Tag Archive for showtime

Maurice Harris back in heavyweight picture.

Maurice Harris back in heavyweight picture

 

NEW YORK (July 20, 2011) – USBA heavyweight champion Maurice “Sugar Moe” Harris’ often tumultuous boxing career is back in a good place, after he redeemed himself last Saturday in Atlantic City, when he stopped Derric “The Shaolin Fist” Rossy in the 12thround at Resorts Casino Hotel.

 

Harris (25-15-2, 11 KOs) was coming off of a disappointing loss by third round to Tony “The Tiger” Thompson (36-2, 24 KOs) in May, shown live on ESPN Friday Night Fights in their IBF Box-Off.

 

Rossy (25-5, 14 KOs), rated No. 15 by the IBF, served as a litmus test for Harris, a 35-year-old whose major claim to fame is winning the 2002 Thunderbox Heavyweight Tournament, defeating Thompson in the $100,000 finale, as well as defeating world champion Sergei Liakhovich. The New Jersey fighter found himself at the crossroads once again, facing possible retirement if he lost to Rossy, the former Boston College football standout who had previously defeated WBO champion and 1988 Olympic gold-medal winner Ray Mercer (DEC12) and world title challenger Carl David Drummond (DEC10).

 

“I never looked at the fight like that,” Harris said, “only as another challenge, another fight. I don’t focus on something like that (in a career-ending fight) because I always need to focus on my opponent and our fight. I did show resiliency when I needed to win. It was a good win, one of my top five, but I was only about 70-percent of what I can really be. I hadn’t been 12 rounds since last August. I was still a little rusty. You can do that (12 rounds) in the gym but it’s not the same as in a fight. I did feel good going into the fight and afterwards.”

 

Harris dropped Rossy in the sixth, led by two rounds going into the 12th, and finished the show in impressive style. The veteran had worn-down Rossy and eventually trapped his tiring opponent on the ropes in the 12th, decking him again with a three-punch combination, an overhand right to the chin serving as an exclamation point. Rossy got to his feet but Harris moved in to finish him, backing Derec onto the ropes again, and unloading a four-punch combination against his defenseless opponent. Referee Earl Morton halted the action at 1:35 of the final round.

 

“This fight proved that Maurice’s last one was a fluke.” Harris’ promoter Mario Yagobi (Boxing 360) commented. “He couldn’t respond right after getting hit with so many illegal hits behind the head. I said that before this fight and still believed in Maurice. He was the stronger, bigger guy who showed a lot more skills than his opponent. Rossy came to win. He was in great shape, at 225 pounds, and had a six-pack stomach. Maurice showed his experience, dropping him the sixth, and finishing with a 12th round knockout. Rossy was banged up; his face had a lot of bruises and welts. From the eighth or ninth round, he looked like a beaten fighter.”

 

“The last two rounds were my strongest,” Harris noted. “I caught my second wind. I knew one good assault would close the deal. I hadn’t had a knockout in a long time (2002 vs. Liahkovich). I thought I had him out in the sixth, but he stayed right in there until the last round. I hit him with some good combinations. He fell and got up, but I knew he was finished.

 

“The Thompson fight is still in the back of my head. We’ve both won once and I’d like a third fight to settle things. I won’t get over it until we do. I wish him luck in his fights but, even if it’s sparring, I want to fight him again. He didn’t fight the best Maurice Harris but, then again, neither did Rossy.”

 

Because Harris, rated No. 9 by the IBF, fought an optional defense against Rossy, Maurice has a mandatory coming up against a challenger to be determined. Chazz Witherspoon is the No. 1 rated IBF challenger, followed in order by Steve Collins, Cedric Boswell, Antonio Tarver and Michael Grant.

 

Other members of Boxing 360’s stable include WBC #5 super bantamweight Leon “Hurry Up” Moore, former IBF super middleweight champion Alejandro “Naco” Berrio, unbeaten welterweight prospect Vitaliy “Demyan”Demyanenko WBC Caribbean & NY State super middleweight champion Lennox “2 Sharpe” Allen, Dominican lightweight champion Eudy “AK47” Bernardo, KO king Tyrone Brunson, heavyweight Mike Mollo, unbeaten NABF featherweight champion Amanda “The Real Deal” Serrano, Nick “Hands of Gold” Casal, middleweight prospect DonYil Livingston, Joel Diaz Jr., and “King”David Estrada.

 

Go to www.Boxing360.comfor more information about Harris, Boxing 360 or any of its other fighters.

