From the stage to the ring: Thomas Valdez wins split decision with signals, signs and cheers from Oscar Valdez Sr.’s seat on a stage

TUCSON – There were hand signals. There were looks. There were cheers and probably a few prayers.

In the end, there were thumbs up, one from Thomas Valdez and another from his trainer and uncle, Oscar Valdez Sr. on a stage overlooking an outdoor ring on a chilly night Saturday at Casino Del Sol.

Thomas Valdez (18-3-2, 7 KOs), a super-featherweight from Nogales, Mexico, and cousin of featherweight champion Oscar Valdez Jr., won a split decision over Luis Coria (9-2, 4 KOs) with his lead trainer, Valdez Sr., unable to work the corner because of the lingering effects from a food-borne virus he caught in 2011.

“I just can’t climb the steps through the ropes between rounds, because I’ve still got some of that sickness in me,’’ Valdez Sr. said of his ongoing comeback from a long-term fight with a virus he caught while with his son at an international tournament in Rio De Janeiro. “I’m here mostly for the strategy and tactics.’’

But it was also clear he was there because Thomas Valdez needed him for a measure of confidence as well as the tactics. After the fourth round, the fight looked even. It was then that Valdez Sr. stood up and gestured to Thomas that he needed to move forward.

He did so with great effect – repeated uppercuts over the second half of the 8-rounder. Those blows might have been enough to give him an edge on the score cards. Two were in his favor, 79-74 and 77-75. On the third card, it was 79-74 for Coria, an Oxnard, Calif., fighter out of trainer Robert Garcia’s Boxing Academy in the final bout on a 10-fight card that promoter Michelle Rosado dedicated to the memory of Don Chargin, a Hall of Fame matchmaker who died a couple of months ago.

In the co-main event, Christopher Gonzalez (3-0-1) and Judas Estrada (1-1-1, 1 KO), both Tucson welterweights, fought through a ferocious four rounder that ended in a majority draw.

On The Undercard

The Best

Look at Sebastian Fundora and you think basketball. He is 6-foot-6, big enough to be more of a small forward than a welterweight. That’s right, he’s a boxer, just a few pounds between welter and super-welter.

He might be taller than anybody in either division.

He also has some big-boy power.

Fondura (11-0, 7 KOs), a Coachella, Calif., fighter promoted by David Benavidez promoter Sampson Lewkowicz, flashed it scary fashion, throwing a right that sent a much shorter Jeremiah Wiggins (10-7-1, 6 KOs) of Newport News, VA, into a long fall onto the canvas 31 seconds after opening bell. Wiggins fell face first and twitched while he laid on the canvas. After a few frightening seconds, he was helped up and into a sitting position on top of an overturned bucket. Eventually, he was able to walk out of the ring under his own power.

A relieved crowd applauded. Wiggins was OK.

Then, Fondura ‘s hand was raised and the time of his knockout victory was announced. The crowd roared. He was sensational.

The Rest

It was close in the beginning. It was gutsy in the end. The guts and victory belonged to Tucson junior-welterweight Alfonso Olvera (11-5-1, 4 KOs), who found energy and punches over the final two rounds of a six-rounder to take a unanimous decision over Virgil Green (11-6, 4 KOs) of Vancouver, Wash.

Tucson super-welterweight Nicholas Rhoads (5-0, 2 KOs) floored Hamilton Ash (0-2) of Guadalupe, Ariz., in the second round. Ash was down, but not out. Rhoads had to hold on in the third. Then, regained his energy and edge in the fourth, scoring a unanimous decision over Ash.

Tucson middleweight Arturo Resendiz (2-0, 2 KOs) threw a body shot for a knockdown in the opening seconds and then quickly finished up some easy work, scoring a first-round TKO of Brandon Trujillo (0-5) of Albuquerque.

Heavyweight Edgar Medina (1-0), a Tucson roofer when he isn’t in the ring, won his debut in front of hometown fans, scoring a unanimous decision over David Samore (1-5-3) of Chandler, Ariz.

It’s called blood sport for a reason and those reasons covered super-flyweights Edrick Rosa (1-0, 1 KO) of Florence, Arizona and Richard Mike Martinez (1-2, 1 KO) of Tucson. Blood was everywhere, mostly from a busted-up nose suffered by Martinez early in his loss by a fourth-round TKO. Martinez’ face was bloody-mask when time was called midway through the fourth. The ringside physicians took one look and ended it.

