fight card and more details about this event, visit GoFightLive.tv or click here

Wild Bill’s Fight Night 28
Fri Jun 25 17:30PM ET
Click here to watch this event on GoFightLive!

Big Night of Fights from Georgia Tonight featuring Aric ‘Cage’ Nelson from the reality tv show ‘Daisy of Love’ fighting Georgia standout Clay Harvison from X3 Sports in Marietta. There is definite bad blood between these fighters.

This show will feature a HOT female main event – Tyra Parker vs Amy Stacey. Another top female bout features Justine Kish vs Linda Cunningham is also on the card.

For full fight card and more details about this event, visit GoFightLive.tv or click here




Chavez Jr. is fighting for a grown-up identity against Duddy


No telling who was first to say that fathers fight so their sons don’t have to. But I’m guessing it was a mom, who from a ringside seat sat like a horrified witness on that inevitable night when dad got bloodied, bruised and stitched up.

It is a powerful sentiment, as simple as it is sensible. But sorry, mom, it doesn’t always apply. Floyd Mayweather Jr. is the most notable example. From his father and uncle, he inherited instinct and skill, perfected them and transformed them into a family business. Mayweather Jr. makes it work. Marvis Frazier didn’t. Former heavyweight great Joe Frazier’s son should have listened to mom before Mike Tyson sprinted out of a corner in 1986 and launched him into unconsciousness. Joe would have lasted longer.

On the scale between Mayweather and Marvis, it’s hard to say where Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. belongs. A better idea, perhaps, is forthcoming Saturday night when the son with his dad’s legendary name, athletic royalty in Mexico, faces Irish middleweight John Duddy at The Alamodome in San Antonio on a pay-per-view card.

Duddy’s credentials (29-1, 18 KOs) say that Chavez (40-0-1, 30 KOs) is finally being weaned off a sliver-spoon diet of soft opposition. It’s a step or two in an attempt to quell impatience with a young fighter whose name represents an impossible collection of expectations. Chavez’ dad is a scarred personification of Mexican pride in a stubborn willingness to endure punches and punishment in the battle to fight, always fight on.

But it’s only a name. I’m not sure whether Chavez’s 24-year-old son will ever become a good fighter. But I am sure that he will never be his father. He can’t change his name to World B Free, but he can begin to abdicate expectations that he become a chip off of Mexico’s indestructible myth. After only a four-week camp, the move to trainer Freddie Roach is still in the experimental stage. If it begins to work against Duddy, however, it might be another step in allowing him to forge an identity, a fighter in his own right instead of just Jr.

“It came to a point in my career that if I wanted to do better,’’ said Jr., whose doubters grew after he tested positive for a banned substance after his last fight seven months ago against unknown Troy Rowland. “If I wanted bigger and better things I had to make a change. I did it because I knew I needed it for my career, I still want to do great things in boxing and that’s what motivated me. I thought: Do I want to stay where I am or do I want to get better? This opportunity came and I took it and I’m very happy that I did.

“Any time you make a move to the unknown you get nervous. I wasn’t sure what to expect but once I made the decision I knew I would be capable of doing anything he asked of me. I knew I could a lot of things and wouldn’t be here now if I couldn’t.”

Unlike his compact father’s heavy-handed style of fighting on the inside in a battle of attrition, the son is longer and seemingly built for tactics dictated by a long jab and agile footwork. The knowledge, perhaps instinct, is there, Roach said in a conference call Wednesday from San Antonio.

“He has enjoyed the work, he really has,’’ Roach said, almost as though he was surprised.

Roach, like everybody else, had heard the stories about a questionable work ethic. Doubts about Jr.’s willingness to fight on were further fueled by a late arrival to Roach’s Wild Card Gym in Los Angeles. It was beginning to look as if Jr. had inherited only his father’s diva-like reputation for arriving for news conferences or workouts whenever it suited him. But, Top Rank promoter Bob Arum said, Jr. was late only because of a paperwork delay in acquiring a visa.

“There were a lot of warning signs about how he is lazy and doesn’t want to work and would last a week with me,’’ said Roach, who agreed to work Jr.’s corner after Arum and Top Rank matchmaker Bruce Trampler pointedly urged Jr. to watch the work ethic exercised by Manny Pacquiao in training for Joshua Clottey. “He is a great kid, great to work with, and is very disciplined. He gets up in the morning and does his roadwork every day, comes in the gym and sparred up to 12 rounds with three sparring partners. Overall, it was a real good experience and we enjoyed each other’s company and it was a pleasure.

“I was going to give him one more day to arrive in camp before deciding I wasn’t going to have enough time with him, but then he showed up. We had four weeks together and obviously it would have been better to have more but next time around we’ll get better and better. We know what we have in front of us and we’ll be ready for it.’’

For Jr., San Antonio represents a time and place, a career cross roads, for his father and maybe one for him. He was seven years old in 1993, when his father escaped from the Alamodome with a draw with Pernell Whitaker. Most of the ringside media scored it for Whitaker. The record crowd, about 60,000 Chavez partisans, didn’t boo. They left quietly, also knowing they had just witnessed a great escape. It was a moment when there were some sure signs of erosion in the Mexican icon. JC Superstar was neither super nor a star.

