Featured Articles
Boxing Odds and Ends: Lovejoy (Don King’s Latest ‘Ghost Fighter’) and More
Remember Christopher Lovejoy? Mr. Lovejoy, who is still kicking around, attracted a bit of buzz in 2020 when promoter Eddie Hearn brought him to London to fight British bruiser Dave Allen. Lovejoy was 19-0 and had knocked out all of his opponents in the opening round; the sort of record that would make one stand up and take notice.
A closer look at his record revealed that all of those knockouts were forged in Tijuana. One had to have been there to see Lovejoy in action as none of his fights were televised or even you-tubed. Noting that there was no footage of him, Australian sports scribe Mike Meehall Wood dubbed Lovejoy a ghost fighter.
Lovejoy’s fight with Dave Allen never did come to fruition. Eddie Hearn thought it prudent to send him home following a late-night phone call from Don King who alleged that Lovejoy was his fighter and threatened to sue the British promoter for tortuous interference. The show, headlined by Oleksandr Usyk’s match with Derek Chisora, went ahead with neither Lovejoy nor Dave Allen getting to display their wares.
Lovejoy resurfaced in May of the following year in Cologne, Germany, where he was matched against Mahmoud Charr. A German citizen of Lebanese extraction, Charr is pretty good, but it was his first fight in three-and-a-years (an impasse fueled partly by a contract dispute with Don King) and it figured that he would need to go a few rounds to shake off the rust.
Christopher Lovejoy wasn’t good enough to give Charr a few rounds. Conspicuously out of shape, he was whacked out in round two. Calling Lovejoy a ghost fighter was diplomatic. His fight with Charr confirmed the suspicion that he was a fraud. (Lovejoy fared better in his most recent assignment. In Cairo, Egypt, he earned a draw in a 6-round fight with a 46-year-old Egyptian who sported a 4-8 record.)
This brings us to Jesus Escalera who fights Jonathan Guidry on Don King’s Nov. 4 extravaganza (King’s word; not ours) at Miami Casino Jai Alai. By all appearances, Escalera, a Puerto Rican currently residing in Riverview, Florida, is the Latin version of Christopher Lovejoy.
In common with Lovejoy circa 2020, Escalera is 19-0 with 19 knockouts. However, all but one of his fights took place in Colombia. The exception was a bout at the Blind Tiger Bar & Grille in Biloxi, Mississippi where Escalera stopped his 48-year-old Brazilian opponent in the opening round. The bout was framed as a heavyweight title fight for something called the Universal Boxing Organization.
Escalera can likely fight more than a little. The nephew of former WBC 130-pound world champion Alfredo Escalera, he comes from a fighting family. And there won’t be any ring rust when he enters the ring against Jonathan Guidry. At age 43 (yes, 43), he’s been a pro for only 12 months! It’s worth noting, however, that his high rate of activity hasn’t curbed his appetite. In his last outing, per boxrec, he carried 271 pounds on his five-foot-eleven frame, up from 230 in his pro debut.
By the way, we’re a fan of Jonathan Guidry. Dubbed the “Swamp King” – he supports his family fishing and crabbing in the bayous of south Louisiana – Guidry always gives an honest effort. His professional record (19-1-2, 11 KOs) is a testament to his perspicacity. However, as a short and short-armed heavyweight, he has some serious limitations. On boxrec’s list of the top 50 active heavyweights, Guidry, 33, clocks in at number 45.
—-
The first prizefighters, by some accounts, were the booth fighters who traveled the fair circuit in horse-drawn caravans in merry old England. At their pitch on the fairgrounds, they challenged all comers although the man in the audience who threw his hat in the ring (the derivation of this phrase) was often a plant.
Anecdotal histories inform us that every booth fighter was the champion of the district from where he came. Well, not exactly, but he was introduced that way by the spieler who customarily was the same person that managed the fighters in his troupe. Without the word champion attached to his name, a booth fighter had no pull.
