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Final Stop for Martinez-Cotto; Plus, Inglewood Forum Gets Started

BEVERLY HILLS, CA.—Judging by the slow steps and weariness in their voices the various promoters, minus Lou DiBella, seemed relieved it was the final stop of the long road trip that took them from Puerto Rico, to New York City, to Beverly Hills.
DiBella’s father is ill and needed to tend to his family.
It was the final stop for the traveling press tour to announce the middleweight championship fight between Sergio “Maravilla” Martinez and Miguel Cotto. Their showdown will take place on June 7 at Madison Square Garden in New York City. HBO pay-per-view will televise.
WBC middleweight champion “Maravilla” Martinez looked the freshest of them all and genuinely interested in the last stop of the press junket. Cotto sat with his trainer Freddie Roach at the historically swanky Beverly Hills Hotel, a mere 50 yards from the famous Polo Lounge where celebrities and agents meet.
It’s an intriguing fight between Martinez and Cotto. Though Martinez fights at the 160-pound weight division he really is a junior middleweight. The Argentine southpaw speedster was right at home in Beverly Hills. For more than five years he lived and trained in Oxnard or Ventura. Over that time he’s built many relationships and also accrued many fans.
“He has a lot of Mexican fans,” said Sampson Lewkowicz, who co-promotes Martinez.
Cotto will be training at the Wild Card Boxing gym once again with Roach. Though Manny Pacquiao has full rights to the wizard trainer at the moment, the baton will be handed to the Puerto Rican boxing icon. Roach and Cotto will pick up where they last left.
“Everything works out perfectly,” said Top Rank’s Bob Arum, who looked especially drained from the tour. “Plus, Cotto and Manny get along very well. They like each other.”
The last time Roach and Cotto hooked up, they assembled a perfect fight plan to destroy the tricky boxer Delvin Rodriguez. Now they’re teamed up again. It’s hard to bet against them. First you have one of the smartest analysts in Roach and second, one of the most intelligent boxers in Cotto. When you put them together it’s a near unbeatable team.
Martinez is no dunce in the boxing ring either. Over the years I’ve visited the very classy champion and I’m always amazed at his work rate while training. In my lifetime in boxing – that includes watching my father in the ring – I’ve seen thousands of boxers prepare over the years. Only three stick out in my mind when it comes to eye-popping workouts: the late Edwin Valero was one of them. He was a blur while training. Another was the younger Manny Pacquiao. Martinez is the third.
The very congenial Argentine stylist had a workout routine that was remarkable. It consisted of bike work, running, working on the bags, moving laterally from one side to the other and sparring. All of these routines have been done by many fighters, but not at the rate of speed that Martinez employs. It’s like watching a cartoon. Then he would go home to his condo near a channel and straddle a small boat on the water for a half hour to work on his balance.
When he was announced to the crowd and media he introduced a small boy and also talked about working on a campaign to stop bullying. Martinez is one of those guys who speaks from the heart. At times he may seem like he’s simply promoting but he truly believes in what he’s saying.
Martinez is emphatic that he will beat Cotto and it won’t be by decision. He implied that Cotto’s making him jump through hoops only boosted the will to knock out the Puerto Rican in front of his own fans.
“All of these sacrifices that I had to make to get this fight completed are not going to be forgotten,” said Martinez. “Cotto will pay for it in the end.”
Meanwhile, Cotto was as stoic as ever, but believes it should be a magical night in Madison Square Garden on June 7.
“It’s going to be the fight of the year,” Cotto said.
Coming from Cotto that’s quite a statement and should be taken seriously.
Arum Says Inglewood Forum Gets JMM vs. Alvarado.
The top guy from Top Rank said that Mexico’s boxing wizard Juan Manuel Marquez will fight Mike Alvarado on May 17 at the Inglewood Forum. The winner of the welterweight match up will face the winner of the fight between WBO champion Tim Bradley and Pacquiao.
Arum also said that Julio Cesar Chavez will return on July 12 to face either Gennady Golovkin or someone else if the WBA and IBO middleweight titleholder cannot return in time.
Madison Square Garden owns the rights to the Inglewood Forum and has extreme interest in staging fight cards in the venue that has a long history of great fights.
