Tūtohu Archives: Shobox

UNDEFEATED ADAM LOPEZ OUTPOINTS MARIO MUÑOZ IN MAIN EVENT ON SHOBOX: THE NEW GENERATION FROM ADRIAN PHILLIPS BALLROOM IN HISTORIC BOARDWALK HALL

 

Unbeaten Ronald Ellis and Jerry Odom Box to Majority Draw,
O’Shaquie Foster Scores TKO Over Previously Undefeated Lavisas Williams, Christopher Brooker and John Magda Fight to Controversial Split Draw

Catch Replay Rāhina, Feb. 22, i 10:30 p.m. AND/PT i runga i SHO EXTREME®

Pāwhiritia HERE Hei Tikiake Photos

Credit Photo: Rosie Cohe / SHOWTIME®

ATLANTIC CITY (Feb. 20, 2016) - Adamu "pata" Lopez (15-0, 7 Koó), o San Antonio, Texas, remained unbeaten and took another step toward becoming a full-fledged contender by winning a hard-fought unanimous 10-round decision over previously undefeated Mario “Yayo” Muñoz (16-1-1, 10 Koó), o Kuatalahala, Jalisco, Mexico, i roto i te Rāmere ohui matua i runga i ShoBox: Ko te Generation New ora i runga i SHOWTIMEi te Adrian Phillips Ballroom in Historic Boardwalk Hall.

 

“Lopez punched harder and controlled the tempo," ShoBox kaitātari tohunga Steve Farhood mea. “He overcame the problem with his right eye and now he’s 3-0 with three undefeated fighters on ShoBox, so he’s indeed a prospect to watch.”

 

The highly regarded Lopez, making his third ShoBox appearance and main event debut, survived a nasty cut over his right eye to win by the scores of 98-92 rua me te 97-93. There were no knockdowns.

 

“This was my toughest fight as a pro and I think I proved a lot,'' Na ka mea a Lopez, who entered the ring as the WBA No. 8 contender at 122 pauna. “I showed I could fight through a lot of adversity. The cut in my eye was definitely a factor for my performance in a couple of rounds, but I put the pedal to the medal and got through it. I landed the more telling shots.

 

“This is the kind of fight I can learn from. Fighting through the cut and all the head butts, and still persevering. These are the kinds of fights that make fighters better. You don’t learn a thing by blowing guys out.

 

“Muñoz was a good fighter and landed some tight shots on me, but I was definitely the better fighter and there was no question I would get the decision. I thought I might stop him in the eighth or ninth, but it didn’t happen.’’

 

There was little known about Muñoz going into Rāmere, but the mystery man from Mexico who was making his United States debut and first start outside of Mexico performed well and showed solid skills and ability.

 

“I’m very disappointed in the decision,’’ Muñoz said. “I’m a better fighter than he is. I landed more combinations. My face is unmarked, look at his. He hurt me more from his low blows and head butts than he did with his punches. I’d love to fight him again.’’

With the defeat, Muñoz became the 142nd boxer on ShoBox to suffer his first defeat. Two fights earlier, Lavisas “Red Williams (8-1-1, 3 Koó), o Rochester, N.Y., ka te 141st ShoBox boxer to suffer his initial setback when he lost by seventh round TKO to O'Shaquie "Ice Water" Foster (10-1, 7 Koó), o Orange, Texas.

Foster, he Ākuira he amateur mua, rebounded from a poor outing in hisShoBox debut to register a seventh-round TKO over Williams. Foster dropped the outclassed southpaw four times. After the final knockdown in the seventh, the fight was stopped at 52 hēkona ki te a tawhio.

 

In the co-feature of a ShoBox quadrupleheader, undefeated super middleweight Ronald “Flatline” Ellis (12-0-1, 10 Koó), o Lynn, Mass., and Washington D.C.’s "Te Tama te a te Kingi" Jerry Odom (13-2-1, 12 Koó) fought to a hard-fought eight-round majority draw. A close, competitive contest throughout was scored 78-74 for Ellis and 76-76 o tetahi,.

 

I roto i te whawhai whakatuwheratanga o te telecast, John “Madman” Magda (11-0-1, 7 Koó), o Rutherford, N.Y., and Philadelphia’s Christopher “Ice Cold” Brooker (7-1-1, 5 Koó) fought to a disputed eight-round split draw in a super middleweight matchup that most felt Brooker won. At the finish, one judge had it for Magda (77-74), one had it for Brooker (78-74) and one had it even at 76-all.

 

“I thought that was a terrible decision,'' Na ka mea a Farhood. “The judges were all over the place. I think Brooker did enough to win. He was the more aggressive fighter and landed the bigger punches. I was very surprised by the result that it was a draw.

 

Ellis, a five-year-pro who hurt his right hand at the end of the third, was pleased with his overall performance, not so much the result.

 

“I think I did a good job te po nei,’’ said Ellis, the older brother of welterweight prospect Rashidi Ellis who’d won four straight by knockout, including a second-round TKO over Jas Phipps in his last start last Aug. 29. “I started strong and I showed that I belong here, in a nationally televised show. I’m happy with what I did.

 

“I showed te po nei that I can counter a busy fighter. Ka taea e tangohia e ahau he tokua. I can also be a boxer-puncher. Odom tried to do his thing at the beginning, but he just couldn’t do it with me. I followed my trainer’s advice. I punched, I stood back. I used my left hook. I think I really hurt him a couple times.

 

“I won that fight. I’m sure. I te tuatahi, I banged with him and then I showed my boxing. It was easy in there, I won that fight. E kore ia tukino i ahau. I’ll be back. You will be seeing a lot of me in the future.”

 

Odom, he runaruna runga, me te 2012 National Golden karapu Champion i 178 pounds who was looking to turn it around after losing two of his last three, was content with the decision although he felt he’d won his first fight in seven months.

“I can’t be disappointed with the decision because I fought my heart out.’’ Odom said. “I know I hurt him. He hurt me a bit in the second, but I got back on my feet and I kept on going.