Seventeen years later, the son returns to the scene with a chance to show that he is his own man, a grown-up instead of a Jr.

Even mom couldn’t argue with that.




VIDEO: On the set w/Fedor




Burns – Martinez September 4 in Scotland


Word out of Scotland is that Ricky Burns gets his long awaited World Title shot when he challenges Roman Martinez for the WBO Super Featherweight crown on the 4 September in Glasgow at the Kelvin Hall. Burns 27, steps up in class against unbeaten Puerto Rican Martinez who will be making his third defence. Martinez ironically won it on British soil when he stopped Nicky Cook back in March 2009.

Also scheduled for the undercard is an intriguing Commonwealth Featherweight title fight between experienced champion John Simpson who fights on home soil & unbeaten prospect Stephen Smith. Simpson an 8 year veteran who sports a 21-6(9) ledger is also a former British champion. For his part Smith 24, puts his 10-0(6) record on the line along with his reputation as one of the top prospects in Britain. Smith narrowly missed out on qualifying for the 2008 Olympics but has taken vengeance sweeping aside all before him in the pro ranks. This will be his acid test though.

Also appearing is Paul Appleby who makes his debut fighting for Frank Warren. It will be one time bright prospect Appleby, still only 23’s first fight in 16 months when he fought valiantly though ultimately unsuccessfully against Martin Lindsay.




Duddy looking to make bandwagons, not jump on them


SAN ANTONIO – Wednesday afternoon in Alamodome’s cavernous but air-conditioned arena, “Latin Fury 15” participants, managers and trainers joined Top Rank’s Bob Arum on stage for their final press conference before Saturday’s card. Some wore jeans, others wore t-shirts, three even wore blazers. But only one had green Chuck Taylors on.

That would be Ireland’s John Duddy, of County Derry in the North, proudly wearing a color that’s as universally associated with Ireland as any color is with any land. Duddy will fight Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. for the WBC Silver middleweight title in Saturday’s main event.

And yes, Top Rank knows what you might think about that.

“A lot of people say, ‘What the hell is the WBC Silver belt?’” said Bob Arum from the stage on Wednesday. “The winner becomes the WBC mandatory challenger, so it has great significance.”

Duddy confirmed the significance when his turn at the podium came, describing a world title shot – in this case with Sergio Martinez, the middleweight champion – as being a dream of his since childhood. But first he must beat Chavez.

“I’ve had this fight on my mind for a long time,” Duddy said of battling the son of Mexico’s most famous champion. “It’s a crossroads fight for us both.”

One of the themes of this week’s promotion has been Duddy’s family in Northern Ireland, specifically the uncle after whom he was named, John Francis Duddy, who was killed during a demonstration on Jan. 30, 1972 that came to be known as “Bloody Sunday.” Last week, a 10-volume tribunal report exonerated the Irish citizens killed that day, concluding all were unarmed. Duddy’s uncle, known colloquially as Jackie, will be honored with the tolling of a 10-count before Saturday’s main event.

While last week’s Saville Report brought joy to long-suffering members of Duddy’s family, on Wednesday Duddy emphasized how important it was to him to have their permission before using his prizefight as a way of honoring Jackie Duddy.

“My family were thrilled with this decision,” Duddy said when asked about the tribunal’s finding. “But I was never a part of that (struggle). I don’t want to seem to be jumping on the bandwagon.”

Duddy confirmed, though, that he would be fighting in his uncle’s honor with the blessing of his aunts and uncles Saturday, and also the blessings of his father – who will be in Alamodome.

But neither father nor son is likely to see much green in the Alamo City, at least not without it accompanied by Mexican red and white. Asked if he thought maybe his opponent would be the crowd favorite at an event alternately called “La Furia de Mexico,” Duddy was quick but charming in his answer.

“No maybe about it,” he said. “They better be for Chavez.”

Then he smiled and promised there was a chance he’d convert the crowd and have them “singing ‘Juan’ Duddy” by the end of the night.

SALVADOR SANCHEZ REMEMBERED
Leading Saturday’s “Latin Fury 15” telecast will be Salvador Sanchez II, the nephew of Salvador Sanchez, a Mexican fighting legend who made nine professional appearances in Texas, including four in San Antonio. The younger Sanchez is eager to garner a fraction of the acclaim his uncle won in a career defined by 10 world title fights.

“To be here, where my uncle defended his title, is an honor,” said Sanchez, Wednesday afternoon.

RAUL MARTINEZ WANTS TO BE YOUR CHAMPION
Local interest will also focus itself on Saturday’s second televised card when Raul Martinez and Gabriel Elizondo, two friends who grew up together in San Antonio’s amateur program, put their camaraderie aside and prove there are no friends in the prizefighting ring.

“It’s a great privilege, a great honor, to be fighting on this card,” said Martinez from Wednesday’s podium. “I want to show San Antonio they’ve got a future world champion here.”

Martinez also acknowledged the city’s last world champion, Jesse James Leija, whose Championfit Gym hosted an open workout Tuesday.

