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No Time To Waste For Chris Algieri & Other Fight Stuff
Time definitely waits for no one.
But every so often someone comes along that rips through the limits of time like a human bulldozer.
Undefeated Chris Algieri (13-0, 6 KOs) tangles with fellow New Yorker Winston Mathis (7-4-1) on March 31 at the Paramount Theater in Huntington, New York. The Star Boxing event won’t be televised.
“Winston is from Rochester, New York. He’s a tough guy and comes to fight and has a really good chin,” Algieri says about his rival. “He lost to undefeated guys and he’s going to come to fight.”
It may be difficult to believe but Algieri has already accomplished some incredible goals and seeks another one or two more. He’s rumbling onward at full speed so don’t step in front of his way, you might get trampled on.
Was that Algieri that raced by?
Long Island’s Algieri has two lives: one spent toiling in the gyms working on his craft as a prizefighter and a second life is spent reading tons of books as he pursues entrance to medical school.
A regular human being would have thrown his hands up in exasperation.
“School is intense. The university is a full time job and a lot of work. You have courses like anatomy, chemistry and physics. They’re heavy courses,” admits Algieri who attended Stonybrook University in New York. “The time it takes is tremendous. But I’ve always been good at time management.”
While most of his fellow school mates spend leisure time cajoling in restaurants, theaters or coffee houses, Algieri heads toward the boxing gyms to train.
“It definitely wasn’t easy. I had to sacrifice time. I remember going out to dinner and bringing my books,” says Algieri, adding that attending social gatherings were very rare.
Learning about medicine is one thing. The Long Island prizefighter also has a passion developed in childhood to attain a world championship in boxing. He already has two world championships in kickboxing.
“I got my world titles in kickboxing. But that’s not enough. I want to go into my first love and that’s boxing,” he says.
Darn! Was that Algieri running by again?
Professional boxing has so many intricacies and fine movements that are invisible to the casual fight fan. It takes many years of training to master them.
“I love the training, dedication and discipline and learning the fine movements,” says Algieri who is currently training in Oxnard under famed coach Robert Garcia. “To an untrained eye it looks like two guys just punching each other. But it’s much more. Even just to spar at such a high level it’s a beautiful thing. Boxing is art.”
A single mistake can wreck everything in a prize fight. A single punch can destroy a life. But Algieri has dreams and they include a world title as a boxer and a later career as a doctor.
“My advisors tell me to go to medical school, to go all the way,” Algieri said. “I’m getting a lot of recognition in boxing now and my friends in school see it s for real and I’m not playing around.”
No time to waste.
Fight Action
Three Southern California fight cards erupt on Friday then a middleweight championship bout takes center stage the next day when undisputed world champion Sergio Martinez (48-2-2, 27 KOs) defends against Great Britain’s Matthew Macklin (28-3, 19 KOs) in New York City.
Plenty of choices for fight fans.
First, Coachella’s undefeated Randy Caballero (13-0, 7 KOs) defends the WBC Youth junior featherweight title against Jose Luis Araiza (29-5-1, 20 KOs) at Fantasy Springs Casino in Indio.
The Golden Boy Promotions fight card also features Blythe’s Andrew Cancio (12-1-2, 11 KOs) in a severe test against former title contender Roger “Speedy” Gonzalez (27-5, 18 KOs) who lives in Chino. Both bouts will be televised on Showtime and could end abruptly on Friday night.
On the same day, former junior welterweight champion Kendall Holt (27-5, 15 KOs) fights Baltimore’s Tim Coleman (19-2-1, 5 KOs) in a welterweight main event at Morongo Casino. If you remember, Holt lost the title to Palm Spring’s Timothy “Desert Storm” Bradley a few years back. The New Jersey-based boxer with solid power has moved up in weight.
Also on the Morongo fight card will be La Puente’s undefeated Abraham Lopez (16-0, 12 KOs). He’s fought many times at the Doubletree Hotel and collides with Gabriel Tolmajyan (12-1-1, 3 KOs) in an eight-round contest between featherweights.
