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Cotto Talks About Catchweight, Roach Talks About Sergio’s Excuses

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Puerto Rico’s Miguel Cotto took part on a Thursday conference call to hype his June 7 scrap at Madison Square Garden, against middleweight champion Sergio Martinez, and the 33-year-old said he thinks he will be just fine at this weight class, and feel comfortable at 160.

“I feel at 160 I don’t need to lose weight,” and thus, he will be that much stronger, because he doesn’t need to cut. Indeed, he said he does feel he has more power at this class, but allowed that he won’t know how it will play out till fight night.

HBO, by the way, will produce the PPV show.

Cotto said he’s 33, and he won’t become a bulky sort overnight, it’s now more a matter of keeping muscle on. He said he trained for the full 12, and if Martinez, who promised a KO, didn’t, he’s in trouble.

Cotto was asked if he’d need to lead, or counter, or what. Whatever needs to be done, will be done, and he will listen to his corner, and follow that advice.

I asked about the catchweight, 159 pounds. On Wednesday, Team Martinez portrayed Cotto as a diva, who made too many requests as the “A side.” They said that Cotto demanded the catchweight, and I wondered if that is indeed the case. “That came from Sampson,” Cotto said. Top Rank exec Todd Duboef hopped in, to clarify, and said that the Martinez people stated that a lower weight could be agreed upon. “They settled at 59,” he said. “It was mutual,” he said. (UPDATED, THURSDAY AFTERNOON: Nathan Lewkowicz, of Team Martinez, and Sampson’s son, talked to TSS about the catchweight. He said what Cotto and Duboef is true.  The media was talking about a catchweight first, so Sampson, right up front, to Team Cotto,  said 157 or less was a no fly zone. Sampson asked for 160 first, and Team Cotto countered with 159, and it was immediately agreed upon, Nathan said. He thinks Cotto will come in 155, 156, while Sergio usually comes in at 159, or 158, and Nathan expects the same for fight night.)

Cotto said he will fight at a comfortable weight, and wouldn’t offer a target weight for the weigh-in.

(I get the sense that hardcore fans don’t care for catchweights and while I understand a fighters’ desire to gain an edge with a catchweight, I really don’t much support them. We have so many weight classes, I think we should be able to agree to a cemented weight class.)

I also asked Miguel about Cotto’s body punching making him pee blood after workouts. “I’m just doing my work, I didn’t think about that, sorry Freddie,” Cotto said, to chuckles.

Roach said his body protector doesn’t help him that much anymore, and that Cotto is “the hardest worker” he’s worked with, and is also the most disciplined.

Top Rank’s Duboef said Cotto’s goal is to be the first Puerto Rican boxer to win titles in four divisions. He said the ticket demand has been hot, as well. The exec said that this one, apart from a Mayweather or Pacman PPV, is maybe the biggest PPV in about five years. He predicted the results will be “incredible.” He said he isn’t sure if they can do a million buys, and thinks that might be a reach, in fact. The Puerto Rican buy rates will be “huge,” he said. He said ticket sales also indicate demand is immense, as the scraps almost sold out after four hours on sale.

Cotto trainer, Freddie Roach, was also on the call, and Roach said that camp has been stellar. He’s brought in awkward lefties to spar and he said he “can’t wait for this fight to happen.” He said he thinks Cotto will be the stronger man, and his guy will push Martinez around on the inside.

The trainer said he thinks Martinez is already sort of making excuses, with the talk of his past injuries, but he’s training Cotto for a 100% Martinez. Roach said if the knees aren’t good, they will catch Sergio earlier, rather than later. He doesn’t want to hear after that his knee was bad, he said.

Cotto said he’s been having fun in camp with Freddie and the guys in camp. He was asked if he ever thought he’d fight at middleweight. It never crossed his mind, he said.

He said he had differences when he was getting ready to fight Manny Pacquiao, but now his relationship with Roach is “great.” They have the chemistry to make him a better boxer, he said.

He’d love to win that title in that fourth class, he said, but that wouldn’t mean he’d automatically be thought of as better as a Wilfredo Gomez or a Tito Trinidad. He played down a question as to whether he’s there with those legends, and said that’s a matter for the fans to decide.