ALAMODOME CONFIGURED FOR 15,000
Saturday night, Alamodome will have roughly half its seats curtained-off. An upcoming convention will take the south side of the building, with the north side reserved for boxing. This is great news for local fans. A quick peek at the ringside area Wednesday revealed that upper-deck seats are also covered in curtains, meaning that every seat Saturday will be a good one.

Top Rank officials confirmed ticket sales have been pleasantly brisk, but plenty of seats still remain available.

FRIDAY WEIGH-IN ON THE RIVER
The weigh-in for “Latin Fury 15” will happen along the River Walk at 1:30 P.M. on Friday afternoon at the Arneson River Theatre, just north of La Villita. It is open to the public.

Anyone willing to brave June’s humidity will be rewarded with perhaps the most picturesque setting in which any boxing weigh-in has yet been conducted.

FINANCE: WORLD BANK POSTPONES INDIA LOANS

Inter Press Service English News Wire May 27, 1998

Inter Press Service English News Wire 05-27-1998 WASHINGTON, May 26 (IPS) — The World Bank today postponed consideration of $865 million in new loans to India as part of a Washington-led protest against India’s recent nuclear tests.

Voting on the loans was put off until “a date to be determined” after several of the lending agency’s 24 executive directors had asked for the delay, the Bank said in a statement.

Bank officials declined to name the countries requesting the postponement. However, at the summit of the “Group of Eight” leading powers in Birmingham, England earlier this month, the United States, Japan and Canada led the drive for international sanctions against India.

Washington invoked the 1994 Nuclear Proliferation Prevention Act and imposed sweeping sanctions against New Delhi May 13. That law requires U.S. executive directors at the World Bank, International Monetary Fund, and Asian Development Bank to oppose loans for India. bankofindianow.com bank of india

The World Bank had been expected to approve some $2 billion in such loans before June 30, the end of its fiscal year. The four loans to have been decided this week included three from the Bank itself and one from the International Finance Corporation (IFC), its private-sector affiliate.

Now in limbo were $130 million to support India’s renewable energy program, $450 million to develop the national electric power grid, $275 million to improve the highway network in the state of Haryana, and a $10 million IFC loan for a tractor factory.

Other loans in the pipeline included two health projects and an “economic restructuring” package for Andhra Pradesh state. It was not yet certain whether those loans also would be subject to delay, a Bank spokeswoman told IPS.

This week’s postponement effectively added to sanctions that could top $20 billion in frozen lending, loan guarantees, and other economic aid from U.S. and international agencies, according to economists here.

Washington’s sanctions so far have cut off some $500 million in export projects, pending but not approved by the U.S. Export-Import Bank (Ex-Im), as well as $3.5 billion in projects still in their very first stage. Also halted was $10.2 billion in insurance and financing by the U.S. government’s Overseas Private Investment Corporation.

U.S. companies have been among those to suffer. Seattle-based Boeing Co. had been counting on $200 million in Ex-Im credits for the sale of 10 737 jets to the Indian private carrier Jet Airways — a deal worth about $500 million. Boeing also was competing against Europe’s Airbus Industrie for billions of dollars in business from the national carrier, Air India.

Indian government officials played down the likely impact of sanctions and arguing that any withdrawal by the United States or Japan — which already had halted its bilateral aid program — would serve only to heat up competition for lucrative Indian contracts in fields ranging from state development projects to private business deals. in our site bank of india

U.S. officials moved yesterday to counter the notion that Washington might be isolating itself from Western nations more intent on pursuing business opportunities in India. European foreign ministers had signaled their support of U.S. efforts to block loans to New Delhi and implement other measures intended to win Indian compliance with the 1996 Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty (CTBT), according to State Department spokesman James Rubin.

“The Europeans, contrary to the impression one gets from international media accounts, are moving toward imposing what is effectively a sanction for India if it doesn’t join the CTBT as a result of the test,” Rubin told reporters.

India is the World Bank’s biggest borrower. Last year, it received some $1.5 billion in loans and credits from the Bank and its soft-loan window, the International Development Association.

The Bank’s portfolio of active loans to India as of the end of June 1997 was $15.1 billion.

The World Bank and other multilateral lenders account for some 70 percent of India’s borrowing from overseas and New Delhi has been especially dependent on these loans to finance power and transportation infrastructure — key to attracting foreign investment and enabling economic growth.

While that funding has been key to some of India’s most ambitious and crucial infrastructure projects, it also has been assailed for backing environmentally unsound projects that trampled on the rights of local communities. Notable examples include a 2,000-megawatt coal-fired power project at Singrauli, often referred to as India’s “power capital.” The Bank itself has admitted that the effort, aimed at helping end the desperately short supply of electricity to Indian industry and homes, has been an environmental, health, and economic disaster for peasant communities living in the area.




BIG JOHN: NERVES WON’T KO ME–WATCH ON GFL FOR FREE


WATCH FOR FREE
JOHN McDERMOTT has promised fans he won’t be beaten by nerves when the bell rings in his return clash against Tyson Fury.

Manchester Romany gypsy Fury (10-0) risks his English heavyweight title against the Essex man (25-6) at The Brentwood Centre on Friday June 25 in a contest that also doubles as a final eliminator for the British title.

McDermott admits he constantly worries before fights, but insists he will be cool when they cross paths nine months after their epic first battle which Fury controversially won on points.