“I feel I pulled it out in the last rounds. I worked the body, I think I did some damage. Ellis looked hurt.

“I mean no disrespect, but I felt I definitely did enough to win, but the judges saw it differently.”

Said Farhood: “Ellis-Odom was a strange fight. At times it was a brawl, and at times it was a boxing match. I te tahi taime, one fighter came forward and at times the other fighter came forward. I thought Odom did enough in the last couple of rounds to salvage a draw and it turns out that is what the judges scored, a draw. Na, I think the judges got it right on that fight.”

Foster decked Williams in the second, third, fourth and seventh rounds. Three of the knockdowns appeared to result from a push, but Williams’ gloves touched the canvas each time so they went into the books as knockdowns.

“I think it was a great win for Foster, because he looked so bad when he fought on ShoBox last time outdoor in Las Vegas,'' Na ka mea a Farhood. “And this kind he showed the kind of skills that enable him to be a good amateur. He showed the kind of skills that will make him a legitimate prospect as a pro. It was a very good win for him. He showed speed. He showed his movement, his boxing abilities and he scored four knockdowns, and you can’t ask for much better than that.”

 

“This is a huge relief for me,’’ Foster said. "Ite ahau nui. I think people saw a glimpse of the kind of fighter I can be te po nei. That wasn’t me in my first ShoBox whawhai. I don’t know if I froze under the lights or if I lost because of the cold weather outside, but I wasn’t nearly as confident for that fight as I was te po nei and it affected my performance.

 

“I had a tremendous training camp, my best camp ever, which played a big part in my confidence te po nei. I thank God for the opportunity to fight on national television again and I’m already looking forward to the next time.’’

The previously undefeated Williams confessed he was unable to his rhythm. “For some reason, I just could not get loose. I had a cold, but I won’t take anything away from Foster. He knocked me down, but I actually thought he pushed me down most of those times.

“I learned something te po nei. I can’t do what I did. I can’t wait on my opponent. I have to attack first. I’ll be will be back.”

There were no knockdowns in the Brooker-Magda battle. One judge scored it for southpaw and local favorite going in, Magda 77-74, one had it 78-74 for Brooker and one had it 76-76 even.

 

After a few rounds of solid back-and-forth exchanges, Brooker seemed to dominate in the eyes of everyone but the judges. Te ShoBoxannouncers had Brooker a close but clear winner and the fans booed the decision. According to SHO STATS, Brooked outpunched and outlanded Magda by a significant margin. Brooker landed 152 o 481 nifó (32 ōrau) while Magda connected on 78 f 268 (29 ōrau).

Brooker was visibly upset with the verdict.

 

“I don’t train eight hours a day, seven days a week to get this kind of decision. That was not a draw, I clearly won the fight,'' Ka mea ia. “I don’t want to take away from Magda. He’s strong fighter and he countered well, but I showed everybody that hard work beats talent any day.

“I won this fight. I was the aggressor. I threw some big punches. My right was key. In the beginning Magda was fast, but I placed my punches and I know I did enough to win the fight.’’

 

“I feel OK, but this was a tough fight,” said Magda. “He stayed on me and pressed forward, which we knew he would. But he was stronger than I thought. I’ll have to watch the tape again, but I thought I landed the more effective punches.’’

 

Te ShoBox quadrupleheader ka anō-hau i tenei wiki e whai ake:

 

DAY CHANNEL

Rāhina, Feb. 22, 10:30 p.m. AND/PT SHOWTIME EXTREME®

 

Rāmere o four-fight telecast will be available at SHOWTIME ON DEMAND beginning today, Rāhoroi, Feb. 20.

 

Barry Tompkins ka karanga te ShoBox mahi i te ringside ki Farhood me te toa o mua ao Raul Marquez i te tavini ei tohunga kaitätari. Ko te kaihanga matua ko Gordon Hall ki Richard Gaughante whakaputa me te Rick Phillips aratai.

ALL EIGHT BOXERS MAKE WEIGHT FOR SHOBOX: THE NEW GENERATIONQUADRUPLEHEADER TONIGHT, LIVE ON SHOWTIME® FROM HISTORIC BOARDWALK HALL IN ATLANTIC CITY

Adam Lopez vs. Mario Muñoz, Ronald Ellis vs. Jerry Odom,
Lavisas Williams vs. O'Shaquie Foster, John Magda vs. Christopher Brooker

Haamata telecast i 10 p.m. AND/PT; First Fight is at 7 p.m. AND

Tickets Are Still On Sale!

Pāwhiritia HERE No te Photos Mai Rosie Cohe / SHOWTIME

ATLANTIC CITY (Feb. 18, 2016) – All eight fighters hit their marks and are set to go for their fights te po nei, Rāmere, Feb. 19 i runga i ShoBox: Ko te Generation New ora i runga i SHOWTIME (10 p.m. AND/PT, roa i runga i te Tai Te Hau-ā-uru). A quadrupleheader, presented by GH3 Promotions, will emanate from the Adrian Phillips Ballroom i roto i te Historic Boardwalk Hall in Atlantic, City, N.J.

 

In the main event two undefeated prospects with exceedingly high expectations face their most dangerous opponent to date when Adamu "pata" Lopez (14-0, 7 Koó), o San Antonio, Texas, by way Phoenix, Ariz., tutaki Mario “Yayo” Muñoz (16-0-1, 10 Koó), o Kuatalahala, Jalisco, Mexico in a 10-round super bantamweight matchup.

 

In other televised bouts, all scheduled for eight rounds, Ronald “Flatline” Ellis (12-0, 10 Koó), of Dorchester, Mass., takes on Washington D.C.’s "Te Tama te a te Kingi" Jerry Odom (13-2, 12 Koó) in a clash of hard-hitting super middleweights, southpaw Lavisas “Red” Williams (8-0-1, 3 Koó), of Rochester, N.Y.. risks his undefeated record against O'Shaquie "Ice Water" Foster (9-1, 6 Koó), o Orange, Texas, in a lightweight match and, opening the telecast, John “Madman” Magda (11-0, 7 Koó), o Rutherford, N.J., faces Philadelphia’s Christopher “Ice Cold” Brooker (7-1, 5 Koó) in a super middleweight matchup.