About 35 miles west of Riverside All Star Boxing hosts a boxing and mixed martial arts fight card at the Quiet Cannon Country Club. They’ve consistently built a fan base for both boxing and MMA fans the past several years. Most of the bouts feature young prospects in both prizefighting styles. Many past and current world champions began fighting on their cards, plus there are always celebrities attending the fight shows.
The Garden
Madison Square Garden Theater is the site for Argentina’s Martinez middleweight world championship defense against Macklin on Saturday. Located right in the heart of Manhattan its only fitting that the old Mecca of boxing stages the fight.
The “Garden” as its known to old fight followers, once was the center of the boxing universe. Plenty of world championship fights took place in this location. Currently this is the fourth version of the Garden, located on Eighth Avenue between 31st and 33rd Street.
Middleweight champions like Stanley Ketchel, Al McCoy, Harry Greb, Mickey Walker, Ceferino Garcia, Tony Zale, Rocky Graziano, Jake LaMotta and Sugar Ray Robinson all fought many times in Madison Square Garden. It’s almost mandatory that a middleweight world championship bout take place under its storied roof.
Martinez erupted on the American boxing scene several years ago as an Argentine who had fought primarily in Spain for almost a decade. When he arrived in the U.S. he was thought to be a so-so fighter. That proved to be an egregious mistake.
A draw by the southpaw Martinez against noted slugger Kermit Cintron, though he knocked that fighter down twice, proved to be a harbinger of things to come. Next up was Paul Williams who emerged with a skintight win and Pavlik who ended up a loser. Martinez quickly showed American fans he was exceptionally quick and gifted.
The big moment for Martinez came in a rematch with Williams for the middleweight championship. He had lost a disputed match to the tall and lanky Georgia fighter but in the rematch he promised a knockout win.
“I know how he fights now,” claimed Martinez who lives in Port Hueneme, Calif.
Those words proved prophetic as he put Williams to sleep with a single overhand left hand in the second round. It deemed by most to be the “knockout of the year” in 2010.
Subsequent knockout wins over Russia’s undefeated Serhiy Dzinziruk and Great Britain’s undefeated Darren Barker have kept him on top. Martinez wants more than the middleweight world championship, he wants fame and fortune.
“I want to be known as the best boxer who ever lived,” said Martinez, 37. “That’s my goal, to be known as the best.”
Macklin knows that a win over Martinez could vault him all the way to the top too. If Martinez wins, a marquee fight in the “big room” at the Garden would make sense, as he’s promoted by New Yorker Lou DiBella.
Fights on television
Fri. ESPN2, 6 p.m., Kendall Holt (27-5) vs. Tim Coleman (19-2-1).
Fri. Showtime, 11 p.m., Randy Caballero (13-0) vs. Jose Luis Araiza (29-5-1).
Sat. HBO, 7 p.m., Sergio Martinez (48-2-2) vs. Matthew Macklin (28-3).
Sat. Telefutura, 11 p.m., Carlos Molina (15-0-1) vs. Angino Perez (11-3).
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Skylar Lacy Blocked for Lamar Jackson before Making his Mark in Boxing
Skylar Lacy, a six-foot-seven heavyweight, returns to the ring on Sunday, Feb. 2, opposing Brandon Moore on a card in Flint, Michigan, airing worldwide on DAZN.
As this is being written, the bookmakers hadn’t yet posted a line on the bout, but one couldn’t be accused of false coloring by calling the 10-round contest a 50/50 fight. And if his frustrating history is any guide, Lacy will have another draw appended to his record or come out on the wrong side of a split decision.
This should not be construed as a tip to wager on Moore. “Close fights just don’t seem to go my way,” says the boxer who played alongside future multi-year NFL MVP Lamar Jackson at the University of Louisville.
A 2021 National Golden Gloves champion, Skylar Lacy came up short in his final amateur bout, losing a split decision to future U.S. Olympian Joshua Edwards. His last Team Combat League assignment resulted in another loss by split decision and he was held to a draw in both instances when stepping up in class as a pro. “In my mind, I’m still undefeated,” says Lacy (8-0-2, 6 KOs). “No one has ever kicked my ass.”
