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Chavez Jr. Wears What He Wants, Trains When He Wants

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Chavez Jr arrival 120911 002aHas Junior had the very best camp possible ahead of the Martinez fight? Did he give himself the very best chance to win by preparing to the utmost? It didn't sem that way on 24/7; but we shall have to see, this Saturday on PPV, to learn if the pink panties were a good luck charm, or not. (Chris Farina-Top Rank)

“He works when he wants to, that bugs me a little bit, but overall, it's OK. As long as we get the work done.”

Hearing Freddie Roach say those words on the second installment of HBO's Martinez-Chavez Jr 24/7, and then seeing evidence that the son of the legend still has a bit more of the Lord Fauntleroy in him than one would hope or expect at age 26, had me reducing Chavez' chances against Martinez on Saturday night in Las Vegas.

I gave Junior the proverbial punchers chance, and figured that possibly the fact that Martinez didn't dominate Darren Barker and Matthew Macklin at times not because he wasn't mentally primed but because he has slipped, minutely, physically. I thought a sliver of a chance existed for Junior, but because of what I saw on 24/7 I have reduced the sliver to 3/4 of a sliver. I give Junior a 15% shot of beating Sergio Martinez, down from 20%.

In the opening scene, we see Chavez working, which is as it should be for a man taking two steps up in competition from anything he's seen before. From Peter Manfredo to Sergio Martinez is like going from Triple A to the majors…so Junior rooters have to hope that the son of the legend isn't going into the event thinking he will turn on the heater and time the curveballs coming from Martinez as he did Andy Lee.

He's running, late at night, in Vegas, and we hear that Junior likes to keep Michael Jackson hours, sleep all day, and work at night. Junior heads to the Top Rank gym, where Freddie Roach waits. The trainer says Junior's camp at home, in LA, didn't work out so well, because he wasn't working out as often or as hard as he should've been. In Vegas, though Roach tried to light a fire underneath him, Junior didn't tame his tardiness.

We see Junior's mom, Alba Carrasco-Orduno, sort of a fabulous Mexican Peg Bundy looking lady, and she says she's attended just one of his fights. “I don't like it,” she says. “I don't go because it's scary.” Mom, who split with Julio Sr. about 15 years ago, is present at this family reunion, with sons Omar and Cristian, to encourage Junior.

The kid takes a shot at the foe ten years his senior when he says, “You should be fighting my dad. You're too old!” Pop, age 50, breaks into a grin.

Over in Oxnard, CA, Martinez uses a hyperbaric chamber to get pure oxygen into his system. He uses one five days a week, for an hour per session. His cutman, a chiropractor, owns one. The fighter says getting up at four AM, and training hard, is the real secret to his success.

We see Martinez sparring at the gym. Trainer Pablo Sarmiento says Martinez doesn't spar that much, to help keep him fresh. He'll spar just 60 rounds to get ready for Junior. And he hasn't downshifted because of age, he says. He has trained like this, doing lots of footwork drills, for ten years.

Back at the Vegas gym, Freddie Roach waits. Junior is late for a 7 PM mitt workout.  After an hour, a Junior lackey calls Freddie, and tells him that the fighter won't be showing up. “WTF,” Roach says. He sighs, and still on the phone, says, “I've never seen nothing like this in my life.” He explains to an associate that Junior woke up, said he'd go to the gym, then after a half hour, decided he wouldn't, that he needed a day off.

Freddie recalls that Junior's rep when they met, back in 2010, was that he was “a little bit lazy.” He says that Junior doesn't refuse any request when he shows up at the gym…but that he doesn't always show up at the gym. The next day, Junior does show up. Freddie tells him to drive Martinez back in a straight line, that the Argentine “can't fight going backwards.” The kid says he worked out 12 days straight, so he decided to have a rest day. The trainer says he warned Junior not to fall back into old habits. “I think we're OK now,” he says. His face doesn't scream certainty. (I guess there is the possibility that we're getting conned, that this is all for show. I strongly doubt that though. One day, when we've been doing this 24/7 docu-mercial deal for a spell, somebody will pull off this sort of con, make watchers believe they have an edge by fabricating an injury in camp, or by pretending to go out at night and blow off training. But not yet, I don't think.)