Peter ‘Kid Chocolate’ Quillin ready to hit curveball out of park

Peter ‘Kid Chocolate’ Quillin ready to hit curveball out of park

 

LAS VEGAS (July 21 2011) – Undefeated middleweight prospect Peter “Kid Chocolate” Quillinmay be a prizefighter, rather than a baseball player, but never-the-less the talented Cuban-American plans to hit a curveball out of the park Saturday night in Las Vegas.

 

Coming off of an explosive third-round destruction of former world title challenger Jesse Brinkley this past April for the USBO super middleweight title, Quillin (24-0, 18 KOs) prepared for the last eight weeks to fight once again in his natural weight class against veteran middleweight “Marvelous” Tarvis Simms (27-1-1, 11 KOs), a southpaw, in a10-round bout on Saturday night’s Amir Khan vs. Zab Judah undercard at Mandalay Bay in Las Vegas.

 

Quillin-Simms, however, was recently cancelled when Tarvis reportedly broke a rib in training camp. Now, the International Boxing Federation No. 5-rated Quillin, fighting out of Los Angeles, faced an entirely different fighter, Jason “The Hammer” LeHoullier(21-5-1, 8 KOs).

 

“I sparred and trained to fight a southpaw, Simms, and now I’m fighting a right-handed boxer,” Quillin said. “Hey, I’m a fighter and I can adjust to anybody. When Simms fell out all I cared about was still fighting. Jason LeHoullier stepped in and took a fight with 1 ½ weeks to go and that’s something not many guys would do against a top-level fighter like me. I’m not taking anything away from him because fighters like him can be dangerous. He may be coming in here trying to shock the world, tired of hearing people say he can’t win, and that could cause problems. But I am totally focused on him. I know he’s a guy who puts it all on the line, but he’s facing a guy who can box and is a big puncher. I’m going to set him up and, then, bang like a firecracker.”

 

Quillin has received a lot of attention lately because his trainer, Freddie Roach, went public saying ‘Kid Chocolate” can beat world middleweight champion Sergio Martinez. “I would have been ready to fight Sergio Martinez on July 23,”Quillin added. “Physically, I’m ready and I would have been 10 times more ready mentally for that fight. For now, though, I’m 100-percent focused on Jason LeHoullier. After this fight I’ll be ready to fight anybody in the world, including Sergio Martinez. The sky’s the limit for me. If everything goes right Saturday night, I’d like to comeback right away and fight September 17. But I’m not into the business end of boxing, I’m a fighter, and I’ll let my promoter, Golden Boy Promotions, and manager, John Seip, take care of that.”

 

Quillin-LeHoullier is a scheduled 10-round bout on the non-televised portion of the Khan-Judah world junior welterweight unification fight on HBO.

 

For more information about Peter “Kid Chocolate” Quillin go online to www.TheKidChocolate.com or follow him on Twitter @/Kid Chocolate.

“The Standing Eight Count”- Ringside At The Home Depot Center

 

“The Standing Eight Count”- Ringside At The Home Depot Center

 

By Dave Wilcox

 

 

On October 17th, 2009 Group Stage 1 of the Super Six World Boxing Classic got under way with “King Arthur” Abraham thrilling the boxing world with a dramatic 12th round knockout win over Jermaine Taylor. Just one month later on November 17th, Andre “S.O.G.” Ward made his Super Six debut with a surprisingly easy technical decision victory win over Mikkel Kessler to snatch Kessler’s WBA Super Middleweight belt. The bout was stopped in the 11th round when Kessler couldn’t continue with cuts over both eyes. At the time of the stoppage, Ward was comfortably ahead on all three cards.

 

Flash forward to this past Saturday night at the beautiful outdoor area at The Home Depot Center in Carson, California where Andre Ward and Arthur Abraham kicked off the much anticipated Super Six Semi-Finals. Ward’s WBA strap that he snatched from Kessler in Group Stage 1 was on the line, as well as the right to face the winner of the Carl Froch-Glen Johnson fight in the other semi-final bout that will take place in Atlantic City on June, 4th for Froch’s WBC championship.

 

As the fighters entered the ring on this cool California evening, the pro-Abraham crowd made their presence felt with near deafening cheers for their man. One would have thought with Ward’s hometown being just north up Interstate 5 in Northern California that he would have had the hometown advantage. The Armenian population of Los Angeles made sure that didn’t happen.

 

As the bell for round one rang, it was apparent that Ward was going to try and keep his distance and utilize his very strong jab to keep the very powerful “King Arthur” at bay. Although the action in the ring was slow to start in round one, the energy and excitement was throughout the arena.