Three hundred years later, very little has changed. We’re reminded of this fact whenever we read a Don King press release.
His Nov. 4 show, he informs us, is chock full of title fights. In the main event, Ilunga Makabu takes on Noel Mikaelian for the vacant WBC cruiserweight title. Ilunga, the older bother of heavyweight Martin Bakole, seeks to win back the title he lost in his last outing when he was stopped in the twelfth frame by former super middleweight title-holder Badou Jack.
The title at risk in the Guidry-Escalera fight is presumably Guidry’s WBA Gold title. The press release makes no mention of the UBO title that Escalera won in Mississippi. Instead, he is identified as the FECARBOX heavyweight champion.
Trevor Bryan, who formerly owned a shard of the WBA world heavyweight title, returns to fight Cassius Chaney in a match for something called the WBA Continental North America heavyweight title. And finally, in a late addition to the card, Mike Perez opposes Andrej Pesic in a bout identified as a regional WBC bridgerweight title fight. Perez, born and raised in Cuba, is a longtime resident of Cork, Ireland. The obscure Pesic is from Germany via Serbia. The region associated with this regional belt isn’t specified.
The indefatigable King, still hustling at age 92 but no longer working with a big bankroll, has another “extravaganza” coming up on Dec. 2. Adrien Broner is the main attraction. Broner, says King, is the “People’s Champion” which, as labels go, isn’t a particularly good fit. Broner hasn’t participated in a fan-friendly fight since 2013 when he was badly beaten by Marcos Maidana.
Individual tickets to King’s Nov. 4 and Dec. 2 events are scaled from $50 general admission to $750 ringside. The shows will air on Donking.com, FITE.TV, and ITUBE247.com
To comment on this story in the Fight Forum CLICK HERE
Featured Articles
Avila Perspective, Chap. 297: Callum Walsh in Dublin, Anthony Joshua and More
Avila Perspective, Chap. 297: Callum Walsh in Dublin, Anthony Joshua and More
All eyes point toward the British Isles this weekend and the American wild west.
In back-to-back days, several of that European region’s best pugilists headline cards in Dublin then in London.
It all begins with super welterweight contender Callum Walsh, the Irish fighter from Cork who trains in Hollywood, Calif. with one of the masters, Freddie Roach.
On Friday, Sept. 20, Walsh (11-0, 9 KOs) meets Poland’s Przemyslaw Runowski (22-2-1, 6 KOs) at 3Arena Dublin in Dublin, Ireland for a regional super welterweight title. UFC Fight Pass will stream the 360 Promotions card at 9:30 a.m. Pacific Time.
Straight from the sweaty gyms of Hollywood, Ireland’s Walsh (pictured on the left) returns home to native soil where he intends to showcase the ever-growing skills learned from Southern California’s hotbed of pro boxing.
On any given day a number of veteran fighters can be found to spar and learn.
Walsh, also known as King Callum, has been one of many Irish fighters who uprooted themselves from the comforts of home and moved to Southern California to find a myriad of styles from boxers coming from all parts of the world.
The hard-charging Walsh finally returns to perform in the heart of Ireland. His speed, power and skills have enabled him to eliminate nine of 11 opponents via knockout.
Dana White, his manager, will be attending the fight.
“Love the fact that he’s not fighting guys to pad his record, like the typical boxing model. This is a kid who really believes in himself and his potential to become a world champion,” said White the president of the UFC organization. “I also love the fact that one of the greatest trainers in the history of the sport, Freddie Roach, believes in him. I am very invested in this fight in Dublin and I’m really excited to not only bring a fight back to Ireland but to be sitting ringside to see Callum fight in his home country.”
Poland’s Runowski has never been stopped and has a string of victories against top competition. This match will prove who moves on toward elite competition.
Saturday in London
In London, England on Saturday, top heavyweights Anthony Joshua and Daniel Dubois lead an impressive Matchroom Boxing fight card at Wembley Stadium. DAZN will stream the card.