“A concert was planned on July 12, but they moved it to July 13 so that we can put Chavez on that date,” said Arum. “I like the Forum because the sight lines are so much better than at Staples.”
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Skavynskyi and Bustillos Win on a MarvNation Card in Long Beach

Skavynskyi and Bustillos Win on a MarvNation Card in Long Beach
LONG BEACH, Ca.-A cool autumn night saw welterweights and minimumweights share main events for a MarvNation fight card on Saturday.
Ukraine’s Eduard Skavynskyi (15-0, 7 KOs) experienced a tangled mess against the awkward Alejandro Frias (14-10-2) but won by decision after eight rounds in a welterweight contest at the indoor furnace called the Thunder Studios.
It was hot in there for the more than 600 people inside.
Skavynskyi probably never fought someone like Mexico’s Frias whose style was the opposite of the Ukrainian’s fundamentally sound one-two style. But round after round the rough edges became more familiar.
Neither fighter was ever damaged but all three judges saw Skavynskyi the winner by unanimous decision 79-73 on all three cards. The Ukrainian fighter trains in Ventura.
Bustillo Wins Rematch
In the female main event Las Vegas’ Yadira Bustillos (8-1) stepped into a rematch with Karen Lindenmuth (5-2) and immediately proved the lessons learned from their first encounter.
Bustillos connected solidly with an overhand right and staggered Lindenmuth but never came close to putting the pressure fighter down. Still, Bustillos kept turning the hard rushing Lindenmuth and snapping her head with overhand rights and check left hooks.
Lindenmuth usually overwhelms most opponents with a smothering attack that causes panic. But not against Bustillos who seemed quite comfortable all eight rounds in slipping blows and countering back.
After eight rounds all three judges scored the contest for Bustillos 78-74 and 80-72 twice. Body shots were especially effective for the Las Vegas fighter in the fifth round. Bustillos competes in the same division as IBF/WBO title-holder Yokasta Valle.
Other Bouts
In a middleweight clash, undefeated Victorville’s Andrew Buchanan (3-0-1) used effective combination punching to defeat Mexico’s Fredy Vargas (2-1-1) after six rounds. Two judges scored it 59-55 and a third 60-54 for Buchanan. No knockdowns were scored.
A super lightweight match saw Sergio Aldana win his pro debut by decision after four rounds versus Gerardo Fuentes (2-9-1).
Photos credit: Al Applerose
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Tedious Fights and a Controversial Draw Smudge the Matchroom Boxing Card in Orlando

Matchroom Boxing was at the sprawling Royale Caribe Resort Hotel in Orlando, Florida tonight with a card that aired on DAZN. The main event was a ho-hum affair between super lightweights Richardson Hitchins and Jose Zepeda.
SoCal’s Zepeda has been in some wars in the past, notably his savage tussle with Ivan Baranchyk, but tonight he brought little to the table and was outclassed by the lanky Hitchins who won all 12 rounds on two of the cards and 11 rounds on the other. There were no knockdowns, but Zepeda suffered a cut on his forehead in round seven that was deemed to be the product of an accidental head butt and another clash in round ten forced a respite in the action although Hitchins suffered no apparent damage.
It was the sort of fight where each round was pretty much a carbon of the round preceding it. Brooklyn’s Hitchins, who improved to 17-0 (7), was content to pepper Zepeda with his jab, and the 34-year-old SoCal southpaw, who brought a 37-3 record, was never able to penetrate his defense and land anything meaningful.
Hitchins signed with Floyd Mayweather Jr’s promotional outfit coming out of the amateur ranks and his style is reminiscent in ways of his former mentor. Like Mayweather, he loses very few rounds. In his precious engagement, he pitched a shutout over previously undefeated John Bauza.
Co-Feature
In the co-feature, Conor Benn returned to the ring after an absence of 17 months and won a unanimous decision over Mexico’s Rodolfo Orozco. It wasn’t a bad showing by Benn who showed decent boxing skills, but more was expected of him after his name had been bandied about so often in the media. Two of the judges had it 99-91 and the other 96-94.
