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Jumbo Size Helping Of Teddy Atlas! ESPNer & Tim Smith Starting “Sirius” Show

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Teddy Atlas is out in Cali, visiting his son, who works for the Raiders NFL franchise, and he was kind enough to take time from his visit to Alcatraz to talk a bit about his new venture, which he hopes will bring some new fans to the sport which has lagged in engagement tactics in the last few decades.

The ESPN analyst will start on SiriusXM Jan. 6, doing a radio show with the ultra-classy reporter Tim Smith, who’s shined at the NY Times and the NY Daily News. Atlas told me he was approached to do the two-hours-a-week program, which will run on Channel 92, and he likes that “it’s another forum for me, where I can express things that need to be said, deal with some things that are wrong in the sport, and the corruption, and what’s hurting the sport.”

Yes, those of us who treasure the conniption fits Atlas’ unleashes during the inevitable judging episode of corruptitude on ESPN’s “Friday Night Fights” are looking forward to hearing Staten Island Teddy, in his unfiltered and hyper-indignant manner throw furious combos at the powers that be which help keep our sport decked out in perpetual black eyes.

We can also expect to hear, he said, positive talk, about how boxing benefits society, is a net plus to the world, which is what I always hammer as well. All those kids falling in between the cracks, some of them get found in a boxing ring, and Atlas and Smith will remind us about those sunny stories.

“Maybe we can educate a different group of people, maybe reach some people who are fringe boxing fans, not just talk about slipping jabs, fighting on the inside, that stuff. Boxing is about people facing things, about not lying to yourself, how to deal with your inhibitions, how to control yourself…and you don’t have to throw punches in a ring to get that.”

There will be lobbying, and educating, and humor, and optimism, and the intention to grow the message about his charitable organization, the Theodore Atlas Foundation, which honors his late father the physician, and helps people needing that hand up.

Atlas gets boldface names from outside boxing, the NFL, NBA, Hollywood, all walks of life, to sit on the dais and helps raise funds. We can expect, he said, many of those A listers, who are boxing fans, to come on the show, and talk sweet science with the passionate tutor and role model.

And will we talk corruptitude, Teddy?

“We will touch on which judges should be eliminated from having the privilege of doing that job,” he promised.

Atlas said the folks at ESPN are stellar souls for letting him be unfiltered, speak his mind, because they trust his judgment. So it’s not like we should expect a two-times-more unfiltered Teddy on satellite radio. No; but he will be graced with more time, to expand and expound, and won’t be constrained by segment spacing as much. You like Teddy on a tangent? This show will be for you.

Good luck getting in the way of that Mack Truck of truth, Tim Smith!

I asked Teddy, for example, if the show started tonight, and a caller asked you if that Floyd Mayweather-Manny Pacquiao fight is going to happen May 2, or heck, ever…what would you say?

“It’s not gonna be May,” he told me. “I think Floyd has the upper hand and Bob Arum and Manny Pacquiao have been weakened. I think they will come to the table but that Floyd will wait, pull in more money, maybe with lesser fights, and then, when there’s not a lot out there, when his Showtime deal is done, look to possibly get together with Pacquiao and Arum.”

Here is the release the SiriusXM folks sent out today (Monday) to trumpet the new Atlas/Smith endeavor.

Teddy Atlas and Tim Smith Team Up for New Boxing Show on SiriusXM

Renowned trainer and longtime boxing journalist will host “Going the Distance,” along with SiriusXM’s Nabaté Isles, starting January 6

NEW YORK – December 22, 2014 – SiriusXM today announced today that Teddy Atlas, the world renowned boxing trainer and TV commentator, will team up with veteran boxing journalist Tim Smith for a new show dedicated to the sweet science, starting in 2015.

Going the Distance will debut Tuesday, January 6 (6:00-8:00 pm ET) on SiriusXM Sports Zone, channel 92, and air weekly throughout the year. Atlas, Smith and co-host Nabaté Isles will take calls from fight fans around the country, discuss the latest boxing news, preview upcoming matches and interview fighters, trainers and promoters.

“I look forward to this next experience in my boxing life and can’t wait to start throwing punches over the SiriusXM airwaves with the greatest fans in the world,” said Atlas.