 

nga Weights: Lopez and Muñoz each weighed 121½ pounds; Ellis tipped scale at 166½ pounds, Odom 167½, Williams weighed 132 pauna, Foster 134; and Magda weighed 167½ pounds and Brooker 168½.

 

Utu Tickets e i $25, $50, $75, $100 a $150 a e wātea ana mō te hoko ipurangi i www.Ticketmaster.com and over the phone at (800) 736-1420.

 

Here’s what the fighters said Rāpare:

 

ADAM Lopez

 

“This is my third time on ShoBox and my third fight against an undefeated fighter. They like to match me tough but I must confess, Ahau tino titiro atu ahau ki a reira.

 

“I know I only had 14 whawhai, but I truly feel I feel I’m ready for a major fight or a title shot at the end of year. I have a strong amateur background, so I have experience. There are a lot of good fights right now at 122 pauna. The division is hot.

 

“I fought at 118 last time so I can make that weight if the right opportunity comes, but I am strong at 122. I thought I clearly won my last fight. I don’t think it was as close as the judges said it was.

 

“I’m fighting a guy, Muñoz, who is sort of a mystery to me. I’ve seen one tape of him, but it was from 2012. So I don’t really know how he’s fought recently.

 

“He seems to want to box and slug. He’s had some good performances in the past and fought some good ones so I won’t take nothing away from him and I do respect him.

 

“But I’m prepared to make the fight and be aggressor if necessary, and to win it any way that I have to. Toku kaiwhakangungu [former two-time world champion Carlos “Famous” Hernandez] continues to work on all the little things, and trains me for anything that might come my way..

 

“I feel that I’ve moved from prospect to contender, but a victoryapopo night should prove that to everybody.”

 

MARIO MUÑOZ

 

“This is my first fight in nine months and first in America, which is very exciting. You have to fight in the United States eventually; this is where you become known.

 

“I know that I’m in top shape. I’ve fought some good guys in my division, and I’m at the level I need to be. I had a really hard training camp; I know what I’m supposed to do.

 

“I’m grateful for this opportunity. I know a lot of people haven’t heard of me, but I promise you a good fight.

 

“I’m more of a boxer than a puncher, but I love to exchange and switch stance to southpaw, although my trainer doesn’t like it.

 

“Lopez is very fast, smart and has a great left hand. But I’m ready for all that. I’ll look at what he has to offer and counter with my best.

 

“I’m a little nervous. Things are moving fast now. But I couldn’t be more ready.’’

 

RONALD ELLIS

 

“I’ve been working for this sort of opportunity since I was 13, na, ae, I am very excited. I want to win and look good doing it so promoters and television will want to see me again.

 

“I’ve had problems in the past getting opponents, so I’ve taken a few ‘stay busy’ fights. But this fight is a totally different story.

 

“Everyone says I’m a boxer-puncher, and I do feel I am versatile. I’ll decide how I want to go the night of the fight. We know how Jerry’s gonna fight so I need to fight him smart. We’ll see how Odom’s chin is because it’s going get tested apopo po.

 

“I only had 24 runaruna whawhai, but I am dedicated and continuing to improve with each fight. It will be a great night for me. I’m looking forward to putting on a good show.’’

 

 

Jerry Odom

 

“Everybody has to make changes so I have a new trainer, Kennie Johnson, for this fight. He has been trying to stress finesse, movement and utilizing my overall skills more, with less emphasis on just trying to load up and knock the guy out.

 

“We’re working on me picking shots, breaking down opponents and setting up the power shots rather than just show it. Defensively, he’s had me working on my overall movement, head movement in particular.

 

“I’m looking to shine i runga i te Paraire, especially after my last ShoBox fight that I lost. I should have never taken the fight once he came in so overweight. It was a bad business decision on my part, but I learned – no more thinking with my heart.

 

“I got over my last fight right away and I’m anxious to do my job and show how much I gained and learned from it. I certainly feel ready. My only focus is to win.

 

“Ellis should be a good opponent for me. Obviously he has power, a good jab and punches. There are some good things about him, but I’m better. I’ll go out and execute, he won’t be able to stop me.’’’

 

LAVISAS WILLIAMS

“I’m naturally lefty … I’ve sparred against ambidextrous boxers, so I like to say I’m ready for anything that comes my way.

 

“I’m excited to be debuting on national television. That’s a pretty big deal for me so I need to put a great show. Especially for my fan base back home, they are all going to be watching.

 

“I take boxing seriously. I like to say I’m very dedicated. I take advantage of any opportunity I see. I trained at Mayweather Boxing Gym in Las Vegas for a bit last year. It was a good experience.

 

“My job is to frustrate him and trust me, E pai ana ahau. He will fight my fight. If he freezes again, I’m sure taking advantage of that, but I’m not counting on it.

 

“I’m going in knowing I’m the better boxer, but not overconfident. You can’t overlook anybody, but I know I’m the one that’s coming out victorious.”

O’SHAQUIE FORSTER

 

“I don’t know what happened in my last fight. I thought everything was OK but I just couldn’t find my fight rhythm. I couldn’t get off for some reason. But I am done thinking about that night.

 

“I’m definitely more focused this time around and in better shape. I need a win – and I’m fighting a guy who beat the guy that beat me, Samuel mehua. Na, I have to be smart. He’s a southpaw but I can deal with that.

 

“I’ve never worked so hard in camp. I left Texas to go to Washington D.C. to train for this. Ahau 100 percent set to go.

 

“I need a challenge and this is it. I’m ready to step up and I’m ready for him.”

 

 

JOHN MAGDA

“I’m excited and ready to go. Right now I’m looking at this as just another fight, but it’s definitely a big, big deal. I’m hoping to win and put on an exciting show.

