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RINGSIDE REPORT: Rios Demolishes Alvarado

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Broomfield, CO: Brandon Rios dominated and stopped Mike Alvarado in just three rounds on Saturday night at the 1stBank Center in Broomfield, Colorado. The bout, which many folks thought and certainly hoped would be a continuation of the frequently thrilling and savage action seen in their first two scraps, was televised live on HBO.

The fight was promoted by Top Rank as a “welterweight championship,” a considerable feat since neither man is a current titleholder in any division. But the WBO came through to offer it’s international welterweight title, something that means much less than the words “international” and “championship” might lead one to believe.

Nevertheless, this was a championship of sorts. It was the championship between two hardcore brawlers who had split two fights against each other. The winner of the third bout would claim victory over the other man, and do it by being better at what the other man is known for: being a superlative bad-ass in an age where most fighters would rather lightly tap their way to a decision victory more than perhaps any other time in the sport’s history.

This was supposed to be the championship of welterweight action fights. But Rios made short work of Alvarado instead. His hooks and uppercuts landed with great precision, and Alvarado’s return fire was slow and sloppy.

Tension filled the arena as the bout was set to begin.

The crowd booed lustily when Rios was announced, and the roar was deafening for Alvarado when he came to the ring. The hometown kid brought in droves of fight fans to cheer him on. You could see love beaming in their eyes as he strolled confidently into the arena.

But none of that would matter when the bell sounded.

“I had to come out here, and they were booing,” said Rios. “And I loved [it] and I had to do what I had to do. This could have been the end of my career, and I didn’t want that to happen, and I didn’t want it to end like this.”

Alvarado started the bout trying to box instead of brawl. He circled the ring with his hands held high. But Rios made it a street fight by the end of Round 1. He stalked and strafed the slow-footed Alvarado around the ring, making the CO. resident look like a giant-sized ragdoll.

The two went toe-to-toe in Round 2, but Rios was having his way with hooks and uppercuts on his foe until Alvarado landed a low blow to put Rios on his knees. After a brief rest due to the foul, Rios went back to work the way Rios pretty much always goes to work: with hooks, uppercuts and general nastiness.

In Round 3, Rios toppled Alvarado to the canvas with a destructive uppercut.

“The uppercut is my favorite punch,” said Rios. “I love my uppercut, and I have one of the best uppercuts in the world, and I threw it.”

Alvarado rose to his feet and fought back with vigor, but his punches still landed with rarity compared to the sharp, hard-punching Rios.

“I knew it wasn’t going to be easy,” said Rios. “He is a warrior and I had to take my time and be patient. I was disciplined in camp. I knew he could come back and hit me, and I know he has power in both hands.”

Referee Jay Nady stopped the fight after Round 3 on the advice of the ringside doctor after Alvarado counted four fingers held up in front of him when there were only two.

Alvarado did not look sharp in the fight. He blamed a lackluster training effort.

“I didn’t train like I should have, and that’s what I get,” said Alvarado. “I didn’t give it all I got. That’s what I get. I wasn’t as prepared as I should have been, and I got what I should have got, so it is what it is–whatever.”

Rios should have good opportunities ahead of him. He said he trusted his manager, Cameron Dunkin, to get the right fights for him. Bouts with Timothy Bradley, Ruslan Provodnikov or Juan Manuel Marquez would bring him solid money and big chances against elite foes.

Alvarado appears done as a prizefighter. He was slow, unsure of himself and inaccurate. There were rumors ringside of him missing the heavy bag during fight week workouts. That’s never a good sign.

Ramirez defeats Vlasov but needs more work

Super middleweight prospect Gilberto Ramirez hoped to show the world he was a force to be reckoned with on Saturday night. Instead, the undefeated fighter from Mexico, as well as his team, probably will reckon with the idea of him needing another year or two of seasoning before he tackles elite-level competition.

Ramirez defeated Maxim Vlasov by unanimous decision in a light heavyweight bout. Judges at ringside score the bout 96-94, 97-93 and 97-93. He improved his record to 31-0, while Vlasov fell to 30-2.

Ramirez is a much-ballyhooed prospect, one his promoter, Top Rank, probably hopes can turn into the genuine article. After all, if a prizefighter is to be as good as his handlers hope him to be, he might as well hail from the boxing-crazed country of Mexico because those fans support their fighters better than anyone.