The last time he fought at MSG, he lost to Austin Trout. He was young and mobile, and Sergio isn’t so young, and has hampered mobility, arguably. Thus, he said, it’s apples and oranges. “We guarantee you, we’re going to win this fight,” he said.

Trainer Roach said Cotto now knows how to control the ring better, and has worked on that a lot. “We’re more scientific about our approach to the fight, about how to control the ring better,” he said.

The left-handed Cotto said he started fighting at 11, and started lefty, but right away, switched to righty stance.

He said he is less concerned with what Sergio brings to the table than his prep, and Martinez will need to adapt to him. He didn’t offer anything when asked what Martinez does that is potentially worrisome to him. Again, he said that he is concerned with what he will do, not the other guy.

He said he wants to win another crown, but that family, doing well for his kids, is his greatest motivation.

Follow Woods on Twitter. https://twitter.com/Woodsy1069

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Avila Perspective Chap 320: Boots Ennis and Stanionis

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Jaron “Boots Ennis and Eimantis Stanionus are in the wrong era.

If they had fought in the late 70s and early 80s the boxing world would have seen them regularly on televised fight cards.

Instead, with the world’s attention span diluted by thousands of available programming, this richly talented pair of undefeated welterweights Ennis (33-0, 29 Kos) and Stanionis (15-0, 9 Kos) will battle in the smaller confines of Boardwalk Hall in Atlantic City on Saturday April 12.

Thankfully, DAZN will stream the WBA and IBF welterweight world title fight on the Matchroom Boxing card.

If not for DAZN these two elite fighters and the sport of pro boxing might be completely invisible to the sports entertainment world.

These welterweights are special.

Ennis, a lean whip-quick fighter out of Philadelphia, stylistically reminds me of a Tommy Hearns but not as tall or long-armed as the Detroit fighter of the past.

“Win on Saturday and I’m the WBA, IBF and Ring Magazine champion, and then we’ll see what’s next. But I am zoned in on Stanionis,” said Ennis the IBF titlist.

Lithuania’s Stanionis and his pressure style liken to a Marvelous Marvin Hagler who would walk through fire to reach striking distance of a foes chin or abdomen.

“Ennis is slick, explosive, and they say he’s the future of the division. That’s why I signed the contract. I don’t duck anyone—I run toward the fire,” Stanionis said.

When Hagler and Hearns met in Las Vegas on April 1985, their reputations had been built on television with millions watching against common foes like Roberto Duran and Juan Roldan. Both had different styles just like Stanionis and Ennis and both could punch.

One difference was their ability to take a punch.

Hagler had a chin of steel, Hearns did not.

When Ennis and Stanionis meet in the boxing ring this Saturday, each is facing the most dangerous fighter of his career. Whose chin will hold up is the true question?

“This isn’t gonna be a chess match. This is going to be a war,” said Stanionis who holds the WBA title. “I’m stepping into that ring to test him, break him, and beat him. Let’s see how he handles real pressure.”

Ennis just wants to win.

“I’m at the point right now where I don’t care what people say,” said Ennis. “I’m here to do one thing and that’s put hands on you, that’s it.”

Golden Boy in Oceanside, CA

Next week budding star Charles Conway (21-0, 16 Kos) meets Mexico’s Jorge Garcia Perez (32-4, 26 Kos) in the semi-main event at Frontwave Arena in Oceanside, California on Saturday April 19.

The two super welterweights are both ranked in the top 10 and the winner moves up to the elite level of the very stacked super welterweight division.

Conwell, who trains in Cleveland, Ohio, has been one of boxing’s best kept secrets and someone few champions and contenders want to face. Take my word for it, this kid can fight.

On the main event is undisputed female flyweight world champion Gabriela Fundora (15-0, 7 Kos) defending all her titles against Mexico’s Marilyn Badillo (19-0-1, 3 Kos).

Fundora is quickly becoming the most feared champion in boxing.