 

Abraham picked up the pace in the second round and stalked the quicker Ward. Flurries where exchanged and even though Ward was able to stay clear of Abe’s power, it appeared that Abraham was closing the gap and was much more aggressive here than in his previous effort in losing a lopsided decision to Carl Froch his last time out.

 

Abraham got Ward’s attention in round three with a very stiff jab and solid overhand right. It appeared from ringside than when Ward was jabbing, he was dipping down to his right, thus leaving himself open for Abraham’s powerful right hand.

 

Andre Ward came out strong in round four we started to see a shift of momentum as Ward used his superior jab to great effect and Abraham showed signs of frustration with his inability to land on the elusive Ward.

 

What started out as an intriguing and competitive night quickly turned into a typical Andre Ward performance. Ward controlled the action the rest of the way and coasted to a unanimous decision victory over the frustrated Arthur Abraham. Ward’s style might not be pretty or fun to watch but he is always very skilled and will continue to be a hard man to beat for anyone in the Super Middleweight division. As for Arthur Abraham, it appears he will have continued trouble at 168 pounds. There are too many bigger and quicker fighters at that weight for him to be competitive. He might want to consider moving back down to the Middleweight division where there are many good matchups for him and he would be a money maker for any current 160 pound king. The official score cards read 120-108, 118-110 and 118-111. Your friendly neighborhood reporter had the bout scored 119-109.

 

Andre Ward weighed in at 168 pounds and improved his record to 24-0, (13KO)

Arthur Abraham weighed in at 167 pounds and falls to 32-3, (26 KO)

 

In the co-main event, one of our sport’s most talented fat men actually appeared to put down the fork and finally stay true this time to the promise he makes to his fans after each fight to take boxing seriously and get in shape. Chris “The Nightmare” Arreola of Riverside, California stepped in against professional opponent Nagy Aguilera of Newburgh, New York.

 

Arreola weighed in for this bout at 234 pounds and appeared to be in good shape as the robe came off Saturday night. The last time “The Nightmare” came into the ring that light was at in July of 2007 when he knocked out juggernaut, Derek Berry in the first round at the very same Home Depot Center. Arreola has been a mystery to most both physically and mentally with his emotional outbursts on television interviews and his inability to come into a bout in shape. This time it appeared he might have conquered at least one of those feats.

 

As round one began, Arreola came out confidently and worked the body of Aguilera. A few right hands found the mark on Nagy’s chin, but for the most part, round one was a feeling out process.

 

In round two, Arreola had “felt out” enough and came out quick with a furry of hard punches that sent Aguilera reeling back to the ropes. Arreola pounded on his opponent and it seemed the end was near. To everyone’s surprise, good ol’ cement head, Aguilera not only took the barrage, but spun Arreola and started landing his own hard shots. This was the moment of truth for the Mexican slugger as he appeared frustrated that Aguilera not only withstood his charge, but fired back. Now we would get our answer on Arreola’s condition, both mentally and physically.

 

Arreola came out on fire in round three and pounded Aguilera with some horrific left hooks to the body and pounded the head of Aguilera relentlessly until a huge right hand landed on the head of the defenseless Nagy Aguilera that prompted referee, Raul Ciaz, Jr. to stop the bout at 1:58 of the third round.

 

Chris Arreola weighed in at 234 pounds and improved to 31-2, (27KO)

Nagy Aguilera weighed in at 238 pounds and drops to 16-6, (11 KO)

 

Undercard Results:

 

-In a scheduled six round Super Middleweight affair, 2008 USA Olympian, Shawn “Manos De Oro” Estrada, from East Los Angeles, California (12-0, 11KO) continued his assault on the helpless tomato can community when he stepped in against Joseph Garner of Woonsocket, Rhode Island (7-3-1, 1KO). Estrada landed devastating left hook than paralyzed his overmatched opponent at 1:27 of the first round.

 

-Another 2008 USA Olympian was on the card as Javier “El Intocable” Molina of Norwalk, California (6-0, 4KO) looked to continue his unbeaten streak against Danny Figueroa from Hastings, Minnesota (3-2,2KO) in this four round Junior Middleweight contest. Molina coasted to a unanimous decision. All three official scorecards read 40-36.

 

-Junior Bantamweights hit the ring for a scheduled four round bout. Matt Villanueva (6-0, 6KO) from Van Nuys, California stepped in against Frank Guitierrez (2-10-2, 1KO) of Highland, California. Villanueva came out fast and put Guitierrez down early on with a right hand and then finished the bout with a big left hook flush on the jaw of the overmatched Guitierrez that forced the referee to halt the action at 2:56 of the first round.