In CA, we see Sarmiento, a fellow Argentine, and Sergio interact. They mesh quite well, both say. After dinner, they watch tape of Junior. Sergio says he likes to study foes, more for how they think than how they fight. He does note that Junior uses the left hand almost purely to hook with, not jab, so you might want to see how Martinez exploits that on fight night. “I don't see how really he's going to give Sergio any trouble,” Sarmiento says of a fighter he allows is “strong and aggressive.”

“It's a farce that Junior is a world champion,” Martinez says as he watches Chavez celebrate a win on tape. “It's embarrassing.”

Chavez Sr. then watches tape of Martinez versus Matthew Macklin, while Junior sleeps. When Junior is up, dad excitedly shares wisdom on how to better Martinez. Junior listens, and then pads about the house in much-mocked pink briefs, before heading to the pool for a dip. Dad comes poolside, boxing a shadow, telling Junior that his hook will mess up Martinez. At 10 PM, Junior is ready to train…but his session takes place in his kitchen, without Roach. Alex Ariza, his strength coach, is present. We can mock this setup, and people surely will, if he loses. If he wins, then we will embrace the relaxed attitude. But you don't have to be an old school fart to think that he'd be better served in the gym, with his trainer, rather than “working” in his kitchen. “I'm ready for this fight,” Junior insists.

Next, we see a fashion designer come to the house to show Sergio some outfits for fight week. He says that he's in the public eye, so he needs to look sharp, and speak well.

Contrasting to Junior's carefree attitude, Martinez arises before dawn to get in road work. Whereas Junior chews cereal in his undies, Martinez is contemplative and philosophical, saying that he won't forget where he came from, because if he does, he is destined to fall back to that place.

My takeaways: As for the pink panties, god bless 'im. You have to respect that element of Junior's personality, that he doesn't care if the world sees him in pink panties.

Also, boxing ain't rock 'n roll. A singer can burn the candle at both ends, sleep all day, get down to business at night, when he is young. But performing on that stage isn't like this stage. A singer can be aided by a TelePrompTer, or a pill or powder or backing musicians, to carry him to the encore. Chavez will be alone in the ring come Saturday, and if he has been slacking in training, he will get rocked.

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Ramon Cardenas Channels Micky Ward and KOs Eduardo Ramirez on ProBox

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The Wednesday night bi-monthly series of fights on the ProBox TV platform is the best deal in boxing; the livestream is free with no strings attached! Tonight’s episode was headlined by a super bantamweight match between San Antonio’s Ramon Cardenas and Eduardo Ramirez who brought a caravan of rooters from his hometown in Guaymas, Sonora, Mexico.

Cardenas, coached by Joel Diaz, entered the contest ranked #4 by the WBA. He was expected to handle Ramirez with little difficulty, but this was a close, tactical fight through eight frames when lightning struck in the form of a left hook to the liver from Cardenas. Ramirez went down on one knee and wasn’t able to beat the count. It was as if Cardenas summoned the ghost of Micky Ward who had a penchant for terminating fights with the same punch that arrived out of the blue.

The official time was 1:37 of round nine. Cardenas improved to 25-1 with his14th win inside the distance. Ramirez, who was stopped in the opening round by Nick “Wrecking” Ball in London in his lone previous fight outside Mexico, falls to 23-3-3.

Co-Feature

In an upset, Tijuana super welterweight Damian Sosa won a split decision over previously undefeated Marques Valle, a local area fighter who was stepping up in class in his first 10-round go. Sosa was the aggressor, repeatedly backing his taller opponent into the ropes where Valle was unable to get good leverage behind his punches.