Big John, 30, said: “I do worry beforehand, but when I get in them I am gutsy and will push anyone until the end.

I worry about silly things sometimes, but that is just me.

“I always question myself and ask ‘Am I ready?’ but I know I am ready for this fight. This is a big one for me.”

In a big clash of prospects Southern Area heavyweight champion Larry ‘The War Machine’ Olubamiwo meets North Shields Dave Ferguson (12-2) in a British heavyweight title eliminator.

Other heavyweight bruisers on the bill includes Olympic bronze medallist David Price (6-0), Tom Dallas (10-0) and debutant Damien Campbell.

Also boxing on Maloney’s latest knockout show is are Ashley Sexton (9-0-1), Menay Edwards (3-0), Tony Hill (4-1) and Lewis Pettit (1-0).

Tickets are available prices £40 and £90 from 0871 226 1508 and www.frankmaloney.com




Juanma Lopez to fight Rafael Marquez in September pending July 10 win


With a victory over Bernabe Concepcion on July 10, WBO Featherweight champion Juan Manuel Lopez will showdown with Rafael Marquez on September 18th, this according to Dan Rafael of espn.com.

“The only one who doesn’t agree to this deal is a guy named Bernabe Concepcion,” Top Rank’s Bob Arum, who promotes Lopez and Concepcion, said. “But we made our deal with Showtime and we have the MGM on hold.”

“I’m really excited about this fight because I believe Marquez wins the fight,” said Gary Shaw, who promotes Marquez. “I think ‘Juanma’ is overrated. [Showtime’s Ken] Hershman told me Top Rank’s deal with him was done and Beltran told me we were all buttoned up and done. So all we are waiting for is the July fight and for ‘Juanma’ to come out victorious and healthy.”

“That’s always a big rivalry (between Puerto Rican and Mexican fighters) and we’re doing the fight on the Mexican holiday,” Shaw said. “What could be bigger?”

Said Arum, “It’s a sensational fight and a great fight particularly for that date because it’s the 200th anniversary of Mexican independence.”

“Rafael Marquez really wanted this fight,” Shaw said. “He believes he wins the fight and that it’s a great opportunity for him. If he beats ‘Juanma’ he knows that anyone who doubted that he should be in the Hall of Fame won’t be able to doubt him anymore.”

“If Marquez beats Lopez, he’s got some more really big fights in the division,” Shaw said. “The next fight I’d try to make is with [Top Rank-promoted titlist Yuriorkis] Gamboa.”

“I look at the fight like another Barrera-Morales kind of fight because of their styles and the way they’re going to come and bomb each other, and not take a backward step,” Arum said.




Conspiracy Fury? who they kidding John!

So it’s a case of repeat or revenge, Manchester’s Tyson Fury fights for his old title this Friday at the Brentwood International centre just off the A12 against the man he won it from John Mcdermott last September in a highly controversial decision that the fight fraternity deemed a robbery that lent in favour of the Mancunian beanpole!

The villain of the peice was referee Terry O’Connor who awarded the decison along with the vacant belt to Fury, and it caused outrage let alone fury amongst many a fan let alone those in boxing.
It was almost Henry Cooper v Joe Bugner revisited, as the much younger Fury was adjudged the winner, clearly through out the contest Fury seemed to run out of ideas has Mcdermott was clearly outfighting and out hustling his far more inexperienced fellow protagonist through the ten rounds, but Fury unlike Bugner has’nt been on the end of the public’s disgust and rightfully so, then again neither should have Joe in the first place.

It was even believed that the ref O’Connor had a long running grudge with Mcdermott’s father Stan whom O’Connor boxed when he was a pro heavyweight himself and this was possibly the reason behind the ridiculous scoring, {for the record I gave Mcdermott the decision by six rounds}.
None the less Fury was stripped of the belt due to the nature of the decision and now finds himself challenging again for the vacant crown against his old nemesis, the decision even warranted a meeting with the British Boing Board of Control and they made a rematch compulsory.

In the post fight interview Mcdermott said “what do I have to do to win” well now he has the chance to get justice, at a earlier press conference Fury failed to show much to the annoyance of promoter Frank Maloney, but now the press conference has been rescheduled for the Wednesday before the actual fight and should be interesting to say the least.

So to the fight and to tell the truth I see Mcdermott exact revenge and the fight flow in a similar vein to there first meeting, Fury has boxed twice since then and injured his hand in doing in his next fight that caused a postponement of the rematch that should have taken place before Christmas last year, Mcdermott has not boxed since but should’nt be too rusty despite the lay off, I see Mcdermott being that too experienced and winning as wide if not a wider points decision this time around, and if we have a similar kind of decision, just like the billing of there first fight ‘collosal’ and the billing of this the rematch ‘conspiracy Fury’ look for it too be a collosal conspiracy and a lot of fury chucked in for good measure!

Despite my view Lenny Lee one of the most famous faces in British boxing, {you’d know his face, his the old chap on the apron in the corner of many a big fight and many a small fight, okay literally any fight on t.v and not on t.v}, Lenny thinks it’ll go in favour of Tyson, and while on the subject of old timers and Tyson, remember it was Cus D’amato Mike Tyson’s former guardian and trainer that once said it took ten years to make a good ten round fighter, that’s why I’m going for Tyson to lose, Fury that is not Mike!!!!!!!!!!