360 Promotions

Super welter prospect Sadridden Akhmedov (15-0, 13 Kos) meets Elias Espadas (23-6, 16 Kos) in the main event on Saturday April 19, at the Commerce Casino in Commerce, Calif. The 360 Promotions event will be streamed on UFC Fight Pass.

Also, Roxy Verduzco (3-0) meets Jessica Radtke (1-1-1) in a six rounds featherweight battle.

Fights to Watch

Sat. DAZN 5 p.m. Jarron Ennis (33-0) vs Eamantis Stanionis (15-0).

Photo credit: Mark Robinson

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Dzmitry Asanau Flummoxes Francesco Patera on a Ho-Hum Card in Montreal

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Dzmitry Asanau Flummoxes Francesco Patera on a Ho-Hum Card in Montreal

Camille Estephan’s Eye of the Tiger Promotions was at its regular pop stand at the Montreal Casino tonight. Upsets on Estephan’s cards are as rare as snow on the Sahara Desert and tonight was no exception.

The main event was a 10-round lightweight contest between Dzmitry “The Wasp” Asanau and Francesco Patera.

A second-generation prizefighter – his father was reportedly an amateur champion in Russia – Asanau, 28, had a wealth of international amateur experience and represented Belarus in the Tokyo Olympics. His punches didn’t sting like a wasp, but he had too much class for Belgium’s Patera whose claim to fame was that he went 10 rounds with current WBO lightweight champion Keyshawn Davis.

Two of the judges scored every round for the Wasp (10-0, 4 KOs) with the other seeing it 98-92. Patera falls to 30-6.

Co-Feature

Fast-rising Mexican-Canadian welterweight Christopher Guerrero was credited with three knockdowns en route to a one-sided 10-round decision over Oliver Quintana. A two-time Canadian amateur champion, Guererro improved to 14-0 (8).

The fight wasn’t quite as lopsided as what the scorecards read (99-88 and 98-89 twice). None of the knockdowns were particularly harsh and the middle one was a dubious call by the referee.

It was a quick turnaround for Guerrero who scored the best win of his career 8 weeks ago in this ring. The spunky but out-gunned Quintana, whose ledger declined to 22-4, was making his first start outside Mexico.

After his victory, Guerrero was congratulated by ringsider Terence “Bud” Crawford who has a date with Canelo Alvarez in September, purportedly in Las Vegas at the home of the NFL’s Raiders. Canelo has an intervening fight with William Scull on May 4 (May 3 in the U.S.) in Saudi Arabia.

Other Bouts of Note

In a fight without an indelible moment, Mary Spencer improved to 10-2 (6) with a lopsided decision over Ogleidis Suarez (31-6-1). The scores were 99-91 and 100-90 twice. Spencer was making the first defense of her WBA super welterweight title. (She was bumped up from an interim champion to a full champion when Terri Harper vacated the belt.)

A decorated amateur, the 40-year-old Spencer has likely reached her ceiling as a pro. A well-known sports personality in Venezuela, Suarez, 37, returned to the ring in January after a 26-month hiatus. An 18-year pro, she began her career as a junior featherweight.

In a monotonously one-sided fight, Jhon Orobio, a 21-year-old Montreal-based Colombian, advanced to 13-0 (11) with an 8-round shutout over Argentine campaigner Sebastian Aguirre (19-7). Orobio threw the kitchen sink at his rugged Argentine opponent who was never off his feet.

Wyatt Sanford

The pro debut of Nova Scotia’s Wyatt Sanford, a bronze medalist at the Paris Olympics, fell out when Sanford’s opponent was unable to make weight. The opponent, 37-year-old slug Shawn Archer, was reportedly so dehydrated that he had to be hospitalized.

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Remembering Hall of Fame Boxing Trainer Kenny Adams

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The flags at the International Boxing Hall of Fame in Canastota, New York, are flying at half-staff in honor of boxing trainer Kenny Adams who passed away Monday (April 7) at age 84 at a hospice in Las Vegas. Adams was formally inducted into the Hall in June of last year but was too ill to attend the ceremony.