 

“I’ve been in the gym training since November but a series of unfortunate events took place and I didn’t fight that month, or in December, or in January. Na, I’ve been training for a while. Ahau rite ki te whawhai.

 

‘I’m in with a rough, taata uaua. I can’t let him bully or push me around; I just can’t let him stand and throw.

 

“I need to box, move, do a lot of things I know I can do. I have to see how it plays. It’s all just a matter of me doing what I am supposed to do, whether it is to box or slug. I’m ready for it.’’

 

CHRISTOPHER BROOKER

 

“I love being the underdog; I’m accustomed to it. That’s why I work so hard, remain dedicated and will not ever quit.

 

“Magda throws a lot of punches, so you can’t expect him to stay on the outside. But I run 15 miles a day, three days a week after sparring, to get into the kind of shape I need to be in and am for this fight.

 

“This is my first fight against a southpaw, but I’ve had southpaw sparring, including some recently with [toa o mua te ao] Andre Dirrell. I learned so much from him.

 

“I’m a Philly fighter through and through: I may not be a favorite to win, but I come to war and will never give up. That’s a lot like the way I grew up when living in foster homesand later, manene, for some time. I just not give up, I keep on fighting.

 

“There’s a lot on the line for me tenei Rāmere and I am ready to show what I can do.’’

 

# # #

 

 

Barry Tompkins Ka karanga i te ShoBox mahi i te ringside ki Steve Farhood me te toa o mua ao Raul Marquez i te tavini ei tohunga kaitätari. Ko te kaihanga matua, ko te Gordon Hall ki Richard Gaughan te whakaputa me te Rick Phillips aratai.

 

 

ShoBox: Ko te Generation New
Mai i tōna urunga i roto i te Hōngongoi 2001, te raupapa mekemeke SHOWTIME arohaehae, manohi, ShoBox: Ko te Generation New ki āu fifi kua ngā taranata taitamariki. Te ShoBox kaupapa, ko te ki te televise whakaongaonga, kua takoto mano-ahuareka, me ngā tākaro whakataetae i te whakarato i te whenua ata mohiotia hoki opuaraa pai ki te whawhai mo te taitara ao. Ētahi o te rārangi e tupu o te 65 whawhai nei i puta i runga iShoBox me te matatau ki te ngaki taitara ao ngā: Andre Ward, Deontay Wilder, Erislandy Lara, Shawn Porter, Gary Russell Jr., Lamont Peterson, Guillermo Rigondeaux, Omar Figueroa, Nonito Donaire, Devon Alexander, Carl Froch, Robert Guerrero, Timothy Bradley, Jessie Vargas, Juan Manuel Lopez, Chad Dawson, Paulie Malignaggi, Ricky Hatton, Kelly Pavlik, Paora Williams me te ake.

 

John Magda – Christopher Brooker ready for a Super Middleweight showdown this Friday night at Historic Boardwalk Hall in Atlantic City and Live on ShoBox: Ko te Generation New

John Magda battles Christopher Brooker in Super Middleweight showdown from Historic Boardwalk Hall Live on ShoBox: Ko te Generation New

Quadrupleheader includes Adam Lopez vs. Mario Muñoz, Ronald Ellis vs. Jerry Odom,
Lavisas Williams vs. O’Shaquie Foster This Rāmere, Feb. 19 i 10 p.m. AND/PT
Live On SHOWTIME®
Kia tukuna tonutia atu

Atlantic City, Nj (Feb. 16, 2016) – Despite the fight being added just two weeks ago, many boxing insiders feel that the opening eight-round super middleweight between undefeated John Magda a Christopher Brooker tenei Rāmere, Feb. 19 ora i runga iSHOWTIME (10 p.m. AND/PT, roa i runga i te Tai Te Hau-ā-uru) could steal the show onShoBox: Ko te Generation New quadrupleheader that is loaded with talent.

Unbeatens Arama “Mantequilla” Lopez (14-0, 7 Koó), o San Antonio, Texas, by way Phoenix, Ariz., a Mario “Yayo” Muñoz (16-0-1, 10 Koó), o Kuatalahala, Jalisco, Mexico, will face their toughest opponents to-date when they meet in the 10-round super bantamweight main event from the Adrian Phillips Ballroom i roto i te Historic Boardwalk Hall i roto i te Atlantic City, N.J.

In other televised bouts, all scheduled for eight rounds, Ronald “Flatline” Ellis (12-0, 10 Koó), of Dorchester, Mass., takes on Washington D.C.’s Jerry “Tama a te Kingi” Odom (13-2, 12 Koó) in a clash of hard-hitting super middleweights, and southpawLavisasRed” Williams (8-0-1, 3 Koó), o Rochester, N.Y.. risks his undefeated record against O’ShaquieIce Water” Foster (9-1, 6 Koó), o Orange, Texas, in a super featherweight scrap.

Tickets for the GH3 Promotions event are priced at $25, $50, $75, $100 a $150 a e wātea ana mō te hoko ipurangi i www.Ticketmaster.com and over the phone at(800) 736-1420.

The bout between Magda and Brooker has a bit of the territorial rivalry feel as Magda will be fighting close to his Rutherford, N.J. home while Brooker will be making the one-hour trek on the Atlantic City Expressway from his residence in Philadelphia.
Both Magda and Brooker are 24-years old.
Magda has built his reputation on his volume punching that has catapulted him to a perfect mark of 11-0 with seven knockouts. The former New Jersey Junior Olympic champion is coming off the best win, a unanimous decision over Dionisio Miranda.

Brooker has a record of 7-1 with five knockouts and is an aggressive puncher with good power. Brooker stepped on late notice and scored an upset when he defeated previously undefeated Leo Hall on Dec. 29.