Also featured on the undercard is Dave Ferguson going up against Larry Olubamiwo the Southern Area heavyweight champ, in what is a final eliminator for the Fury-Mcdermott rematch, though it was reported it was a final eliminator for the British title, this is obviously nonsense as neither man is out of the novice stage yet, despite Larry becoming Southern Area champ in his last fight when he beat Southampton’s Colin Kenna inside of a round on the Shinny Baayar- Ashley Sexton card at Dagenham, and talking of Sexton, he will also be appearing on this show since that disapointment against Bayaar that ended in a draw, hoping to get a rematch with the Mongolian, Sexton’s the grandson of former West Ham footballer and Manchester United manager Dave Sexton and also the great grandson of former pro light heavy Archie, dad of Dave naturally.

Also featured are light heavy Menay Edwards, Olympic bronze medalist David Price who hopes to one day challenge for the richest one.

Also featured are heavyweights Damian Campbell making his debut and prospect Tom Dallas, lower down the scales you have Tony Hill at middle, Lewis Pettitt at super bantam and Ben Jones at super feather

Tickets available are £40, if you’d like to purchase then go to www.frankmaloney.com for more details.

I hope to see you there

I’ve been Michael Angelo Serra and you’ve been reading for the last couple of minutes!

any comments to micksnice@aol.com




Roach puts the open in Chavez Jr. open workout


SAN ANTONIO – Tuesday afternoon, Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. and his new trainer Freddie Roach conducted an open workout for local media that was much more than advertised. Far from the scripted, lather-me-up-for-the-press exercises these events usually comprise, Chavez and Roach worked long and hard. And it looked like one of them needed it.

Chavez (40-0-1, 30 KOs) arrived later than initially planned at Jesse James Leija’s Championfit Gym – part of “Latin Fury 15” fight week festivities – though not for the reasons some might expect. Originally scheduled to walk through the paces before Saturday’s co-main event star Marco Antonio Barrera, Chavez instead had his costar go first so that Chavez could have more time for stretching, shadow boxing and lots of pad work.

Before working on his new charge’s balance, timing and occasionally questionable defense, Freddie Roach answered questions with typical honesty.

“More time would have been better,” Roach said of his short training camp with Chavez. “He’s not lazy. He’s trying. But he doesn’t have all the moves yet.”

Asked to list Chavez’s strengths, Roach treated his guy’s height and reach.

“He has a great jab, but he doesn’t use it as much as I want him to,” Roach said. “He’s not 100 percent there right now.”

If Roach thought he was getting a lazy underachiever in Chavez – a label that has haunted the young Mexican with the country’s most famous name – he was pleased to learn that was not the case.

“He’s actually a very nice kid,” Roach said. “I was really surprised.”

When asked what most concerns him about Ireland’s John Duddy (29-1, 18 KOs), Chavez’s Saturday opponent, Roach was candid.

“Duddy has a pretty good right hand,” he said. “My guy tends to get hit with those.”

Probably a few left hands, too. Once Alex Ariza, Roach’s strength and conditioning coach, was done stretching Chavez and watching him shadow box, Roach put on the hand pads and began a session with Chavez that could best be called instructive. Trainer and fighter looked well-rehearsed and tightly in-sync while doing 1-2s but quickly stumbled on dead patches when their focus turned to hooks and defense.

As Roach promised, Chavez looked particularly susceptible to right crosses, as his left hand strayed low much of the time. More troublesome still were the balance issues Chavez showed while trying to come off the ropes by pivoting leftward on his lead foot. A rudimentary move, the pivot’s requisite weight shift befuddled Chavez enough for Roach to spend the better part of a round on it, belying the merits of Chavez’s pristine record and making ringsiders wonder what will happen if Duddy forces Chavez to the ropes Saturday.

That match will be the main event of a nine-fight card promoter Top Rank will stage at Alamodome, downtown.

MARCO ANTONIO BARRERA BACK IN FIGHTING TRIM
Also present Tuesday afternoon were Mexican three-division world champion Marco Antonio Barrera (65-7, 43 KOs) and undefeated Phoenix hopeful Jose Benavidez (6-0, 6 KOs). Barrera will fight little-known Brazilian lightweight Adailton De Jesus (26-4, 21 KOs) in Saturday’s co-main event, while Benavidez will face Rhode Island’s Josh Beeman (4-6-2, 2 KOs) in the card’s opening bout.

After skipping rope, doing some light shadow boxing and saluting gathered fans, Barrera took a shower, changed and greeted the media, looking trimmer than he had during a press conference last month.

Asked how high his weight had climbed after his loss to Amir Khan 15 months ago, Barrera was truthful if not proud.

“One forty-seven,” Barrera said. “I let it go a little. It was the highest it has ever been. But I have lost the weight slowly, little by little. I feel good.”




RAN NAKASH TO BATTLE FORMER WORLD CHAMPION LOU DEL VALLE ON WEDNESDAY NIGHT JULY 14TH AT THE ARENA IN SOUTH PHILADELPHIA.