Benn (22-0, 14 KOs) was a late addition to the card although one suspects that promoter Eddie Hearn purposely kept him under wraps until the week of the fight so as not to deflect the spotlight from the other matches on his show. Benn lost a lucrative date with Chris Eubank Jr when he was suspended by the BBBofC when evidence of a banned substance was found in his system and it’s understood that Hearn has designs on re-igniting the match-up with an eye on a date in December. For tonight’s fight, Benn carried a career-high 153 ½ pounds. Mexico’s Orozco, who was making his first appearance in a U.S. ring, declined to 32-4-3.
Other Bouts of Note
The welterweight title fight between WBA/WBC title-holder Jessica McCaskill (15-3-1) and WBO title-holder Sandy Ryan (6-1-1) ended in a draw and the ladies’ retain their respective titles. Ryan worked the body effectively and the general feeling was that she got a raw deal, a sentiment shared by the crowd which booed the decision. There was a switch of favorites in the betting with the late money seemingly all on the Englishwoman who at age 30 was the younger boxer by nine years.
The judges had it 96-94 Ryan, 96-95, and a vilified 97-93 for Chicago’s McCaskill.
In the opener of the main DAZN stream, Houston middleweight Austin “Ammo” Williams, 27, improved to 15-0 (10) with a 10-round unanimous decision over 39-year-old Toronto veteran Steve Rolls (22-3). All three judges had it 97-93. Rolls has been stopped only once, that by Gennady Golovkin.
Photo credit: Ed Mulholland / Matchroom Boxing
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Zhilei Zhang KOs Joe Joyce; Calls Out Tyson Fury

Joe Joyce activated his rematch clause after being stopped in the sixth frame by Zhilei Zhang in their first meeting. In hindsight, he may wish that he hadn’t. Tonight at London’s Wembley Stadium, Zhang stopped him again and far more conclusively than in their first encounter.
In the first meeting, Zhang, a southpaw, found a steady home for his stiff left jab. Targeting Joyce’s right eye, he eventually damaged the optic to where the ring doctor wouldn’t let Joyce continue. At the end, the fight was close on the cards and Joyce was confident that he would have pulled away if not for the issue with his eye.
In the rematch tonight, Zhang (26-1-1, 21 KOs) closed the curtain with his right hand. A thunderous right hook on the heels of a straight left pitched Joyce to the canvas where he landed face first. He appeared to beat the count by a whisker, but was seriously dazed and referee Steve Gray properly waived it off. The official time was 3:07 of round three.
Zhang, who lived up to his nickname, “Big Bang,” was credited with landing 29 power punches compared with only six for Joyce (15-2) who came in 25 pounds heavier than in their first meeting while still looking properly conditioned. One would be inclined to say that age finally caught with the “Juggernaut” who turned 38 since their last encounter, but Zhang, 40, is actually the older man. In his post-fight interview in the ring, the New Jersey resident, a two-time Olympian for China, when asked who he wanted to fight next, turned to the audience and said, “Do you want to see me shut Tyson Fury up?”
He meant it as a rhetorical question.
Semi-Windup
Light heavyweight Anthony Yarde was matched soft against late sub Jorge Silva, a 40-year-old Portuguese journeyman, and barely broke a sweat while scoring a second-round stoppage. Yarde backed Silva against a corner post and put him on the deck with a short right hand. Silva’s body language indicated that he had no interest in continuing and the referee accommodated him. The official time was 2:07 of round two.
A 30-year-old Londoner, Yarde (24-3, 23 KOs) was making his first start since being stopped in eight rounds by Artur Beterbiev in a bout that Yarde was winning on two of the scorecards. Silva, a late replacement for 19-3-1 Ricky Summers, falls to 22-9.
Also
Former leading super middleweight contender Zach Parker (23-1, 17 KOs) returned to the ring in a “shake-off-the-rust” fight against 40-year-old Frenchman Khalid Graidia and performed as expected. Graidia’s corner pulled him out after seven one-sided rounds.
In his previous fight, Parker was matched against John Ryder who he was favored to beat. The carrot for the winner was a lucrative date with Canelo Alvarez. Unfortunately for Parker, he suffered a broken hand and was unable to continue after four frames. Tonight, he carried 174 pounds, a hint that he plans to compete as a light heavyweight going forward. Indeed, he has expressed an interest in fighting Anthony Yarde. Graidia declined to 10-13-4.
The Zhang-Joyce and Yarde-Silva fights were live-streamed in the U.S. on ESPN+.
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