Joshua (28-3, 25 KOs) and Dubois (21-2, 20 KOs) fight for the IBF heavyweight title. Both have recently looked in peak form. Look for a stoppage in this fight between knockout experts.
Dubois only lost to Okesandr Usyk and should have been ruled the winner when he floored the champion with a body shot a year ago. The referee erroneously ruled it a low blow. The titles should have been given to Dubois at that moment. Instead, Usyk rallied and stopped the British fighter in the ninth.
Since that loss, Dubois knocked out Jarrell Miller and Filip Hrgovic.
Former champion Joshua has never looked better and recently destroyed MMA star Francis Ngannou who gave Tyson Fury fits when they fought. Not so against Joshua who mercilessly blew him out in two rounds.
Also featured on the card are Hamzah Sheeraz, who recently defeated Ammo Williams via knockout plus Josh Warrington, Josh Kelly and undefeated Joshua Buatsi. It’s a front-loaded boxing card.
Wild West USA
Mexico’s former champion Jaime Munguia (43-1, 34 KOs) makes his debut on a Top Rank card against undefeated Armenian super middleweight Erik Bazinyan (32-0-1, 23 KOs) on Friday Sept. 20, at the Desert Diamond Arena in Glendale, Arizona. ESPN will televise the Top Rank card.
It’s Munguia’s first fight since losing to boxing kingpin Saul “Canelo” Alvarez. No shame in that. But he is facing another Canadian prospect who has never lost. Recently, that country has been developing some very good pugilists like another super middleweight Christian Mbilli.
The Top Rank card is loaded with highly-regarded prospects such as Richard Torrez Jr., Emiliano Vargas, Alan “Kid Kansas” Garcia and others.
LA Area
A half dozen undefeated fighters including Daniel Cruz (7-0) against Recky Dulay (11-9) meet on Friday Sept. 20, for KO Fight Night at Farallon Event Center in Lynwood, Calif.
Among the undefeated fighters on the House of Pain fight card are Mathias Radcliffe, DeAngelo Evans, Luis Rubalvaca, and Jose Casillas.
Doors open at 6 p.m.
Fights to Watch (all times Pacific Time)
Fri. UFC Fight Pass 9:30 a.m. Callum Walsh (11-0) vs Przemyslaw Runowski (22-2-1)
Fri. ESPN 7:30 p.m. Jaime Munguia (43-1) vs Erik Bazinyan (32-0-1).
Sat. DAZN 10 a.m. Anthony Joshua (28-3) and Dubois (21-2).
Photo courtesy of Zuffa
To comment on this story in the Fight Forum CLICK HERE
Featured Articles
Mikaelian vs Rozicki POSTPONED Amidst Rumors that Promoter Don King is Ailing
The WBC world cruiserweight title fight between Ryan Rozicki and Noel Mikaelian, slated for Sept. 28 at Miami Casino Jai Alai in Miami, Florida has been postponed. A terse press release attributed to Don King Promotions, Three Lion Promotions (Rozicki’s promoter) and the WBC was issued today. No reason was given for the postponement. It merely said, “we are working diligently to set a new date and should have a new date to announce in the days to come.”
An Armenian who has done most of his fighting in Germany and now lives and trains in Miami, Mikaelian (aka Noel Gevor) sports a 27-2 (12 KOs) record and would be making the first defense of the title he won with a third-round stoppage of Ilunga Makabu on a Don King card in Miami in November of last year. Canada’s Rozicki (20-1, 19 KOs) suffered his lone defeat at the hands of Oscar Rivas in October of 2021. That match, which went the full 12 rounds, is recognized by the WBC as the first Bridgerweight title fight. Plagued with chronic eye problems, Rivas would never fight again.
This is the second time that the Mikaelian-Rozicki match has been postponed. They were originally scheduled to fight on June 7 at the Seminole Hard Rock Casino and Resort in Hollywood, Florida, but Mikaelian (pictured on the left) suffered an eye injury just days before the fight and the match evaporated. Mikaelian’s injury bumped the welterweight contest between Blair Cobbs and Adrien Broner into the main event. Cobbs won a 10-round unanimous decision.