Ramirez is a southpaw. He’s doesn’t possesses incredibly fast hands, but his punches land with solid enough thump. Moreover, he has a good little jab and he enjoys using it. That’s a good thing. Because Ramirez fights patiently behind a guard and fires power shots from the correct distance instead of barreling in forward like a madman.

While not particularly light on his feet, the undefeated prospect appears to have good balance. He keeps his feet wide enough to throw with power, and he digs to the body with both hands and with regularity.

The bout was fought at a slow pace. Vlasov was content to try and move and box for most of the fight, and he stuck Ramirez with a few straight right hands over the scheduled ten. But few, if any of them, landed with real power, so it appeared early Vlasov wasn’t going to have enough firepower to do anything but go rounds with the favored Ramirez.

So that’s what he did.

In the end, one gets the impression that Ramirez has much work to do if he’s going to compete with the very elite fighters at 168, such as Carl Froch or Andre Ward. And at 175, he would probably stand little chance against Sergey Kovalev, Adonis Stevenson, Jean Pascal or Bernard Hopkins.

But Ramirez is young and talented fighter, and neither HBO nor Top Rank are known for showcasing young fighters during primetime that they don’t believe will turn into someone special.

Ramirez may not be that noteworthy right now, but in a year or two his backers and ability might carry him into big money fights against elite-level opponents.

Check out my post-fight assessment, which is running on Boxing Channel.

— Photo Credit : Chris Farina – Top Rank

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Results from Detroit where Carrillo, Ergashev and Shishkin Scored KOs

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Dmitriy Salita, who began promoting small club fights In Brooklyn at the former U.S. Navy airfield where he had his final pro fight, has found a welcome home in Detroit where he is working hard to resurrect the Motor City as an important fight destination. Although his shows are still low-budget (save for the money he spends on marketing; he uses heavyweight PR firm Swanson Communications), his new arrangement with DAZN can only move him another step up the pecking order.

Tonight, two of the most valuable pieces in his stable – junior lightweight Shohjahon Ergashev and super middleweight Vladimir Shishkin — were in action on Salita’s second show at Detroit’s Watne State University Fieldhouse. However, Salita reserved the main event for one of his newest signees, Juan Carrillo, a light heavyweight who represented Colombia in the 2016 Rio Olympics.

In a battle of southpaws, Carrillo (12-0, 9 KOs) had no difficulty putting away Quinton Randall (21-9-2), a 37-year-old North Carolinian who had scored only five of his 21 wins against opponents with winning records. In the third frame, a big left uppercut put Randall on the canvas. He managed to get to his feet at the count of nine, but was on queer street and the fight was waived off. The official time was 0.27 of round three.

Ergashev

Shohjahon Ergashev, a southpaw from Uzbekistan who purportedly has 2.7 million Instagram followers in his home country, was making his first start since a failed bid to win the IBF 140-pound world title. Ergashev was stopped in the fifth round by Subriel Matias, his first defeat as a pro after opening his career 23-0 with 20 KOs.

Tonight, he got back on the winning track without breaking a sweat. A left hook to the body ended the fight in the opening round. His victim, Juan Antonio Huertas, a 31-year-old Panamanian, entered the fight with a 17-4 record, but was 0-2 on American soil and had been stopped both times.

Shishkin

A 32-year-old Russian who trains at the new Kronk Gym where SugarHill Steward holds forth when he is in town, Vladimir Shishkin entered the contest undefeated (15-0, 9 KOs) and ranked #2 by the IBF. How odd that his fight opened the telecast. Perhaps promoter Salita thought that the fight would be too one-sided and wanted to get it out of the way in a hurry. His opponent Mike Guy, 12-7-1 (5) heading in, had been in with some rough customers but was 43 years old, was inactive in all of 2022 and 2023, and had fought most of his career as a super middleweight.

The fight was one-sided in favor of Shishkin and rather dull until the Russian cracked up the juice in round seven and forced the stoppage.

In the future, we would encourage Dmitriy Salita to take some of that money he has been spending on marketing to find a higher caliber of “B-Side” opponents. The best thing about this show was that it was over in a hurry.

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R.I.P. IBF founder Bob Lee who was Banished from Boxing by the FBI

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“The image some people have of me is disappointing,” said Bob Lee in a 2006 interview, “but I also feel I had a positive impact on the sport…”

Lee, the founder of the International Boxing Federation who died yesterday (Sunday, March 24) at age 91, spoke those words to Philadelphia Daily News boxing writer Bernard Fernandez who was the first person to interview him when he emerged from a federal prison in 2006. Lee served 22 months on charges that included racketeering, money laundering, and tax evasion.