GH3 Promotions Hector Frometa headlines a stacked undercard on Friday, February 19 at the Adrian Phillips Ballroom at Historic Boardwalk Hall in Atlantic City

Full night of boxing to take place before terrific ShoBox: Ko te kāri New Generation, Live SHOWTIME®
John Magda to battle Christopher Brooker in opening televised bout
Nutley, N.J. (Feb. 5, 2016) – It will be a big night of boxing on Rāmere, Feb. 19, i teAdrian Philips Ballroom i roto i te Historic Boardwalk Hall i roto i te Atlantic City rite GH3 Whakatairanga presents ShoBox: Ko te Generation New, live on SHOWTIME® at 10 p.m. AND/PT.

Four bouts will be showcased on the televised portion. I roto i te hui matua, Arama Lopez (14-0, 7 KO o) o San Antonio, Texas, Ka tangohia i runga i Mario Muñoz (16-0-1, 10 KO o) o Kuatalahala, Mexico, in a ten-round battle for the WBA Fedalatin Super Bantamweight title.

I roto i te waru-a tawhio noa tahi-āhuatanga, undefeated super middleweight Ronald Ellis (12-0, 10 KO o) o Lynn, Mass., ka whawhai Jerry Odom (13-2, 12 KO o) o Washington, D.C.

In an eight-round super featherweight bout, Lavisas Williams (8-0-1, 3 KO o) o Rochester, N.Y., ka whawhai O'Shaquie Foster (9-1, 6 KO o) of a Houston, Texas.

Recently added is an eight-round super middleweight bout between undefeated John Magda (11-0, 7 KO o) o Rutherford, N.J., tango i runga i Christopher Brooker (7-1, 5 KO o) o Philadelphia.

The combined record of the eight competitors is an astounding 90-4-2 which equates to a 94.8 winning percentage.

Before the cameras roll, an outstanding undercard has been assembled by GH3 Promotions.

GH3 Whakatairanga Hector Frometa (1-0) o Miami, Fla. via Cuba, Ka tangohia i runga i Horano Rosario (0-2) o Jersey City, N.J., i roto i te Welterweight a'ee wha-a tawhio noa.

In a six-round junior middleweight bout, Arturo Trujillo (7-0, 4 KO o) o Easton, Pa., ka whawhai Jeffrey Wright (3-1-1, 3 KO o) o Milwaukee, Wisc.

In a six-round junior middleweight bout, Anthony Young (11-1, 5 KO o) o Atlantic City, ka whawhai Skender Halil (8-1, 8 KO o) of Fort Worth, Texas.

In a six-round heavyweight match, Brendan Barrett (3-0-1, 3 KO o) o Little Egg Harbor, N.J. Ka Square atu ki Rana Pasciolla (6-1) o Brick, N.J.

Elijah Vines ka meinga tona tuatahi pro o Philadelphia ki Danny Rosenberger(0-1-2) of Saint Petersburg, Fla., i roto i te a'ee Welterweight.

Tickets for the GH3 Promotions event are priced at $25, $50, $75, $100 a $150 are available for purchase online at www.Ticketmaster.com and over the phone at 1 800 736 1420.

GH3 Whakatairanga ngā tūturu whitu Antoine Douglas, Super whitu o Jerry Odom, tūturu Super whā Arama Lopez me te Boxcino 2015 JR. Whitu tekau Champion John Thompson, Jr., a Welterweight tūturu Hector Frometa, Jerrell Harris & Keenan Smith & JR. Lightweight O’Shaquie Foster to the GH3 Promotions stable.

After Sensational Victory over Donovan Dennis, The Sky is Now the Limit for Heavyweight Slugger Jarrell ‘Big Baby’ Miller

 

Promoter Greg Cohen of Greg Cohen Promotions says he could not be happier with the performance turned in last Friday night by the fighter he co-promotes (with Dmitriy Salita of Salita Promotions), undefeated heavyweight slugger Jarrell “Big Baby” Miller.
Miller, i teie nei 16-0-1, 14 Koó, showed both his frightening power and excellent boxing skills while scoring a brutal TKO 7 over an extremely game Donovan Dennis. Fighting in the co-main event of a nationally televised ShoBox: The New Generation from the Casino Del Sol in Tucson, Arizona, Miller made believers out of many by displaying depth and ring intelligence to go with his sledgehammer fists.
Jarrell showed he’s not just a big puncher,” Na ka mea a Greg Cohen. “He showed the ability to change up his game plan during a fight. That’s very important at the higher levels of the division. He nearly took Dennishead off in the first round, but when he saw that somehow he was going to survive for a while, he switched up to boxing and re-established his dominance that way. It was exactly what he should have done in there.
Miller, who won the NABA Heavyweight Championship with the victory, is now in line for an even higher-profile showdown with a rated contender.
Jarrell is a force to be reckoned with and with his power, skill, athleticism and charisma, he can become a worldwide star and be the man to restore the heavyweight division to its glory of yesteryear,” Cohen tonu. “People love him and can’t enough of him!”
Cohen says that even though Miller called out the champions of the division after the victory, the probable next step will be a top-ten fighter in one of the sanctioning organizations.
We believe he can beat any of the champions right now, i tenei ra. But to get him there we will have to next focus on someone rated above him and take their spot by force. But I have every confidence we are less than a year away from getting Jarrell the world title shot he wants more than anything.

ADAM LOPEZ AND MARIO MUNOZ TO HEADLINE SHOBOX: THE NEW whakatupuranga QUADRUPLEHEADER PARAIRE, FEB. 19, FROM BOARDWALK HALL IN ATLANTIC CITY

 

Ronald Ellis vs. Jerry Odom, Keenan Smith vs. Wellington Arias Romero & Lavasis Williams-O’Shaquie Foster Also in Action

Rāmere, Feb. 19 i 10 p.m. AND/PT

Ora i te SHOWTIME®

NEW YORK (Jan. 15, 2016) - ShoBox: Ko te Generation New returnson Rāmere, Feb. 19, quadrupleheader ora i runga i SHOWTIME (10 p.m. AND/PT, roa i runga i te Tai Te Hau-ā-uru) i te Adrian Phillips Ballroom in Historic Boardwalk Hall i roto i te Atlantic City, N.J.