Lacy was the B-side in both of those draws, the first coming in a 6-rounder against Top Rank fighter Antonio Mireles on a Top Rank show in Lake Tahoe, Nevada, and the second in an 8-rounder against George Arias, a Lou DiBella fighter on a DiBella-promoted card in Philadelphia.
Lacy had the Mireles fight in hand when he faded in the homestretch. The altitude was a factor. Lake Tahoe, Nevada (officially Stateline) sits 6,225 feet above sea level. The fight with Arias took an opposite tack. Lacy came on strong after a slow start to stave off defeat.
Skylar will be the B-side once again in Michigan. The card’s promoter, former world title challenger Dmitriy Salita, inked Brandon Moore (16-1, 10 KOs) in January. “A capable American heavyweight with charisma, athleticism and skills is rare in today’s day and age. Brandon has got all these ingredients…”, said Salita in the press release announcing the signing. (Salita has an option on Skylar Lacy’s next pro fight in the event that Skylar should win, but the promoter has a larger investment in Moore who was previously signed to Top Rank, a multi-fight deal that evaporated after only one fight.)
Both Lacy and Moore excelled in other sports. The six-foot-six Moore was an outstanding basketball player in high school in Fort Lauderdale and at the NAIA level in college. Lacy was an all-state football lineman in Indiana before going on to the University of Louisville where he started as an offensive guard as a redshirt sophomore, blocking for freshman phenom Lamar Jackson. “Lamar was hard-working and humble,” says Lacy about the player who is now one of the world’s highest-paid professional athletes.
When Lacy committed to Louisville, the head coach was Charlie Strong who went on to become the head coach at the University of Texas. Lacy was never comfortable with Strong’s successor Bobby Petrino and transferred to San Jose State. Having earned his degree in only three years (a BA in communications) he was eligible immediately but never played a down because of injuries.
Returning to Indianapolis where he was raised by his truck dispatcher father, a single parent, Lacy gravitated to Pat McPherson’s IBG (Indy Boxing and Grappling) Gym on the city’s east side where he was the rare college graduate pounding the bags alongside at-risk kids from the city’s poorer neighborhoods.
Lacy built a 12-6 record across his two seasons in Team Combat League while representing the Las Vegas Hustle (2023) and the Boston Butchers (2024).
For the uninitiated, a Team Combat League (TCL) event typically consists of 24 fights, each consisting of one three-minute round. The concept finds no favor with traditionalists, but Lacy is a fan. It’s an incentive for professional boxers to keep in shape between bouts without disturbing their professional record and, notes Lacy, it’s useful in exposing a competitor to different styles.
“It paid the bills and kept me from just sitting around the house,” says Lacy whose 12-6 record was forged against 13 different opponents.
As a sparring partner, Lacy has shared the ring with some of the top heavyweights of his generation, e.g., Tyson Fury, Anthony Joshua and Dillian Whyte. He was one of Fury’s regular sparring partners during the Gypsy King’s trilogy with Deontay Wilder. He worked with Joshua at Derrick James’ gym in Dallas and at Ben Davison’s gym in England, helping Joshua prepare for his date in Saudi Arabia with Francis Ngannou and had previously sparred with Ngannou at the UFC Performance Center in Las Vegas. Skylar names traveling to new places as one of his hobbies and he got to scratch that itch when he joined Whyte’s camp in Portugal.
As to the hardest puncher he ever faced, he has no hesitation: “Ngannou,” he says. “I negotiated a nice price to spend a week in his camp and the first time he hit me I knew I should have asked for more.”
Lacy is confident that having shared the ring with some of the sport’s elite heavyweights will get him over the hump in what will be his first 10-rounder (Brandon Moore has never had to fight beyond eight rounds, having won his three 10-rounders inside the distance). Lacy vs. Moore is the co-feature to Claressa Shields’ homecoming fight with Danielle Perkins. Shields, basking in the favorable reviews accorded the big-screen biopic based on her first Olympic journey (“The Fire Inside”) will attempt to capture a title in yet another weight class at the expense of the 42-year-old Perkins, a former professional basketball player.
