By Norm Frauenheim-
LOS ANGELES – Mikey Garcia has gone to school in law enforcement. He’s gone to school to learn how to drive race cars. He’s always a student of one pursuit
or another. The learning never ceases, not even in in the craft he has mastered with a fundamental proficiency few ever attention.
A pound-for-pound contender is the equivalent of a boxing PhD. Garcia, a consensus top five in the pound-for-pound debate, is a master of the brutal art, yet he’s still the student seeking to learn more. Do more.
In part, it’s that student in Garcia (38-0, 30 KOs) that helps explain his lightweight unification fight against Robert Easter Jr Saturday night in a Showtime-televised bout (10 p.m. ET/7 p.m. PT) at Staples Center. It’s the next lesson plan in a career — a life — full of them.
“I’m looking for answers,’’ said Garcia, the World Boxing Council champion who hopes to add Easter’s International Boxing Federation version of the title to his collection.
Another belt is like another degree for the decorated Garcia, a already a multi-division champion. Only an undisputed claim on the mythical pound-for-pound crown appears to be missing on Garcia’s resume. The question is how to get it. It’s about politics and punches, timing and tactics. It’s also about finding the right fit, the right weight and the right opponent in a three-way race to the top with Terence Crawford and Vasiliy Lomachenko.
In considering options that might pave Garcia’s way to the top of the pound-for-pound debate, Garcia has looked up and down the scale. Of late, his search has taken him to a challenge of emerging welterweight Errol Spence Jr That might be a pound or several too far for Garcia, who appears to be at his very best at junior-welterweight.
Still, it’s a question and a very good reason for Garcia to fight Easter, whose lanky dimensions are an unusual for his 135-pound weight class. He’s both taller and has a longer reach than Spence. Translation: This is a bout that should provide a few answers and challenges for Garcia.
There’s’ more to Easter than an unbeaten record (21-0, 14 KOs). There unusual height and reach. He’s a lightweight with a welterweight’s tale of the tape. Easter is 1 ½ inches taller than Spence. More important, Easter’s reach, 76 inches, is four inches longer than Spence’s.
“We’ve prepared for it,’’ Garcia said. “Easter’s reach is the key.’’
Key to a fight. And maybe a career.