The 25-year-old Valle, managed by the influential David McWater, was the house fighter. This was his 10th appearance in this building. He brought a 10-0 (7) record and was hoping to emulate the success of his younger brother Dominic Valle who scored a second-round stoppage of his opponent in this ring two weeks ago, improving to 9-0. But Sosa, who brought a 24-2 record, proved to be a bridge too high.

The judges had it 97-93 and 96-94 for the Tijuana invader and a disgraceful 98-92 for the house fighter.

Also

In a fight whose abrupt ending would be echoed by the main event, 34-year-old SoCal featherweight Ronny Rios, now training in Las Vegas, returned to the ring after a 22-month hiatus and scored a fifth-round stoppage over Nicolas Polanco of the Dominican Republic.

A three-punch combo climaxed by a left hook to the liver took the breath out of Polanco who slumped to his knees and was counted out. A two-time world title challenger, Rios advanced to 34-4 (17 KOs). Polanco, 34, declined to 21-6-1. The official time was 0:54 of round five.

The next ProBox show (Wednesday, May 8) will have an international cast with fighters from Kazakhstan, Japan, Mongolia, and the United Kingdom. In the main event, Liverpool’s Robbie Davies Jr will make his U.S. debut against the California-based Kazakh Sergey Lipinets.

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Haney-Garcia Redux with the Focus on Harvey Dock

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Saturday’s skirmish between Ryan Garcia and WBC super lightweight champion Devin Haney was a messy affair, and yet a hugely entertaining fight fused with great drama. In the aftermath, Garcia and Haney were celebrated – the former for fooling all the experts and the latter for his gallant performance in a losing effort – but there were only brickbats for the third man in the ring, referee Harvey Dock.

Devin Haney was plainly ahead heading into the seventh frame when there was a sudden turnabout when Garcia put him on the canvas with his vaunted left hook. Moments later, Dock deducted a point from Garcia for a late punch coming out of a break. The deduction forced a temporary cease-fire that gave Haney a few precious seconds to regain his faculties. Before the round was over, Haney was on the deck twice more but these were ruled slips.

The deduction, which effectively negated the knockdown, struck many as too heavy-handed as Dock hadn’t previously issued a warning for this infraction. Moreover, many thought he could have taken a point away from Haney for excessive clinching. As for Haney’s second and third trips to the canvas in round seven, they struck this reporter – watching at home – as borderline, sufficient to give referee Dock the benefit of the doubt.

In a post-fight interview, Ryan Garcia faulted the referee for denying him the satisfaction of a TKO. “At the end of the day, Harvey Dock, I think he was tripping,” said Garcia. “He could have stopped that fight.”

Those that played the rounds proposition, placing their coin on the “under,” undoubtedly felt the same way.

The internet lit up with comments assailing Dock’s competence and/or his character. Some of the ponderings were whimsical, but they were swamped by the scurrilous screeching of dolts who find a conspiracy under every rock.

Stephen A. Smith, reputedly America’s highest-paid TV sports personality, was among those that felt a need to weigh-in: “This referee is absolutely terrible….Unreal! Horrible officiating,” tweeted Stephen A whose primary area of expertise is basketball.

Harvey Dock

Dock fought as an amateur and had one professional fight, winning a four-round decision over a fellow novice on a show at a non-gaming resort in the Pocono Mountains of Pennsylvania. He says that as an amateur he was merely average, but he was better than that, a New Jersey and regional amateur champion in 1993 and 1994 while a student New Jersey’s Essex County Community College where he majored in journalism.

A passionate fan of Sugar Ray Leonard, he started officiating amateur fights in 1998 and six years later, at age 32, had his first documented action at the professional level, working low-level cards in New Jersey. The top boxing referees, to a far greater extent than the top judges, had long apprenticeships, having worked their way up from the boonies and Dock is no exception.