 

With the same height, same age, and similar strong amateur backgrounds, Adamu "pata" Lopez (14-0, 7 Koó) a Mario “Yayo” Munoz (16-0-1, 10 Koó) will face their toughest opponents to date when they touch gloves in the 10-round super bantamweight main event matchup.

 

In other televised bouts, all scheduled for eight rounds, Ronald “Akeem” Ellis (12-0, 10 Koó) e i runga i Jerry Odom (13-2, 12 Koó) in a clash of hard-hitting super middleweights, Keenan Smith (9-0, 3 Koó) faces fellow southpaw Te Ūpoko o te Ika Romero (9-0-1, 4 Koó) in a battle of unbeaten welterweights and lefthander Lavisas “Red” Williams (8-0-1, 3 Koó) risks his undefeated record against O'Shaquie Foster (8-1, 5 Koó) in a super featherweight match.

 

The combined record of the eight up-and-coming competitors is 89-3-3 ki 54 knockouts.

 

Lopez, o San Antonio, Texas, by way Phoenix, Ariz., Smith, o Philadelphia, and Foster, o Orange, Texas, will be making their secondShoBox tīmata; while Munoz, of Guadalajara, Jalisco, Mexico, Ellis, of Dorchester, Mass., Williams, of Rochester, N.Y.. and Romero, of Hasburgh, N.Y., via Santiago, D.R., ratou tuatahi. Odom, o Washington, D.C, is making his third appearance.

 

Tickets for the GH3 Promotions event are priced at $25, $50, $75 a 100 a e wātea ana mō te hoko ipurangi i www.Ticketmaster.comand over the phone at 1 800 736 1420.

 

An excellent boxer-puncher and tactician that likes to counter, Lopez won his ShoBox debut in his outing before last with a close, hard-fought 10-round majority decision over previously undefeated, DominicanErietere Aquino (17-0-1 haere i roto i te). Lopez is coming off a second-round TKO over Eric Aiken whakamutunga Dec. 12.

 

Lopez was born in Phoenix, raised in Los Angeles and moved to San Antonio when he was 15. Haere ia ki 125-23 in the amateurs and won six national championships before turning pro in February 2012. He’s trained by former two-time world champion Carlos "Famoso" Hernandez.

 

Munoz will be making his United States debut and first start outside of Mexico. A pro since September 2010, he’s known for his come-forward style, first-rate overall skills and proficient punching power. Haere ia ki 140-10 i roto i te amateurs, winning three national Junior Olympic tournaments and coming away with bronze and silver medals in national championships.

 

Muñoz, who hails from a fighting family, has an uncle who boxed professionally. He’s the one he credits for introducing him to boxing when he was 13. This will be his first fight since he scored a lopsided eight-round decision over Daniel Franco whakamutunga Kia 2.

 

Ellis upset highly regarded Terrell Gausha to win the 2010 National Golden karapu (Gausha would go on to represent the U.S. i te 2012 Olympic Games). Since going pro in February 2011, Ellis has fought in two countries (Puerto Rico, Mexico) and six U.S. cities (San Antonio, Carson, Calif., Winchester, Va., New York City, Tulsa and Inglewood, Calif.). The 26-year-old has faced mostly modest opposition and has seldom come close to putting in a full night’s work.

 

Ellis had had a series of delays and restarts since turning pro but feels he’s grown from his mistakes and that he’ll be stronger because of them. For sure, his power hasn’t been affected. Katoa 10 of his knockouts have come inside two rounds (eight in the first). The older brother of boxer Rashidi Ellis has won four straight by knockout, including a second-round TKO over Jas Phipps in his last start last Aug. 29. But he seems to be taking a sizeable step-up in class here.

 

Odom is looking to turn it around after losing two of his last three, the most recent defeat coming via a shocking third-round TKO to Samuel Clarkson (14-3 haere i roto i te) i runga i ShoBox. The heavily favored, heavy-hitting Odom was dropped three times, once in the second and twice in the third, before the fight was halted at 1:15.

 

Odom, he runaruna runga, me te 2012 National Golden karapu Champion i 178 pauna, i te mutunga i runga i Jan pūkenga win 12-whawhai. 9, 2015, when he was disqualified against Andrew Hernandez. In the rematch the followingMarch 13 i runga i ShoBox, Odom registered a 2:47, first-round TKO.

 

I roto i tona ShoBox tuatahi, Odom, who makes for exciting scraps, dropped previously unbeaten Vilier Quinonez (8-0) twice before stopping him in the seventh round on July 25, 2014.

 

Smith won his ShoBox debut in his last start on a hard-fought, eight-round unanimous decision over Pineamine Whitaker whakamutunga Nov. 6 in an outdoor fight in Las Vegas. Fighting in memory of his mother who died in late September and going eight rounds for the first time, the 5-foot-7Smith, overcame a nasty cut over the left eye from an unintentional headbutt in the sixth, rallied to score a knockdown in the seventh and triumphed by the scores of 79-73 a 78-74 rua.

 

Before turning pro in April 2010, Smith was a 2008 National Golden Gloves Featherweight Champion and 2007 Junior Olympic National Champion. His 74-2 record in the amateurs included two victories overworld-ranked contender Amir ahau.

Romero had 268 amateur bouts and represented the Dominican Republic at the Olympics in 2012 (he lost to Vasyl Lomanchenko). Shortly thereafter he relocated to New York. He went pro in October 2013, fought four times in 2014 and five times last year.

 

A slick 5-foot-9 boxer who can punch and gives opponent issues because of his awkward style and movement, Romero, 24, has beat up on ordinary opposition and is coming off a first-round TKO over LuisMeroles whakamutunga Dec. 5. This looks to be his most daunting assignment to date.

 

Williams, 24, is a boxer-puncher who’s won seven in a row since boxing a draw in his second start in March 2013. This will be his first fight outside of New York. Making his eight-round debut in his last start onOketopa. 8, he won a shutout decision over Czech Republic’s Michal Dufek.