Born and raised in northern New Jersey and a lifelong resident of the Garden State, Lee, a former police detective, founded the International Boxing Federation (henceforth IBF) in 1983 after a failed bid to win the presidency of the World Boxing Association. At the time, there were only two relevant sanctioning bodies, the WBA, then headquartered in Venezuela, and the WBC, headquartered in Mexico. Both organizations were charged with favoring boxers from Spanish-speaking countries in their ratings at the expense of boxers from the United States.

Bob Lee’s brainchild, whose stated mission was to rectify that injustice, achieved instant credibility when Marvin Hagler and Larry Holmes turned their back on the established organizations. Hagler’s 1983 bout with Wilford Scypion and Holmes’ 1984 match with Bonecrusher Smith were world title fights sanctioned exclusively by the IBF, the last of the three extant organizations to do away with 15-round title fights.

Lee’s world was rocked in November of 1999 when a federal grand jury handed down an indictment that accused him and three IBF officials, including his son Robert W. “Robby” Lee Jr., of taking bribes from promoters and managers in return for higher rankings. The FBI, after a two-year investigation, concluded that $338,000 was paid over a 13-year period by individuals representing 23 boxers.

The government’s key witness was C. Douglas Beavers, the longtime chairman of the IBF ratings committee who wore a wire as a government informant in return for immunity and provided video-tape evidence of a $5000 payout in a seedy Virginia motel room. Promoters Bob Arum and Cedric Kushner both testified that they gave the IBF $100,000 to get the organization’s seal of approval for a match between heavyweight champion George Foreman and Axel Schulz (Arum asserted that he paid the money through a middleman, Stan Hoffman). In return, the IBF gave Schulz a “special exemption” to its rules, allowing the German to bypass Michael Moorer who had a rematch clause that would never be honored. (In a sworn deposition, Big George testified that he had no knowledge of any kickback).

After a long-drawn-out trial that consumed four months including 15 days of jury deliberations, Bob Lee was acquitted on all but six of 32 counts. His son, charged with nine counts, was acquitted on all nine. The jury simply did not trust the veracity of many that testified for the prosecution. (No surprise there; after all, they were boxing people.) But neither did the jury buy into the argument that whatever money Lee received was in the form of gifts and gratuities, a common business practice.

The IBF was run by a court-appointed overseer from January of 2000 until the fall of 2003. Under its current head, Daryl Peoples, who came up from the ranks, assuming the presidency in 2010, the IBF has stayed out of the crosshairs of federal prosecutors.

As part of his sentence, Bob Lee was prohibited from having any further dealings with boxing and that would have included buying a ticket to sit in the cheap seats at a boxing card. This was adding insult to injury as Lee’s passion for boxing ran deep. As a boy working as a caddy at a New Jersey golf course, he had met Joe Louis and Sugar Ray Robinson, two of the proudest moments of his life.

As for his contributions to the sport, Lee had this to say in his post-prison talk with Bernard Fernandez: “We instituted the 168-pound [super middleweight] weight class. We took measures to reduce the incidence of eye injuries in boxing. We changed the weigh-in from the day of the fight to the day before, which prevented fighters from entering the ring so dehydrated that they were putting themselves at risk. All these things, and more, were tremendously beneficial to boxing. I’m very proud of all that we accomplished.”

Bob Lee was a tough old bird. Diagnosed with Type 2 diabetes in 1986, he was insulin-dependent for much of his adult life and yet he lived into his nineties. Although his coloration as a shakedown artist is a stain that will never go away, many people will tell you that, on balance, he was a good man whose lapses ought not define him.

That’s not for us to judge. We send our condolences to his loved ones. May he rest in peace.

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Australia’s Nikita Tszyu Stands Poised to Escape the Long Shadow of His Brother

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They held a confab for the boxing media last week at the spacious Las Vegas gym where WBO super welterweight champion Tim Tszyu has been training for his forthcoming match with Sebastian Fundora. Tim was there, of course, as were many of the fighters in the supporting bouts plus Tim’s younger brother Nikita who was inconspicuous in this gathering.

Nikita Tszyu isn’t on Saturday’s card and so was never spotlighted, but it’s likely that most of the media-types there knew nothing about him. Had they been Aussies, he wouldn’t have been able to blend into the scenery as the Sydneysider is already a major sports personality in the Land Down Under. More than that, he is seemingly on pace to become as big a star as his older brother who has been called the face of boxing in Australia.