Per boxrec, Haney vs Garcia was Harvey Dock’s 364th assignment in the pros and his forty-second world title fight. Some of those title fights were title in name only, they weren’t even main events, but, bit by bit, more lucrative offerings started coming his way.

On May 13, 2023, Dock worked his first fights in Nevada, a 4-rounder and then a 12-rounder on a card at the Cosmopolitan topped by the 140-pound title fight between Rolly Romero and Ismael Barroso. It was the first time that this reporter got to watch Dock in the flesh.

Ironically (in hindsight), the card would be remembered for the actions of a referee, in this case Tony Weeks who handled the main event. Barroso was winning the fight on all three cards when Weeks stepped in and waived it off in the ninth round after Romero cornered Barroso against the ropes and let loose a barrage of punches, none of which landed cleanly. Few “premature stoppages” were ever as garishly, nay ghoulishly, premature.

With all the brickbats raining down on Weeks, I felt a need to tamp down the noise by diverting attention away from Tony Weeks and toward Harvey Dock and took to the TSS Forum to share my thoughts. Referencing the 12-rounder, a robust junior welterweight affair between Batyr Akhmedov and Kenneth Sims Jr, I noted that Dock’s Las Vegas debut went smoothly. He glided effortlessly around the ring, making him inconspicuous, the mark of a good referee. (This post ran on May 15, two days after the fight.)

Folks at the Nevada State Athletic Commission were also paying attention. Dock was back in Las Vegas the following week to referee the lightweight title fight between Devin Haney and Vasyl Lomachenko and before the year was out, he would be tabbed to referee the biggest non-heavyweight fight of the year, the July 29 match in Las Vegas between Terence Crawford and Errol Spence Jr.

The Haney-Garcia fight wasn’t Harvey Dock’s best hour, I’ll concede that, but a closer look at his full body of work informs us that he is an outstanding referee.

While the Haney-Garcia bout was in progress, WBC president Mauricio Sulaiman threw everyone a curve ball, tweeting on “X” that Devin Haney would keep his title if he lost the fight. Everyone, including the TV commentators, was under the impression that the title would become vacant in the event that Haney lost.

Sulaiman cited the precedent of Corrales-Castillo II.

FYI: The Corrales-Castillo rematch, originally scheduled for June 3, 2005 and aborted on the day prior when Castillo failed to make weight, finally came off on Oct. 8 of that year, notwithstanding the fact that Castillo failed to make weight once again, scaling three-and-a-half pounds above the lightweight limit. He knocked out Corrales in the fourth round with a left hook that Las Vegas Review-Journal boxing writer Kevin Iole, alluding to the movie “Blazing Saddles,” described as Mongo-esque (translation: the punch would have knocked out a horse). After initially insisting on a rubber match, which had scant chance of happening, WBC president Jose Sulaiman, Mauricio’s late father, ruled that Corrales could keep his title.

Whether or not you agree with Mauricio Sulaiman’s rationale, the timing of his announcement was certainly awkward.

Haney’s mandatory is Spanish southpaw Sandor Martin (42-3, 15 KOs), a cutie best known for his 2021 upset of Mikey Garcia. A bout between Haney and Martin has the earmarks of a dull fight.

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In a Shocker, Ryan Garcia Confounds the Experts and Upsets Devin Haney

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Its good to be crazy. Like a fox.

Ryan “KingRy” Garcia knocked down WBC super lightweight titlist Devin Haney three times to remind everyone of his fighting abilities in winning by majority decision on Saturday.

“I just knew what I could do,” Garcia said.

Fans will not forget the lanky kid from Victorville, California now.

Garcia (25-1, 20 KOs) fooled everyone in playing crazy weeks before the fight, then showed shocking power to hand Haney (30-1, 15 KOs) his first loss as a professional at Barclays Center in Brooklyn.

Haney’s WBC super lightweight title was not at stake for Garcia because he weighed three pounds over the limit.