 

-Junior Middleweights were next up in a scheduled four rounder as Armen Ovesepyan (11-1, 9KO) out of Yerevan, Armenia took on Arturo Brambilla (9-15, 4KO) from Guadalajara, Mexico. Ovesepyan landed the punch of the night with a tremendous straight right hand lead that immediately caused Brambilla to do the “nestea plunge” and the referee wasted no time in waving it off at 2:44 of the first round.

 

-More Junior Middleweights were up next in a scheduled six round bout. Andrey Klimov 11-0, 6KO) of Van Nuys, California squared off against Ty Barnett (18-2-1, 12KO) hailing from Washington, DC. On paper this appeared to be a nice matchup, so much for paper. Klimov dictated the action and ended it swiftly with a left hook to the body, followed by a right to the jaw that sent Barnett to dream land. The referee called the action at 1:12 of round three.

 

-Middleweights hit the squared circle for a scheduled six rounder as Dominik Britsch (22-0, 8 KO) of Bad Friedrichshall, Germany took on Delray “Rainmaker” Raines (18-10-1, 13KO) out of Paris, Arkansas. If nothing else, Raines proved that he was game, but Britsch was just too skilled for Raines on this night. In a strange coincidence, Raines was knocked down in rounds two, three and four, all within 10 seconds of the bell sounding to end the round. In round five, Raines wouldn’t be as lucky when the German landed a thundering right hand to jaw the kept Raines down for good as the referee haled the bout at 2:21 of round five.

 

-The final bout of the evening followed the main event and myself and the four other guys stayed to watch as Heavyweights were scheduled for eight rounds. Manuel “El Toro” Quezeda (29-7, 18 KO) from Bakersfield, California squared off against Bowie “Bo” Tupou (20-1, 16 KO) from Los Angeles, California. You might remember Quezada as the guy who lost a ten round decision to Chris Arreola back in August of last year on a card televised on ESPN Friday Night Fights. As is usually the case with Heavyweights, these two did the best to put the handful of us still there to sleep as they plodded forward. The two exchanged on occasion for the first six rounds, but then in surprising fashion in round seven, Tupou landed a damaging left hook that had “El Toro” stunned and then “Bo” followed with a right hand to the jaw that Quezada never saw coming and when he couldn’t make the count of ten and bout was called off at .53 seconds of round seven.

 

 

 

Keep punching

 

*Dave Wilcox is the West Coast Coordinator and Radio Correspondent for The “Talkin Boxing with Billy C.” Radio program.

ARREOLA SHAPES UP FOR MAY 14 FIGHT VS. AGUILERA…AND BEYOND

SEEING IS BELIEVING;

BETTER THAN A 1,000 WORDS

Chris Arreola scale

ARREOLA SHAPES UP FOR MAY 14 FIGHT VS. AGUILERA…AND BEYOND

Los Angeles, CA (May 2, 2011) – They say “Pictures Don’t Lie.”  And that is especially true about the photos in this release of an obviously slimmed down and solid Chris “The Nightmare” Arreola, who is on target to enter the Home Depot Center boxing ring on Saturday night, May 14 in Carson, CA at his lowest weight in four years.

 

“Right now I’m training very hard,” said the former #1-ranked world contender about his upcoming 10-round fight with Nagy Aguilera (16-5, 11 KOs) as the co-featured bout underneath the Super Six World Boxing Classic semi-final contest between WBA Super Middleweight Champion Andre Ward and Arthur Abraham.  “I’m looking more to showing than talking; at least until after the fight,” said the normally ‘sound bite’ machine who ballooned up to a career high of 263 pounds in 2009.

 

The “re-dedication of Arreola” started when he and his longtime trainer Henry Ramirez trekked down to the Houston, TX training center run by Ronnie Shields to prepare for an ESPN2 main event on January 28, 2011.  For the first time in eight fights, Arreola came in under 250-pounds for that bout.

 

And now Arreola is back in Riverside hard at work with Ramirez for his upcoming bout.

 

So what was Arreola’s motivation for re-dedicating himself?

 

“I hate to lose,” he said.

 

Tickets for this May 14 action-packed, world championship boxing card are priced at $25, $50, $100 and $200 (VIP floor seats). Fans can purchase tickets now at all Ticketmaster outlets and online at www.Ticketmaster.com as well as The Home Depot Center Box Office (open Monday through Friday, 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.).