 

Foster, 22, gets a quick-fix opportunity to redeem himself after losing hisShoBox debut on an eight-round unanimous decision to underdog Sam mehua (6-1) i runga i te Nov. 6 card in Las Vegas.

 

A highly decorated amateur, the 5-foot-8½ inch Foster advanced to the 2012 U.S. Olympic Games tamataraa i reira ngaro ia ki hinga kore amanaki pro, Hohepa "Jo-Jo" Diaz. I mua i taua, Foster was a 2011 Houston Golden karapu me 2010 PAL National Champion, a five-time Ringside National Champion and two-time National Junior Golden Gloves Champion.

Barry Tompkins Ka karanga i te ShoBox mahi i te ringside ki Steve Farhood me te toa o mua ao Raul Marquez i te tavini ei tohunga kaitätari. Ko te kaihanga matua, ko te Gordon Hall ki Richard Gaughan te whakaputa me te Rick Phillips aratai.

 

# # #

 

ShoBox: Ko te Generation New
Mai i tōna urunga i roto i te Hōngongoi 2001, te raupapa mekemeke SHOWTIME arohaehae, manohi, ShoBox: Ko te Generation New ki āu fifi kua ngā taranata taitamariki. Te ShoBox kaupapa, ko te ki te televise whakaongaonga, kua takoto mano-ahuareka, me ngā tākaro whakataetae i te whakarato i te whenua ata mohiotia hoki opuaraa pai ki te whawhai mo te taitara ao. Ētahi o te rārangi e tupu o te 65 whawhai nei i puta i runga iShoBox me te matatau ki te ngaki taitara ao ngā: Andre Ward, Deontay Wilder, Erislandy Lara, Shawn Porter, Gary Russell Jr., Lamont Peterson, Guillermo Rigondeaux, Omar Figueroa, Nonito Donaire, Devon Alexander, Carl Froch, Robert Guerrero, Timothy Bradley, Jessie Vargas, Juan Manuel Lopez, Chad Dawson, Paulie Malignaggi, Ricky Hatton, Kelly Pavlik, Paora Williams me te ake.

Regis PROGRAIS KNOCKS I ABEL Ramos I matchup o hinga Tuhinga 140-PAUNA I MATUA MAHINGA OFSHOBOX: THE NEW whakatupuranga ON SHOWTIME®

Zenunaj, Rārangi ko Baranchyk katoa Impress Ki knockouts

I Bayou City Takahanga Center I roto i Houston;

Taumahamaha kaiwero Artur Szpilka Faka'eke'eke I roto i telecast

 

Pāwhiritia HERE Hei Tikiake Photos

Credit Photo: Stephanie Trapp / SHOWTIME

 

HOUSTON (Dec. 12, 2015) - Regis Prograis te nuinga tūturu mua Apera Ramosen huarahi ki te TKO iwa-a tawhio noa i roto i te hui matua o ShoBox: Ko te Generation New ora i runga i SHOWTIME i runga i te Paraire i Bayou City Takahanga Center i Houston.

 

Papatono (16-0, 13 Koó) I te hono i te neke atu i te 5-1 whakawā i te toru rauna whakamutunga o te whawhai i te aroaro o Ramos 'kokonga ui kaiwawao Laurence Cole ki te mutu i te whawhai.

 

Ki te mate - me te hua o mua i roto i te quadrupleheader - ka Ramos te 139thtoa ki te tukua tona mate tuatahi i runga i te raupapa, whanaketanga amanaki.

 

Prograis was the more aggressive and effective fighter from the outset. U ia 53 ōrau o ana matā kaha whakaritea ki noa 28 ōrau mō Ramos i whiua e nui atu i 250 atu nifó katoa.

 

Ramos (14-1-2, 9 Koó) simply couldn’t deal with Prograis’ speed and movement. At the finish, ko ia he takirimatia te toto i te tapahia huri noa tona kanohi maui, me te tatua ka i runga i te tihi o tona matenga, a kihai i whakahoki mo te aroraa o nifó i tona hoariri tūturu.

 

"Ko te he whawhai maere,” Prograis said. “It was really, tino uaua, me te kore i whakaaro ahau i haere ahau ki te mutu ia, but I did. We stuck to the game plan and I am happy.

 

“He was really messed up. I don’t like to talk bad about my opponents, engari e ahau tino kino ia ia, me te whakaaro e pea ratou kia kua mutu te reira i mua. Koe e kore e hiahia ana ki te kino ia tangata e kino i te wahi e taea te pā te reira ratou i roto i te oma roa. "

 

I muri i te whawhai, Amuamu Ramos e kore ko ia te taua i muri i te reke upoko kōpeka i roto i te rima o e tuwhera te tapahia pawhare, i runga i te tihi o tona matenga.

 

Late-whakakapinga Dardan Zenunaj tukua amanaki Kōmāmā mua hinga kore Bryant Cruz te mate tuatahi o tona mahi i muri kaiwhakangungu Cruz ' Ronnie Shields called an end to the fight after the seventh round. Zenunaj was ahead 67-64 i runga i scorecards te kaiwhakawa e toru 'i muri i te whitu.

 

Cruz ko te toa atu hohe, tuatuku 754 nifó roto whitu rauna whakaritea ki noa 555 mo Zenunaj, engari ko te reira mārama i Zenunaj ū i te matā atu kaha.

 

Zenunaj (11-1, 9 Koó) knocked Cruz down midway through the fourth with a wide left hook. Cruz survived the round, but continued to eat a series of big shots to close the round. Cruz bounced back but couldn’t keep Zenunaj from picking his shots and landing damaging power punches. Zenunaj floored Cruz again with another strong blow in the final seconds of the seventh, Cruz whiua te tatau, engari Shields i kite nui a totitoti ana te whawhai, ka Cruz (16-1, 8 Koó) hoki ki te kokonga.