PHILADELPHIA (June 22, 2010)—On Wednesday night, July 14th, Boxing returns to The Arena in South Philadelphia as No Limits Promotions presents a night of world class boxing that will be seen all over country as the first show of the Comcast Boxing Series.

In the main event, undefeated cruiserweight and Israeli sensation, Ran Nakash battles former Light Heavyweight champion Lou Del Valle in a Cruiserweight bout scheduled for ten rounds.

The scheduled eight round co-feature will pit former Olympic Gold Medalist Felix Diaz taking on Emanuel Taylor in a battle of undefeated Welterweights.

Nakash has a record of 24-0 with eighteen knockouts and has captures the imagination of the Philadelphia boxing fans as he has amassed a record of 10-0 of Philly’s famed Legendary Blue Horizon.

Nakash of Haifa, Israel has had impressive victories over the likes Larry Robinson (10-3); Dave Brunelli (8-4); Gary Gomez (18-10-1) and Richard Stewart (14-8-2).

Nakash has scored three consecutive knockouts with the latest being a third round stoppage over Dan Sheehan on April 29th in Tel Aviv, Israel

Del Valle of New York has a record of 36-6 with twenty-two knockouts

Del Valle won his first twenty-two fights before challenging and narrowly losing a unanimous decision to long reigning champ Virgil Hill. Four wins later, Del Valle put him back in position and this time captured the WBA Championship with a eighth round stoppage over Eddy Smulders (34-1.)

In Del Valle’s first defense, he scored a knock down on legendary pound for pound king Roy Jones Jr. but came up short as he dropped a unanimous decision.

It just took for fights for Del Valle to position himself for the WBA Title again and he fought to a draw against Bruno Girard in Girard’s homeland of France.

The two fought just eleven months later with Girard pulling out a close split decision victory.

Since that fight, the eighteen year veteran has gone 5-3-1 with his latest fight being a draw with Joey Spina (25-1-1) on October 31, 2009.

Diaz of the Dominican Republic won a Gold Medal at the 2008 Olympic Games in Beijing, China. Diaz has amassed a record of 5-0 with three knockouts as a professional.

Diaz has already fought in his native Dominican Republic, Russia, Germany and this fight will be his second in the United States.

In his last fight, Diaz scores a six round unanimous decision over Orlando Membreno on March 12th in the Dominican Republic.

Taylor of Edgewood Arsenal, Maryland is just nineteen years-old but has already compiled an impressive mark of 8-0 with seven big wins by way of knockout.

Taylor, who turned pro at eighteen, has scored two consecutive stoppages, which includes a third round stoppage over Ayi Bruce (6-1) on May 7th in Huntington, NY.

Also on the bill will be former world Junior Amateur champion, Joey Dawejko (3-0, 1 KO) of Philadelphia and he will take on William Miranda (1-0) of Allentown, PA in a Heavyweight bout scheduled for four rounds.

Israeli Jr. Welterweight Oz Goldenburg (1-0) will take on Travis Thompson (3-7-1, 2 KO’s) of Pottstown, PA in a bout scheduled for four rounds.

There will be great fights to be announced shortly

The Arena is located at 7 West Ritner Street

Tickets for this memorable night of boxing are priced at $100, $75, and $50 and can be purchased at following locals:

The Joe Hand Boxing Gym (543-547 North 3rd Street) by calling 1 215 271 4263
Peltz Boxing (2501 Brown Street) 215- 765 -0922
The Arena (7 West Ritner St.) 267-687-7560
Joey Eye 267-304-9399
Don Elbaum 610-933-7510

Classes scheduled at Family History Center

Idaho State Journal January 22, 2011 POCATELLO –A series of classes will be held at 7 p.m. each Tuesday night at the Family History Center , located at 156 S. Sixth Ave. in Pocatello. Further inquiries may be made by contacting the library at 232-9262. here new family search

Library hours are 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., Monday, Friday and Saturday, and 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. on Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursdays. Open Sundays by special appointment. web site new family search

This series of classes began on Jan. 18. The subject of remaining classes is presented below:

* Jan. 25 -Genealogy Program Ancestral Quest n Feb. 1 -Genealogy Program Personal Ancestral File n Feb. 8 -New Family Search n Feb. 15 -Basic Computer Operation n Feb. 22 -Filing (Conversion to Digital) n March 1 -Incorporation Of Histories and Pictures n March 8 -Tactics (Where do I go from here/ Basic research) A new schedule of additional classes to be taught will be released near the end of February.




Shawn Porter to Battle Ray Robinson as part of SHO Box Tripleheader on July 16


Sources have told 15rounds.com that highly regarded Jr. Middleweight Shawn Porter will take on Ray Robinson in a fight mandated at 150 lbs in Memphis, Tennessee and will be part of a tripleheader that will feature Fernando Guerrero battling Ishe Smith as well as Lenard Lane taking on Mike Dallas Jr.

The card will take place on July 16

Porter of Akron, Ohio is 15-0 with twelve knockouts. Robinson of Philadelphia will be looking to rebound from his first professional loss on December 3rd to Brad Solomon and has a record of 11-1 with four knockouts,

The Tripleheader will be telecasted on Showtime.