“I’m excited to team up with Teddy on SiriusXM,” said Smith. “His boxing knowledge is second to none and he brings unvarnished opinions to the airwaves. I’m looking forward to many entertaining, informative and lively discussions with him and with the newsmakers, movers and shakers of the boxing world that will join us for Going the Distance.”

Teddy Atlas is one of the most respected voices in boxing. He has trained numerous world champions – including Michael Moorer, Alexander Povetkin and Shannon Briggs – and has served as a longtime boxing commentator for ESPN’s Friday Night Fights and NBC Sports’ Olympic Boxing coverage. Atlas has been honored by the Boxing Writers Association of America for his work in both fields. He received the Eddie Futch Award for Trainer of the Year in 1994 and the Sam Taub Award for Excellence in Broadcast Journalism in 2001.

Tim Smith is a former sports writer for the Atlanta Journal Constitution, Cincinnati Enquirer and The New York Times and was a sports columnist for the New York Daily News. He also conducted post-fight interviews on ShoBox telecasts on Showtime. In 2005, Smith received the Nat Fleischer Award for Excellence in Boxing Journalism from the Boxing Writers Association of America.

Going the Distance enhances a strong lineup of boxing and mixed martial arts programming on SiriusXM Sports Zone. The channel also features At the Fights, hosted by former heavyweight boxer Gerry Cooney and former NY Athletic Commission Chairman Randy Gordon, MMAjunkie Radio, with George and Brian Garcia, SiriusXM Fight Club, hosted by R.J. Clifford, Steve Cofield, Luke Thomas and Ricky Bonnet, and TapouT Radio!, with Dan Caldwell, Tim Katz and Ricky Bonnet. Visit www.SiriusXM.com/SportsZone for more info.

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Emanuel Navarrete and Rafael Espinoza Shine in Phoenix

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Emanuel Navarrete and Rafael Espinoza Shine in Phoenix

PHOENIX – Saturday was a busy night on the global boxing scene, and it’s quite likely that the howling attendees in Phoenix’s Footprint Center witnessed the finest overall card of the international schedule. The many Mexican flags on display in the packed, scaled down arena signaled the event’s theme.

Co-main events featured rematches that arose from a pair of prior crowd-pleasing slugfests. Each of tonight’s headlining bouts ended at the halfway point, but that was their only similarity.

Emanuel “Vaquero” Navarrete, now 39-2-1 (32), defended his WBO Junior Lightweight belt with a dramatic stoppage of more-than-willing Oscar Valdez, 32-3 (24). The 29-year-old champion spoke of retirement wishes, but after dominating a blazing battle in which he scored three knockdowns, his only focus was relaxing during the holidays then getting back to what sounded like long-term business.

“Valdez was extremely tough in this fight,” said Navarrete. “I knew I had to push him back and I did. You are now witnessing the second phase of my career and you can expect great things from me in 2025.”

“I don’t really know about the future,” said the crestfallen, 33-year-old Valdez. “No excuses. He did what he wanted to and I couldn’t.”

Navarrete, a three-division titlist, came up one scorecard short of a fourth belt in his previous fight last May, a split decision loss to Denys Berinchyk. This was Navarrete’s fourth Arizona appearance so he was cheered like a homeboy, but Valdez was definitely the crowd favorite, evident from the cheers that erupted as both fighters were shown arriving in glistening, low rider automobiles.

Both men came out throwing huge shots, but it was Navarrete who scored a flash knockdown in the first round, setting the tone for the rest of the fight. There was fierce action in every frame, with Navarrete getting the best of most of it, but even when he was in trouble Valdez roared back and brought the crowd to their feet. He got dropped again at the very end of round four, and Navarrete sent his mouthpiece into orbit the round after that.

When Navarrette drove Valdez into the ropes during round six it looked like referee Raul Caiz, Jr was about to intervene, but before he could decide, Navarrete finished matters himself with a perfect left to the ribs that crumpled Valdez into a KO at 2:42.

“He talked about getting ready to retire soon so I told him we had to fight again right now,” said Valdez prior to the rematch. There were numerous “be careful what you wish for” type predictions of doom and he entered the ring at around a two to one underdog, understanding the contest’s make or break stakes. “Boxing penalizes you if you have a lot of losses,” observed Valdez. “It’s not like other sports where you can lose and do better next season. In boxing, most people don’t want to see you again after a couple of losses.”

What Valdez might decide remains to be seen, but even in defeat he proved to be a warrior worth watching.