In his last start, Nikita wrested the Australian 154-pound title from previously undefeated (10-0) Dylan Biggs. Their bout in the Australian harbor city of Newcastle headlined a pay-per-view telecast.

Nikita was down in the first 45 seconds of the contest and was buzzed in the third, but had Biggs in dire straits in the fourth and ended matters in the next frame with a wicked left hook to the liver. Biggs somehow made it to his feet, but the bout was waived off seconds later as Biggs’ corner was throwing in the towel.

It improved Nikita’s record to 8-0 (7 KOs) and burnished the reputation of the Tszyu dynasty. Collectively, the three Tszyu’s – his Hall of Fame father Kostya, his bother Tim and Nikita – are 48-0 in Australian rings.

Outside the squared circle, Nikita Tszyu, who is 26 years old and looks younger, comes across as thoroughly unspoiled. Talking with him, what started as a formal interview quickly became a relaxed chat between two old souls (as Nikita described himself) enjoying each others company. And as prizefighters go, he sure is different. A college grad, Nikita cited gardening, of all things, when we inquired if he had any hobbies.

As amateurs, Nikita had a deeper background and was more decorated than Tim. But in 2017, he turned his back on boxing to pursue a degree in architecture. He was away from boxing for five years before deciding to give the sport another fling.

“I wanted to be the first person in my family to be smart,” he says tongue-in-cheek when asked how he could abandon a sport that was seemingly in his blood. “My mom wanted one of us to get a college degree,” he says, elaborating. “When it wasn’t going to work out for Tim, it fell on my shoulders.”

As is well known, Nikita’s parents divorced (Nikita was then just starting high school) and his dad then returned to his native Russia and started a new family. But the brothers and their father remain on cordial terms – they speak on the phone periodically – and they are close to Kostya’s parents (their paternal grandparents) who live near Nikita in the Sydney area and are currently watching Nikita’s three dogs, a husky, a French Bulldog, and a Cavalier King Charles Spaniel. “I can’t imagine a life without them,” says Nikita who, unlike his brother, has no special lady living under his roof.

The family tie extends to the brothers’ trainer Igor Goloubev who is married to their aunt (Kostya’s sister). Uncle Igor, a training partner of Kostya Tszyu in the old days, came to Sydney in 1997 with a touring Russian amateur team and, unlike the famous boxer, never left.

During the lull between the two generations of fighting Tszyus, Igor Goloubev founded a construction company that he still owns. While working for an architectural firm (working remotely because of Covid), Nikita was able to work part-time for his uncle which was good hands-on experience for a future architect.

When Goloubev counsels one of the brothers between rounds, the old becomes new again and this blast from the past doesn’t stop there. The brothers are managed by Newcastle NSW businessman Glen Jennings who formerly managed Kostya, widely considered one of the two or three best junior welterweights of all time. (Jennings says that as a boxer Nikita is more like his dad whereas Tim is more of a pressure fighter.)

Glen Jennings Flanked by Tim and Nikita

Glen Jennings flanked by Tim and Nikita

This is Nikita Tszyu’s second trip to Las Vegas. He was here last year when Tim was preparing for a match with Jermell Charlo. When that match fell out, Nikita used the occasion for a little holiday, the highlight of which was a hike through Northern California’s Redwood Forest, home to the world’s tallest trees.

“Your national parks are the coolest things about America,” he says. As for the food? ”Too much fat,” he says, wrinkling his nose, but that’s a moot point as Team Tszyu now travels with its own chef.

Nikita Tszyu will defend his Australian title on April 24th. At this writing, the opponent is uncertain. Three leading candidates fell by the wayside, two because they lost a fight they were supposed to win, ruining their credibility, and another because he got injured. Finding good opponents may prove to be a recurrent hassle in part because Nikita, unlike his brother, is a southpaw.

Coming up the ladder, Tim Tszyu looked forward to fighting at the MGM Grand where his father won his first title (TKO 6 over Jake Rodriguez in 1995) and had one of his most memorable fights, a second-round stoppage of Zab Judah in 2001. The T-Mobile Arena didn’t exist back then, but sits on MGM Grand property, so Saturday’s fight is a dream come true for the older Tszyu brother.

Looking down the road, it’s easy to envision Nikita becoming a headline attraction here too.

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