Ultimate Cage Battles from this past Saturday

Saturday night at the Renaissance Sports Complex in Valley View Ohio, MMA pioneer Dan Bobish traded in his gloves for a suit as he presented the first, in a series of shows, entitled Ultimate Cage Battles. The capacity crowd was treated to a exciting evening of amateur and professional MMA coupled with the appearance of celebrity guests that thrilled the fans. UFC Legend Mark Coleman was in attendance along with UFC fighter Wes Sims. Coleman was a 1992 Olympian, UFC 10 and UFC 11 Tournament Champion, 2000 Pride Fighting Championships Open Division, and 3 time UFC world champion & was the first ever UFC Heavyweight Champion of the World. Coleman was inducted into the UFC Hall of Fame at UFC 82. The broadcast team entertained the crowd throughout the night as Bobish hired Cleveland radio personalities Marty Allen and Paul Rado who served as the blow by blow and color commentators. George Michael Phillips served as the evening’s ring announcer.

Results

Donte Adams def. Rubin Mendez
Paul Freeman def. Victor Crenshaw
Brain Forgue def. Nate Hurst
Gino DeGiulio def. Don Kintz
Kyle Booth def. Tyler Bess
Mike Stoker def. Ryan Clark
Chris Wright DRAW Larry DeGiulio
Brandon Inskeep def. Justin Goodall
William Penn def. Bill Clifford
Matt Traylor def. Evan DeLong
Nate Jolly def. Ryan Bixler
Ryan Lang def. Noe Quintania
Rob Wince def. Kyle Gibbons

In the spirit of sportsmanship, following the main event, Kyle Gibbons presented Rob Wince with a check for $500 to the Cayden Wince Memorial Scholarship fund. An emotional Wince accepted the check as the two fighters embraced to a standing ovation showing that once the final bell rings the rivalry ends and the brotherhood begins. Bobish announced that the next show will be September 11, 2010 at the Renaissance Sports Complex with a tribute to the troops theme.




VIDEO: Fedor Emelianenko




Somebody’s mojo has got to go

At some point a word for the art of inducing black magic, “mojo,” became a synonym for momentum. Today there’s even a popular Hollywood website that tracks movies’ box-office momentum and calls it mojo. Boxing has its own such mojo.

It’s a variation on the risk-reward ratio that keeps managers awake at night. A fighter with mojo makes lots of money relative to the risk his competition poses. If you were to take a fighter’s purse, then, and divide it by his opponent’s assumed risk rating, what you would have left is a fighter’s mojo.

Well, this weekend somebody’s mojo is going to go in San Antonio. That’s where Mexican Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. battles Ireland’s John Duddy for something called the “WBC Silver Middleweight Title” in the 15th installment of promoter Top Rank’s “Latin Fury” pay-per-view series. Marco Antonio Barrera will also be there, accompanied by local prospect Raul Martinez, Mexican namesake curiosity Salvador Sanchez, and Phoenix superstar-in-the-making Jose Benavidez.

Top Rank is as much a participant in this show as any fighter because the risk-reward ratio of its main event has an uncharacteristically asymmetrical look to it. Neither Chavez nor Duddy will see his mojo improve greatly with a victory, and either Chavez or Duddy will see his mojo vanish with a loss.

This event will happen in a stadium, Alamodome, and feature two Top Rank fighters. It will be the third time Top Rank has employed this formula in 2010. Earlier this month, it put Yuri Foreman and Miguel Cotto in Yankee Stadium. Earlier this year, it put Manny Pacquiao and Joshua Clottey in Cowboys Stadium. Top Rank takes some deserved criticism for using only its own fighters in major events, but it also deserves credit for being an anomaly: It’s the only promoter better at selling tickets than pitching television executives.

Both of Saturday’s Top Rank fighters have fan bases disproportionate to their achievements. Duddy has built a large following among Irishmen, both in the Old Country and the new, with his handsomeness, charisma and an action fighting style that in any other context could be called Mexican. He’s also benefitted from a paucity of prizefighters in shamrocks; the turn of this century gave Irish eyes fewer men to smile on than the turn of the 20th.

Chavez, meanwhile, built his following the real-old-fashioned way: He inherited it. Trafficking in his father’s name, Chavez has become the biggest draw in the “Latin Fury” franchise. How much genuine affection Mexicans feel for Junior is debatable. Mexicans’ brand loyalty, though, is not; they cheer the name of the one man who gave them anything to cheer about during Mexico’s abysmal stretch from 1988 to 1996. In return for such loyalty, Chavez often treats them to a rousing impersonation of someone uninterested in fighting.

Chavez made his professional debut almost seven years ago as a super featherweight. Without once challenging for a world title, he has climbed five weight classes. That distinction is remarkable when you consider the WBC’s profligacy with championship belts, the WBC’s Mexico City headquarters, and what the Chavez name means to Mexican athletics.

Most of Chavez’s wins have been “Big” – in the collegiate sense of the word. Junior recently finished up a five-year reign of terror on the Big 10 and Big 12 conferences. After back-to-back-to-back bludgeonings of Hoosiers, Chavez vanquished a total of 11 representatives from Indiana, Missouri, Oklahoma, Kansas, Nebraska, Minnesota and Michigan. Not since Pancho Villa’s raid in 1916 has a Mexican made so many Midwesterners so nervous.