A night of full early stoppages continued with Phoenix lightweight Emmanuel Nieves (5-0, 2 KOs) storming out of his corner at opening bell with punches he threw and landed at will, knocking down Jose Barrera (2-1, 1 KO), also of Phoenix, and finishing him with a TKO at 1:51 of the first.

Middleweight Emmanuel Gallardo (4-0), an emerging favorite for Tucson fans, won over the crowd and the judges, landing one big right after another for a unanimous decision over Daniel Garcia-Flores (0-2) of Albuquerque.




All In The Family: Thomas Valdez sees some of himself in Oscar Valdez Jr.

By Norm Frauenheim-

TUCSON, Ariz. – They are first cousins. Sparring cousins, too. They even look alike.

Look into Thomas Valdez’ eyes, and you see Oscar Valdez Jr. looking straight back at you. Listen to Thomas Valdez speak, and you hear his cousin’s voice.

They went to the same schools in Tucson. They’ve worked out in the same gyms on the Mexican side of the border in Nogales. They’ve hit the same speed bags. They’ve hit each other, too. It sounds a little bit like a sibling rivalry. But it’s not.

“He’s my compadre,’’ Thomas Valdez said Thursday during a news conference for a Michelle Rosado-promoted card that will feature the super-featherweight against Jensen Ramirez on Nov. 17 at Casino Del Sol.

For Thomas and Oscar Valdez, it’s family, friendship and at times a significant business alliance. Oscar Valdez is not Mexican’s best-known fighter. That title belongs to Canelo Alvarez, and Canelo has unchallenged pay-per-view numbers for overwhelming proof.

At another level, however, Oscar Valdez Jr. might rank as Mexico’s most respected fighter. The World Boxing Organization’s featherweight champion earned lots of cred for all that blood he shed in a brutal decision over Scott Quigg on a rain-swept night on March 10 at the StubHub Center in Carson, Calif.

They say it never rains in Southern California. But it did that night. After 12 full rounds, there were puddles all over the canvas. Puddles of water. And puddles of Oscar Valdez’ blood. He won, beating a bigger Quigg, who was allowed to fight after missing weight at the official weigh-in.

But there was a price. Oscar Valdez suffered a fractured jaw, although that diagnosis sounds too clinical, if not quite accurate.

Valdez’ jaw was twisted out of shape, so much so that his corner had trouble removing his mouthpiece. It looked awkward. It had to be agony. But he fought through it for a unanimous decision in a brutal bout that is at the top of the ballot for Fight of the Year. Since then, however, the question has been whether Valdez was forced to pay too steep a price. Was it costly to his career?

It’s a nervous question for Top Rank, Valdez’ promoter, and all of the fans he won over last March. Against Quigg, Valdez was transformed into a fighter worth watching. But it all depends on how he reacts in his comeback, which figures to happen early next year. What will happen when that first punch lands on that jaw?

Thomas Valdez thinks he has a pretty good idea. He was the first fighter to test Oscar Valdez a few weeks ago.

“I was his first sparring partner,’’ Thomas Valdez said. “He’s solid, 100 percent.’’

First cousins know best.

Top Rank hopes so.

For now, Oscar Valdez’ comeback is planned for mid-January, possibly in Mexico City for a tune-up — a test run for Valdez’ jaw and his new corner. He hired Canelo trainer Eddy Reynoso, who replaces Manny Robles. He has been training in Guadalajara.

Meanwhile, there are hopes that Oscar Valdez Jr. will be in Tucson, his second home, for Thomas’ fight, which has been scheduled for seven rounds. The odd number was a compromise struck by Rosado’s fellow promoter and mentor, Russell Peltz. One fighter wanted to go six rounds. The other wanted eight. Peltz mentioned seven and they had a deal.

For Thomas, the bout represents a chance to hit the re-set button on 22-fight career (16-4-2, 6 KOs). He is anxious to fight in the United States for the first time since 2013.

“It’s been five years,’’ said Thomas Valdez, who graduated from Tucson High School in 2008 before returning to Nogales. “This is a real chance for me to return to Tucson, get my name back out there around here and all through Arizona.’’

He is doing it with Oscar Valdez’ father, Oscar Sr., as his trainer. Mostly, he’s doing because of his cousin, whose last performance is as unforgettable as it was frightening.

“The way we fight is different,’’ Thomas said. “I’m a little bigger. Physically, we aren’t the same. But our hearts and minds are alike. Watching him against Quigg was kind of crazy. As a fan, I was so excited. As a cousin, I was so worried. I kept thinking: Is he going to be OK?

“But what I see in him, I see in myself. We’re fighters.’’