The news of this second postponement spawned talk in online chat rooms to the effect that Don King had fallen seriously ill. According to one private correspondence shared with this reporter this morning at a local boxing gym, King had suffered a near-death experience and would be stepping away from boxing for one year.
This allegation could not be substantiated. More than that, reliable sources say it should be dismissed as an UNFOUNDED rumor. Considering all the misinformation on social media, perhaps I was remiss in not keeping it under my hat.
At one time the most powerful boxing promoter in the world, Don King turned 93 last month.
To comment on this story in the Fight Forum CLICK HERE
Featured Articles
Reflections on Yoenli Hernandez and the New Wave of Outstanding Cuban Boxers
Reflections on Yoenli Hernandez and the New Wave of Outstanding Cuban Boxers
Cuban boxers were 2-0 at the T-Mobile Arena on Mexican Independence Day weekend in Las Vegas. Erislandy Lara toyed with listless Danny Garcia for nine rounds before Garcia’s corner stopped the bout. Yoenli Hernandez improved to 5-0 with his fifth knockout, dismissing his Mexican opponent in the second round.
Lara, who was appearing his nineteenth 12-round fight, is 41 years old. Yoenli Hernandez (pictured) is 27. However, although separated by only 14 years, they effectively represent two different generations of Cuban boxers. Hernandez is part of the new wave that includes super-hot prospects Arlen Lopez and Andy Cruz.
A light heavyweight, Lopez, 31, was an Olympic gold medalist in Rio and in Tokyo, but came up short in his bid to become only the fourth boxer (and third Cuban) to achieve the Olympic hat trick, losing a split decision to Ukraine’s Oleksandr Khyzhniak in the semi-final round of the recent Paris Games. As a pro, he’s 3-0 (2 KOs).
A lightweight, Andy Cruz, 29, was 4-for-4 against Keyshawn Davis as an amateur, with the last of those four wins coming in the gold medal round of the Tokyo Olympiad. He’s 4-0 (2 KOs) as a pro with all four of those wins coming against experienced opponents in matches slated for 10 rounds.
Yoenli Hernandez (sometimes identified as Yoenlis Feliciano) wasn’t an Olympian, but he was a World Amateur Champion who finished his amateur career with 26 straight wins. He turned pro along with Arlen Lopez and four other elite Cuban amateurs on May 20, 2022 in Aguascalientes, Mexico, an historic day in the history of Cuban boxing as it was the first time that members of the Cuban National Team competed as pros with the blessing of the Cuban government.
—
Cuba has spawned a number of notable boxers over the years. Kid Gavilan, the Cuban Hawk, master of the bolo punch, won the world welterweight title in 1951 with a unanimous decision over Johnny Bratton at Madison Square Garden and successfully defended it seven times. By some accounts, he was Cuba’s first true world title-holder. Kid Chocolate (Eligio Sardinas) captured world titles as a featherweight and a junior lightweight in the early 1930’s, but neither title was recognized overseas — the junior lightweight division then lacked traction and his featherweight diadem was the New York State version of it.
Kid Gavilan and Kid Chocolate have plaques in the International Boxing Hall of Fame as does Luis Rodriguez who captured the world welterweight title at LA’s Dodger Stadium in 1963 in his second of four meetings with arch-rival Emile Griffith. Rodriguez and his compatriot Florentino Fernandez, a world title challenger as a middleweight, both had their first U.S. fights in 1959, the year that Fidel Castro’s rebels overthrew the Batista regime. They trained at Chris Dundee’s iconic Miami Beach gym alongside the fighter who would take the name Muhammad Ali.
Two future greats — featherweight Ultiminio “Sugar” Ramos and welterweight Jose “Mantequilla” Napoles — left Cuba a bit later and settled in Mexico. Although they won world titles in U.S. rings, they never left their adopted home. Both were residents of Mexico City at the time of their passing.