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Mizuki Hiruta Dominates in her U.S. Debut and Omar Trinidad Wins Too at Commerce
Japan’s Mizuki Hiruta smashed through Mexico’s Maribel Ramirez with ease in winning by technical decision and local hero Omar Trinidad continued his assault on the featherweight division on Friday.
Hiruta (7-0, 2 KOs), who prefers to be called “Mimi,” made her American debut with an impressive performance against Mexican veteran Maribel Ramirez (15-11-4) and retained the WBO super flyweight world title by unanimous decision at Commerce Casino in Commerce, Calif.
The pink-haired Japanese southpaw champion quickly proved to be quicker, stronger and even better than advertised. In the opening round Ramirez landed on the floor twice after throwing errant blows. On one instance, it could have been ruled a knockdown but it was not a convincing blow.
In the second round, Ramirez again attacked and again was met with a Hiruta check right hook and down went the Mexican. This time referee Ray Corona gave the eight-count and the fight resumed.
It was Hiruta’s third title defense but this time it was on American soil. She seemed nervous by the prospect of getting a favorable review from the more than 700 fans inside the casino tent.
For more than a year Hiruta has been training off and on with Manny Robles in the L.A. area. Now that she has a visa, she has spent considerable time this year learning the tricks of the trade. They proved explosively effective.
Though Mexico City’s Ramirez has considerable experience against world champions, she discovered that Hiruta was not easy to hit. Often, the Japanese champion would slip and counter with precision.
It was an impressive American debut, though the fight was stopped in the eighth round after a collision of heads. The scores were tallied and all three saw Hiruta the winner by scores of 80-71 twice and 79-72.
“I’m so happy. I could have done much more,” said Hiruta through interpreter Yuriko Miyata. “I wanted to do more things that Manny Robles taught me.”
Trinidad Wins Too
Omar Trinidad (18-0-1, 13 KOs) discovered that challenger Mike Plania (31-5, 18 KOs) has a very good chin and staying power. But over 10 rounds Trinidad proved to be too fast and too busy for the Filipino challenger.
Immediately it was evident that the East L.A. featherweight was too quick and too busy for Plania who preferred a counter-puncher attack that never worked.
“He was strong,” said Trinidad. “He took everything.”
After 10 redundant rounds all three judges scored for Trinidad 100-90 twice and 99-91. He retains the WBC Continental Americas title.
Other Bouts
Ali Akhmedov (23-1, 17 KOs) blasted out Malcolm Jones (17-5-1) in less than two rounds. A dozen punches by Akhmedov forced referee Thomas Taylor to stop the super middleweight fight.
Iyana “Roxy” Verduzco (3-0) bloodied Lindsey Ellis in the first round and continued the speedy assault in the next two rounds. Referee Ray Corona saw enough and stopped the fight in favor of Verduzco at 1:34 of the third round.
Gloria Munguilla (7-1) and Brook Sibrian (5-2) lit up the boxing ring with a nonstop clash for eight rounds in their light flyweight fight. Munguilla proved effective with a slip-and-counter attack. Sibrian adjusted and made the fight closer in the last four rounds but all three judges favored Munguilla.
More Winners
Joshua Anton, Tayden Beltran, Adan Palma, and Alexander Gueche all won their bouts.
Photos credit: Al Applerose
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Avila Perspective, Chap. 309: 360 Promotions Opens with Trinidad, Mizuki and More
Avila Perspective, Chap. 309: 360 Promotions Opens with Trinidad, Mizuki and More
Best wishes to the survivors of the Los Angeles wildfires that took place last week and are still ongoing in small locales.
Most of the heavy damage took place in the western part of L.A. near the ocean due to Santa Ana winds. Another very hot spot was in Altadena just north of the Rose Bowl. It was a horrific tragedy.