After Garcia seemingly acting out of control on social media, Haney’s guard must have slipped in the first round during the first few seconds as Garcia connected with that hellish left hook and Haney, with a look of shock in his eyes, almost went down. He barely survived the first round.

“He caught me with it,” said Haney.

During the next few rounds, Haney proceeded to advance toward Garcia seemingly fully aware of the lethal left hook. He used feints and rights to score with a busier approach as Garcia seemed cocked and ready to counter with a left hook.

In the fourth round it seemed Haney was confident he had regained control of the fight, but every time he opened up with more than a two-punch combination Garcia reminded him whose hands were faster and more dangerous.

Though Garcia seldom jabbed he seemed bent on looking for the right moment to unleash his deadly left hook. And every time the Southern California fighter opened up with a combination he scored and Haney dare not exchange.

A few times Haney smiled as if signifying he escaped.

In the seventh round Haney looked to punish Garcia’s body and instead was met with a three-punch combination included a left hook to the chin and down went Haney slumped on the ground. He managed to beat the count and as soon as Garcia came within reach Haney wrapped his arms around him with a python grip. Despite the warnings by referee Harvey Dock, the fallen fighter would not release and Garcia impatiently fired a weak punch during the break. The referee deducted a point from Garcia though he could have deducted a point from Haney for not obeying his instructions to release his hold. Haney actually went down three times in the round but only one was counted by the referee.

From that point on Haney was very cautious but still looking to win by decision.

Though Garcia kept using a shoulder-roll defense that left his body exposed, he would retaliate with three and four punch combinations that usually Haney could defend against other fighters.. But Garcia’s blazing combinations were too fast to defend.

In the 10th round Haney looked to attack and was countered by Garcia’s right and a blinding left hook to the chin and another two blows that sent the former undisputed lightweight champion to the floor again.

It didn’t look good for Haney to survive.

Garcia walked into the 11th round still composed and never out-of-control He dared Haney to exchange and when within striking distance Garcia unleashed another lightning combination and down went Haney again with a defeated look.

Both fighters had fought each other as amateurs six times so there were no surprises between them. But Garcia’s power and speed were superior and that was the difference in a professional fight.

In the final round both were cautious with Garcia’s combination punching proving too dangerous for Haney to open up. Garcia celebrated early as the round ended confident of victory.

After 12 rounds Garcia was seen the victor by majority decision 112-112, 114-110, 115-109.

“You really thought I was crazy,” Garcia told the interviewer and the crowd. “You guys hated on me.”

Other Bouts

Arnold Barboza (30-0) won a curious split decision victory over United Kingdom’s Sean McComb (18-2) in a 10-round super lightweight fight. McComb’s long reach and busy southpaw style gave Barboza trouble. But he managed to win the fight though the crowd was not pleased.

Bektemir Melikuziev (14-1, 10 KOs) defeated France’s Pierre Dibombe (22-1-1) by technical decision after eight rounds due to a cut on his eye from an accidental head butt. It was a very competitive super middleweight fight.

Costa Rica’s David Jimenez (16-1, 11 KOs) outworked John “Scrappy Ramirez (13-1, 9 KOs) in a 12-round scrap to upset the Los Angeles based fighter. After a few close rounds Jimenez simply bullied his way inside and forced Ramirez against the ropes and unloaded his guns.

After 12 rounds two judges saw it 117-111 and 116-114 all for Jimenez.

“I’m a hard-working man from Cartago I come from nothing,” said Jimenez. “My corner told me I had to work inside.”

Charles Conwell (19-0, 14 KOs) stepped on the gas early with vicious body shots and uppercuts and blasted through the resilient Nathaniel Gallimore (22-8-1, 17 KOs) for several rounds. After a brutal fifth and sixth round the referee halted the one-side beating in favor of Conwell who was fighting for the first time under the Golden Boy banner.

Another winner was Sergiy Derevyanchenko (15-5) by decision over Vaughn Alexander (18-11-1) in a super middleweight match.

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