—
As is well known, Fidel Castro abolished professional sports. Moreover, there was a long lag after he came to power before elite Cuban boxers had the temerity to defect.
Cuban boxers dominated the 1992 Barcelona Olympics, sending nine of a possible 12 boxers to the gold medal round, seven of whom emerged victorious. Of the medal winners, only bantamweight Joel Casamayor left for the United States, and he did not defect until four years later on the eve of the Atlanta Summer Games. Eventually 12 other Cuban boxers – several who arrived in the U.S. before him — would join Casamayor in a stable that took the name Team Freedom. Casamayor was the best of the bunch, winning world titles as a pro at 130 and 135 pounds.
Team Freedom evolved into Warriors Boxing. The South Florida agency, run by Luis De Cubas Sr. and Leon Margules, is the dominant force in the Cuban-American boxing community. De Cubas, who once owned a piece of Roberto Duran, was born in Cuba and spent his formative years in Minnesota before settling in Miami at age 24. His business partner Margules is a Fort Lauderdale attorney.
Yoenli Hernandez’s manager of record is Providence, Rhode Island businessman Robert Valle, but Warriors Boxing, which also controls WBA (regular) light heavyweight champion David Morrell, has its fingers in the pie. Virtually every boxer who defected from Cuba during the Castro years was helped along the way by Luis De Cubas and his associates. His name now appears on the ballot for the International Boxing Hall of Fame and it’s a fair guess that he will go in with the next class of inductees.
In many ways, things have gotten worse in Cuba since Fidel Castro passed away in 2016. More than a million Cubans – roughly 10 percent of the population – left the island nation between 2022 and 2023, the largest wave of out-migration in Cuba’s history. Of that number, more than 400,000 settled in the Unites States, mostly in the Miami area.
Within that diaspora were many of Cuba’s most talented boxers. Those that leave for greener pastures are no longer stamped an enemy of the state. Restrictions have been eased for people traveling back and forth between the two countries.
Cuban boxers were well-represented on the rosters of the teams in the newfangled Team Combat League where men compete in one-round matches across six weight categories. One doesn’t have to like the concept to appreciate the fact that the TCL has been a godsend to boxers who would otherwise have trouble staying busy while also putting a few dollars in their pocket to help pay the bills during the lacuna between conventional prizefights.
The novice professionals from Cuba who have competed in these events tend to be younger than their predecessors who left Cuba to launch their pro careers. To take but two examples, light heavyweight Brayon Leon and welterweight Darian Castro, both strong prospects who excelled at the TCL brand of fisticuffing (a combined 22-2) are 22 and 21 years old respectively.
The takeaway is that we will be hearing a lot more about Cuban boxers in the next few years. And if Yoenli Hernandez becomes a big name in the sport, remember that you heard it here first.
To comment on this story in the Fight Forum CLICK HERE
-
Featured Articles3 weeks ago
A Closer Look at Jordan Plant, One-Half of Boxing’s ‘Power Couple’
-
Featured Articles2 weeks ago
Boxing Notes and Nuggets from Thomas Hauser
-
Featured Articles4 weeks ago
Avila Perspective, Chap. 291: Mayweather Chronicles
-
Featured Articles4 weeks ago
Jarrett Hurd and Jeison Rosario Fight to a Draw in Plant City
-
Featured Articles3 weeks ago
Nikita Tszyu Overcomes Adversity, TKOs Mazoudier in a Sydney Sizzler
-
Featured Articles5 days ago
Canelo Proves Too Canny and Tough for Edgar Berlanga in Las Vegas
-
Featured Articles4 weeks ago
Results and Recaps from Mexico City where Picasso Upended Hovhannisyan
-
Featured Articles4 weeks ago
Tomoki Kameda, Japan’s “Little Mexican,” and the Glory Days of Japanese Boxing