Co-Feature

After their epic, razor-close encounter almost exactly a year ago, it was obvious Rafael Espinoza, and fellow 30-year-old Robeisy Ramirez should meet again for the WBO featherweight title belt Espinoza earned by an upset majority decision. Espinoza turned the trick again this time around, inside the distance, but it was more anti-climactic than anything like toe-to-toe.

The 6’1” Espinoza, now 26-0 (22), was the aggressor from the opening frame, but 5’6” Ramirez, 14-3 (9) employed his short stature well to stay out of immediate danger and countered to the body for a slight edge. The Cuban challenger avoided much of their previous firefight and initially controlled the tempo. The crowd jeered him for staying away but it was an effective strategy, at least at first.

Espinoza connected much better in the fifth round and looked fresher as Ramirez’s face rapidly reddened. Suddenly, seemingly out of nowhere in round six, Ramirez took a punch then raised a glove in surrender. Whatever the reason, even looking at Ramirez’s swollen right eye, it looked like a “No Mas” moment. Replays showed a straight right to the eye socket, but that didn’t stop the crowd from hooting their disgust after ref Chris Flores signaled the end at 0:12.

***

Richard Torrez, Jr, now 12-0 (11), displayed his Olympic silver medal pedigree in a heavyweight bout against Issac Munoz, 18-2-1 (15). Torrez, 236.6, found his punching range quickly with southpaw leads as Munoz, 252, tried to stand his ground but looked hurt by early body work that forced him into the ropes. He was gasping for breath as Torrez peppered him in the second, and Munoz went back to his corner on unsteady legs.

Munoz’s team should have thought about saving him for another day in the third as he ate big shots. Luckily, referee Raul Caiz, Jr. was wiser and had seen enough, waving it off for a TKO at 0:59.

“I don’t train for the opponent,” reflected Torrez, who isn’t far from true contender status. “Every time I train, I train for a world championship fight.”

***

Super-lightweight Lindolfo Delgado, 139.9, improved to 22-0 (16), and took another step into the world title picture against Jackson Marinez, now 22-4 (10), 139.2.

On paper this junior welterweight matchup appeared fairly even, and Marinez managed to keep it that way for almost half the scheduled ten rounds against a solid prospect but Delgado kept upping the ante until Marinez was out of chips. The assembled swarm was whistling for more action after three tentative opening frames, as Delgado loaded up but couldn’t put much offense together.

That changed in the 4th when Delgado connected with solid crosses. In the fifth, a fine combination dropped Marinez into a delayed knockdown and a wicked follow-up right to the guts finished the wobbly Marinez, who had nothing to be ashamed of, off in the arms of ref Wes Melton. Official TKO time was 2:13.

In a matter of concurrent programming, Saturday also held a lot of highly publicized college football and basketball games which likely detracted from the larger mainstream audience and media coverage this fight card deserved. That’s a shame but you can’t fault boxing, Top Rank, or any of the fighters for that because, once again, they all came through big time in Phoenix.

Photos credit: Mikey Williams / Top Rank

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Brooklyn’s Richardson Hitchins Wins IBF 140-Pound Title in Puerto Rico

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A change of champions took place as Richardson Hitchins rallied from a lethargic start to wrest the IBF super lightweight title from Australia’s Liam Paro by split decision on Saturday in Puerto Rico at Coliseo Roberto Clemente in San Juan.

Brooklyn has another world champion.

“I’m just happy to be a world champion,” Hitchins said.

Hitchins (19-0, 7 KOs) proved that his style of fighting could prevail over Paro (25-1, 15 KOs) who had previously knocked off another Puerto Rican champion, Subriel Matias.

Both fighters expected a different kind of encounter as Paro immediately started the fight with constant pressure and short, precise combinations. Hitchins had expected a different attack and seemed hesitant to pull the trigger.

“I couldn’t get my timing,” said Hitchins. “I thought he was going to put the pressure on me.”

Soon Hitchins ramped up his attack.

After Paro had jumped ahead with a constant strategic attack, Hitchins slipped into second gear behind a sharp right counter that found the target repeatedly.

Things began to swing in the Brooklyn fighter’s favor.

Those long arms came in handy for Hitchins who snapped off deadeye rights through Paro’s guard repeatedly. Soon the southpaw Aussie’s eye began to show signs of damage.

But Paro never quit.