A native of Cape Girardeau, Missouri, Adams was a retired Army master sergeant who was part of an elite squadron that conducted many harrowing missions behind enemy lines during the Vietnam War. A two-time All-Service boxing champion, his name became more generally known in 1984 when he served as the assistant coach of the U.S. Olympic boxing team that won 11 medals, eight gold, at the Los Angeles Summer Games. In 1988, he was the head coach of the squad that won eight medals, three gold, at the Olympiad in Seoul.

Adams’ work caught the eye of Top Rank honcho Bob Arum who induced Adams to move to Las Vegas and coach a team of fledgling pros that he had recently signed. Bantamweight Eddie Cook and junior featherweight Kennedy McKinney, Adams’ first two champions, bubbled out of that pod. Both represented the U.S. Army as amateurs. McKinney was an Olympic gold medalist. Adams would eventually play an instrumental role in the development of more than two dozen world title-holders including such notables as Diego Corrales, Edwin Valero, Freddie Norwood, and Terence Crawford.

When Eddie Cook won his title from Venezuela’s 36-1 Israel Contreras, it was a big upset. Adams, the subject of a 2023 profile in these pages, was subsequently on the winning side of two upsets of far greater magnitude. He prepared French journeyman Rene Jacquot for Jacquot’s date with Donald Curry on Feb. 11 1989 and prepared Vincent Phillips for his engagement with Kostya Tszyu on May 31, 1997.

Jacquot won a unanimous decision over Curry. Phillips stopped Tszyu in the 10th frame. Both fights were named Upset of the Year by The Ring magazine.

Adams’ home-away-from-home in his final years as a boxing coach was the DLX boxing gym which opened in the summer of 2020 in a former dry cleaning establishment on the west-central side of the city. It was fortuitous to the gym’s owner Trudy Nevins that Adams happened to live a few short blocks away.

“He helped me get the place up and running,” notes Nevins who endowed a chair, as it were, in honor of her esteemed helpmate.

No one in the Las Vegas boxing community was closer to Kenny Adams than Brandon Woods. “He was a mentor to me in boxing and in life in general, a father figure,” says Woods, who currently trains Trevor McCumby and Rocky Hernandez, among others.

Akin to Adams, Woods is a Missourian. His connection to Adams comes through his amateur coach Frank Flores, a former teammate of Adams on an all-Service boxing team and an assistant under Adams with the 1988 U.S. Olympic squad.

Woods was working with Nonito Donaire when he learned that he had cancer (now in remission). He cajoled Kenny Adams out of retirement to assist with the training of the Las Vegas-based Filipino and they were subsequently in the corner of Woods’ fighter DeeJay Kriel when the South African challenged IBF 105-pound title-holder Carlos Licona at the Microsoft Theater in Los Angeles on Feb. 16, 2019.

This would be the last time they worked together in the corner and it proved to be a joyous occasion.

After 11 rounds, the heavily favored Licona, a local fighter trained by Robert Garcia, had a seemingly insurmountable lead. He was ahead by seven points on two of the scorecards. In the final round, Kriel knocked him down three times and won by TKO.

“I will always remember the pep talk that Kenny gave DeeJay before that final round,” says Woods. “He said ‘You mean to tell me that you came all the way from across the pond to get to this point and not win a title?’ but in language more colorful than that; I’m paraphrasing.”

“After the fight, Kenny said to me, ‘In all my years of training guys, I never saw that.’”

The fight attracted little attention before or after (it wasn’t the main event), but it would enter the history books. Boxing writer Eric Raskin, citing research by Steve Farhood, notes that there have been only 16 instances of a boxer winning a world title fight by way of a last-round stoppage of a bout he was losing. The most famous example is the first fight between Julio Cesar Chavez and Meldrick Taylor. Kriel vs. Licona now appears on the same list.

Brandon Woods notes that the Veterans Administration moved Adams around quite a bit in his final months, shuffling him to hospitals in North Las Vegas, Kingman, Arizona, and then Boulder City (NV) before he was placed in a hospice.

When Woods visited Adams last week, Adams could not speak. “If you can hear me, I would say to him, please blink your eyes. He blinked.

“There are a couple of people in my life I thought would never leave us and Kenny is one,” said Woods with a lump in his throat.

Photo credit: Supreme Boxing

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