Hopefully the worst is over.
Pro boxing returns with 360 Boxing Promotions spotlighting East L.A.’s Omar Trinidad (17-0-1, 13 KOs) defending a regional featherweight title against Mike Plania (31-4, 18 KOs) on Friday, Jan. 17, at the Commerce Casino in Commerce, Calif.
“I’m the king of L.A. boxing and I’ll be ready to put on a show headlining again in the main event. This is my year, I’m ready to challenge and defeat any of the featherweight world champions,” said Trinidad.
UFC Fight Pass will stream the Hollywood Night fight card that includes a female world championship fight and other intriguing match-ups.
Tom Loeffler heads 360 Promotions and once again comes full force with a hot prospect in Trinidad. If you’re not familiar with Loeffler’s history of success, he introduced America to Oleksandr Usyk, Gennady “GGG” Golovkin and the brothers Wladimir and Vitaly Kltischko.
“We’ve got a wealth of international talent and local favorites to kick off our 2025 in grand style,” said Loeffler.
He knows talent.
Trinidad hails from the Boyle Heights area of East L.A. near the Los Angeles riverbed. Several fighters from the past came from that exact area including the first Golden Boy, Art Aragon.
Aragon was a huge gate attraction during the late 1940s until 1960. He was known as a lady’s man and dated several Hollywood starlets in his time. Though he never won a world title he did fight world champions Carmen Basilio, Jimmy Carter and Lauro Salas. He was more or less the king of the Olympic Auditorium and Los Angeles boxing during his career.
Other famous boxers from the Boyle Heights area were notorious gangster Mickey Cohen and former world champion Joey Olivo.
Can Trinidad reach world title status?
Facing Trinidad will be Filipino fighter Plania who’s knocked off a couple of prospects during his career including Joshua “Don’t Blink” Greer and Giovanni Gutierrez. The fighter from General Santos in the Philippines can crack and hold his own in the boxing ring.
It’s a very strong fight card and includes WBO world titlist Mizuki Hiruta of Japan who defends the super flyweight title against Mexican veteran Maribel Ramirez. It’s a tough matchup for Hiruta who makes her American debut. You can’t miss her with that pink hair and she has all the physical tools to make a splash in this country.
Two other female bouts are also planned, including light flyweight banger L.A.’s Gloria Munguilla (6-1) against Coachella’s Brook Sibrian (5-1) in a match set for six rounds. Both are talented fighters. Another female fight includes super featherweights Iyana “Right Hook Roxy” Verduzco (2-0) versus Lindsey Ellis (2-1) in another six-rounder. Ellis can crack with all her wins coming via knockout. Verduzco is a multi-national titlist as an amateur.
Others scheduled to perform are Ali Akhmedov, Joshua Anton, Adan Palma and more.
Doors open at 4:30 p.m.
Boxing and the Media
The sport of professional boxing is currently in flux. It’s always in flux but no matter what people may say or write, boxing will survive.
Whether you like Jake Paul or not, he proved boxing has worldwide appeal with monstrous success in his last show. He has media companies looking at the numbers and imagining what they can do with the sport.
Sure, UFC is negotiating a massive billion dollar deal with media companies, as is WWE, both are very similar in that they provide combat entertainment. You don’t need to know the champions because they really don’t matter. Its about the attractions.
Boxing is different. The good champions last and build a following that endures even beyond their careers a la Mike Tyson.
MMA can’t provide that longevity, but it does provide entertainment.
Currently, there is talk of establishing a boxing league again. It’s been done over and over but we shall see if it sticks this time.
Pro boxing is the true warrior’s path and that means a solo adventure. It’s a one-on-one sport and that appeals to people everywhere. It’s the oldest sport that can be traced to prehistoric times. You don’t need classes in Brazilian Jiujitsu, judo, kick boxing or wrestling. Just show up in a boxing gym and they can put you to work.
It’s a poor person’s path that can lead to better things and most importantly discipline.
Photos credit: Lina Baker
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