Aside from using quick counters, Paro began firing lead lefts and the occasional right hook and uppercut. But seldom did he target the body. Slowly, the rounds began mounting in favor of the Brooklyn fighter.

Perhaps the best blow of the fight took place in the ninth round as Hitchins connected flush with a one-two combination. Though stunned, Paro trudged forward looking to immediately counter.

He mostly failed.

Still, Paro knew the rounds were not one-sided and he could close the distance. The Aussie fighter did well in the 11th and 12th round but could not land a significant blow. After 12 rounds one judge saw Paro the winner 117-11, while two others saw Hitchins the winner 116-112 for the new IBF titlist.

“He’s a hell of a boxer,” said Paro who loses the title in his first defense. “It’s not a loss, it’s a lesson.”

Other Bouts

A battle between Puerto Rican featherweights saw Henry Lebron (20-0) out-battle Christopher Diaz-Velez by decision after 10 action-packed rounds.

In a lightweight fight Agustin Quintana (21-2-1) gave Marc Castro (13-1) his first loss to win by split decision after 10 rounds.

Welterweight Jose Roman Vazquez (14-1) defeated Jalil Hackett (9-1) by split decision after 10 rounds.

Photo credit: Melina Pizano / Matchroom

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A Six-Pack of Undercard Action from the Top Rank Card in Phoenix

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A Six-Pack of Undercard Action from the Top Rank Card in Phoenix

Top Rank promoted a 10-fight card tonight at the NBA arena in Phoenix. The undercard included welterweight standout Giovani Santillan and a bevy of young prospects.

Based on his showing tonight, Albert “Chop Chop” Gonzalez is a prospect on the cusp of being a contender. A high-octane fighter with ring smarts that bely his tender age, the 22-year-old Gonzalez pitched a near 8-round shutout over Argentina’s Gerardo Antonio Perez, advancing his record to 12-0 (7). Although Gonzalez was forced to go the distance after five straight wins by stoppage, Perez, an Argentine who had never been stopped and was better than his 12-6-1 record, had a granite chin.

LA junior bantamweight Steven Navarro improved to 5-0 (4 KOs) with a second-round stoppage of Gabriel Bernardi (7-2). Navarro had Bernardi, a Puerto Rican, on the canvas twice before referee Raul Caiz Jr waived it off.

In a welterweight contest slated for “10,” Giovani Santillan improved to 33-1 (18 KOs) at the expense of Fredrick Lawson who retired on his stool after only one round. It was a nice confidence-booster for Santillan who took a lot of punishment in his last fight vs. Brian Norman Jr, a fight that Santillan was expected to win. However, tonight’s win should come with an asterisk as Lawson, a Chicago-based Ghanaian, is damaged goods and ought not be permitted to fight again, notwithstanding his 30-6 record. (All six of his losses, including the last three, came inside the distance.)

In a welterweight contest slated for six rounds, 19-year-old SoCal prospect Art Berrera Jr advanced to 7-0 (5 KOs) with a second-round TKO over Juan Carlos Campos (4-2) who fights out of Sioux City, Iowa. Referee Wes Melton lost his balance as he stepped in to stop the one-sided affair with a nano-second remaining in round two and went flying into the ropes, but was seemingly unhurt.

In a major surprise, Cesar Morales, a former Mexican national amateur champion, lost his pro debut to unheralded Kevin Mosquera, a 23-year-old Ecuadorian. A flash knockdown in the opening minute of final round factored into the result. The judges had it 39-36 and 38-37 for Mosquera (3-0-1) and 38-38.

The night did not start well for Morales’ trainer Robert Garcia who had five fighters in action tonight.

In the lid-lifter, 21-year-old Las Vegas lightweight DJ Zamora, a protege of the late Roger Mayweather, improved to 15-0 (10 KOs) with a second-round stoppage of Argentine import Roman Ruben Reynoso (22-6-2). Zamora put Reynoso on the canvas in the opening round with a left to the solar plexus and knocked him down in the second round with a counter left to the chin. Reynoso made it to his feet, but had no beef when the fight was waived off. The official time was 1:56 of round two.

Bouts involving former Olympians Lindolfo Delgado and Richard Torres Jr plus two compelling world title rematches round out the 10-fight card. TSS correspondent Phil Woolever is ringside. Check back later for his post-fight reports.

Photo credit: Mikey Williams / Top Rank

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