And perhaps not ever has a Mexican prizefighter been so protected. Possibly, Top Rank is fed up with Chavez and done protecting him. His latest caper was a failed drug test in November, when he apparently needed diuretics to make 160 pounds.

Chavez’s recent hiring of perennial Trainer of the Year Freddie Roach only makes things more curious. Right now, Chavez could don a Philthy Rich Records t-shirt and boast, “Forty-two have tried, and forty-two have failed.” Isn’t a prospect supposed to lose before a rehabilitation tour with his new trainer?

All signs would point to a victory for John Duddy, were it not for Duddy’s performance against Mexican Michael Medina in Cowboys Stadium three months ago. Duddy looked rather hittable in that affair and won a close split decision. But both fighters wore green gloves, prompting one ringside handicapper to quip, “When a Mexican wears green gloves into a fight with an Irishman, bet the Irishman.”

Saturday in San Antonio, on the other hands, both fighters will wear the equivalent of red, white and green gloves. Or will they?

There’s a curious affinity between the Mexicans and Irish – two peoples that love battle with only a secondary interest in victory. A bottle of tequila, a bottle of whisky and a good row; really, you’d be hard pressed to find a frown in that crowd of Mexicans and Irish, whatever the result.

And that’s before you consider Los San Patricios, a battalion of Irish artillerymen conscripted to fight as U.S soldiers in the Mexican American War of 1846. Told to kill fellow Catholics, Los San Patricios deserted the American army, fought on the side of the Mexicans, and were hanged for treason by the man who would become America’s 12th president.

In South Texas, the way men acquit themselves in battles with Mexicans still means plenty. Which is why Alamodome is a proper venue for this match. It is also the place Chavez’s father fought before the largest indoor crowd a domestic prizefight has yet recorded, in 1993. That record will not be in jeopardy this week.

Wither Saturday’s fight? Duddy will fight as he always does, reducing the match to a question of courage, if he’s able. Chavez will fight something like a child of privilege – a “fresa” in Mexican parlance – who resents usurpers. And odd as that combination might sound, Chavez-Duddy will be a hell of a fight.

Bart Barry can be reached at bbarry@15rounds.com




Heavyweight Mike Marrone wins by KO; Jimi Ninja Chaikong grabs big MMA win at Battle at the Beach 8 in Miami Beach!

Boxing Promoters Don King, Gary Shaw, & Tuto Zabala teamed up with Jeff Gibson of Elite Promotions for and exciting night of Boxing and MMA in Miami Beach dubbed “Battle at the Beach VIII”.

24 year old Heavyweight Mike Marrone 19-1(14KO) had a very big knockout win over Joseph Rabotte 8-14. Marrone a former Florida Golden Glove champion looked a bit rusty while working his way back into action. He fought in spots early and never seemed to engage until he dropped a bomb of a right hand in round five at 1:49.

Marrone is currently promoted by Don King and trains out of Buddy McGirts Gym in Vero Beach ,FL and was coming off of his first career first defeat in 2008 in Germany against Francesco Pianeta 20-0(12KO’s) who is now ranked #10 by the WBO. At the time of that fight, Marrone was recovering from the passing away of his younger brother Chris due to a car accident and took time off and now is back.

Jimi “Ninja” Chaikong got his first MMA victory over Steven Jenetis who was making his pro debut. Chaikong caught Jenetis in his guard and swiftly maneuvered into a triangle which put Jenetis out when the referee Jorge Ortiz waved it off midway through the first round. Congrats to Jimi Ninja for his first win in over 10 years of professional fighting and breaking his back along the way.. literally in 2001.

In a female boxing attraction Marianne Chubirka 5-4(3KO) won a majority decision over Deneise Jacobs who was making her debut. Churika and Jacobs engaged often with Chukirka landing the heavier shots often finding a home for the overhand right with a come forward style. The cards read 38-38 37-39 40-36.

MMA- Channing Ward won by triangle choke over Danceton Holcom both making pro debut.

Luis Cruz 1-0 won a unanimous decision victory over a very game Frederico Vega 1-1(1KO) both from Puerto Rico. The two fought hard from bell to bell often slugging over boxing. Cruz who is promoted by long time promoter Tuto Zabala and showed promise in his first fight for his new promoter.

In a MMA bout Sam Jones improved to 2-0 with a unanimous decision over Guillermo Marin who was making his debut.

In an action packed light welterweight matchup Roberto Lopez 3-0-2 was relentless with punches and pressure on the way to a unanimous decision over Southpaw Xavier Burges 4-1. All three judges scored the bout 40-36, as did I.

In the second knockout of the night came by way of heavyweight Donato DeMartiis 2-0(1KO) who landed a beautiful left right combo to the head of John Ramos that put out for the count late in round one. Ramos looked determined to land the big shot with several huge handed attempts only to be knocked out himself. It was a try hard effort that got the puncher knocked out by the boxer.

MMA fighter Sidney Carlton got a walkover win over Cedric James who was a no show who showed up at the weigh in’s and not the event.

JP Reese got his first MMA win over Johanner Correa when the fight was called due to strikes at 1:45 of the second round.