 

Zenunaj-u i roto i Cruz 40-24 i roto i te whitu, anake te wa i roto i te whawhai i ia-maka atu a waho-u Cruz.

 

"Ua hinaaro e ahau te reira ki te waiho i te whawhai mo te katoa o te iwi matakitaki, a meatia e ahau i te reira, na au e ahau ongo'i tino pai,” Zenunaj said. “He is really good, much stronger than I believed he would be. He hung in there, engari i ahau te mahi, a riro ahau.

 

"Ko teie mahana toku whawhai tuatahi i roto i te U.S. a e kore e waiho te reira i te whakamutunga. Next tau kei te haere ki te waiho i te tau nui hoki ahau. "

 

I muri i te whawhai, Kihai Cruz hanga i tetahi ngatahi mo te mahi matekiri.

 

“I came in really confident that I was going to win. I had almost seven weeks of training and this guy took the fight on a week’s notice.

 

"Ahau i haere mai i roto i te whakaaro haere ahau ki te riro, otiia kihai i haere ki reira toku ara e. He was a tough opponent. He came forward and hit me with some really awkward shots. He’s an awkward fighter and he hit me with different angles I hadn’t seen before. Hopukia ana e ia ki ahau i te ohorere, engari e te te ara kia kore e taea e tino ahau riri rawa ki ahau i tenei mate e mekemeke te. Ka hoki mai ahau kaha.

 

“I did everything I could and gave it my all. I tried to listen to the punch list from my coach, engari ia tika i ta'ita'ii roto-i ahau, ka hoatu ki a ia e ahau i te faatura katoa mo taua. "

 

I roto i te matchup o opuaraa whitu, Steve Rārangi piro te TKO a tawhio wha whakamīharo i runga i mua tūturu Hoiho Woodall. VIDEO Miramira:http://s.sho.com/1O1bf7g

 

I muri e rua tata rauna, Woodall knocked Rolls down midway through the third. While Rolls complained it was a slip, Woodall came out blazing after the count and legitimately hurt Rolls in the final minute of the round. Rārangi (13-0, 7 Koó) haere hoki ki te utu i roto i te wha o, landing nearly a dozen big right hands. With Woodall wobbling around the ring with his guard down, marere kaitautoko Laurence Cole i ki te aukati i te whakataetae i 2:46 o te a tawhio noa.

 

"I rite ahau ki te mahi i te mea i haere mai ahau i konei ki te mahi i,"Ka mea Rārangi, nei ki uta 41 ōrau o ngā tītere mana. “I didn’t agree with the knockdown, engari e te te āhua o te mekemeke. Ko e ahua o te mea kei te haere ki te tupu me te hiahia noa koe ki te tiki ake koe, kohikohi koe, ka whawhai i runga i.

 

"Kei te haere ahau ki te okioki i te moka, me te tino tika tōpuni i roto i, me te wātea."

 

Woodall (8-1-1, 5 Koó) amuamu e ko taimi halá, te mutu.

 

"Kihai ahau i whakaae ki te Tuhinga,” Woodall said. “I was caught on my ear so that threw off my balance a little bit, but I was totally fine. I’m wise enough to take a knee if I wasn’t able to continue, but that wasn’t the case. I definitely feel that was a premature stoppage but I’m not a sore loser.

 

"Na te reira hoki ki te poari tuhi. I need to sit down with my manager and get back to training camp. I know it’s soon to say this after the fact, but I’ll definitely be looking for the rematch at some point. Ko, hoki inaianei, te reira hoki ki te poari tātuhi. "

 

I roto i te a'ee whakatuwheratanga o te telecast, Ivan Baranchyk (9-0, 8 Koó) patototanga i mua tūturu Shadi Shehadeh (9-1-2, 5 Koó) ki te kai on o ngā matā kaha i 2:28 o te a tawhio tuatahi.

 

Southpaw Polish Arthur Pin whākī kaitātari mātanga ShoBox Steve Farhoodi roto i Rāmere o telecast rite faaineine ia ki te wero tūturu WBC Heavyweight World Champion Deontay Wilder i runga i Rāhoroi, Jan. 16 i runga i SHOWTIME. During the interview, Fakatokanga Szpilka Wilder e te haere mai ia ki te tango i tona whitiki:

 

"Artur Szpilka he toa taumahamaha heke mai, future Polish champion and a wonderful person. E kore e taea e ahau tatari, kotahi. E kore e taea e ahau tatari.

 

“I was so excited. When I was very young I dreamed that one day I would be champion, and now I have that opportunity. Thank you to the champ for giving me the chance. But you don’t see what you’re doing. This is no joke. This is no (expletive) kata.

 

“This is very important for Polish fans. This is when I change my story, puta ke ano toku ora, change what people think about Polish people here. Polish people have heart, we have everything. And now I must show everyone what I want. I am so confident, you will see. E kore e taea e ahau tatari.

 

"Whakarongo, I don’t care what everyone thinks. I care what my team thinks. I care what my family, taku iwi whakaaro.

 

“I’m going to kick his ass. Remember, Sharing, I’m going to kick your ass. Happy Holidays, Sharing. Do not sleep.”

 

Te ShoBox quadrupleheader ka anō-rangi i runga i Rāhina, Dec. 14 i 10 p.m. AND/PT runga i SHOWTIME EXTREME a ka kia wātea i runga i SHOWTIME ON tono® timata Rāhoroi, Dec. 12

 

Barry Tompkins ka karanga te ShoBox mahi i te ringside ki Farhood me te toa o mua ao Raul Marquez i te tavini ei tohunga kaitätari. Ko te kaihanga matua ko Gordon Hall ki Richard Gaughan te whakaputa me te Rick Phillips aratai.

 

ShoBox: Te whakatupuranga NEW pauna FINAL, Korukī & Whakaahua FOR QUADRUPLEHEADER APONGIPONGI / PARAIRE LIVE ON SHOWTIME®

 

 

 

Local Favorite Regis Prograis Headlines ki
Prospect Top hoa Apera Ramos i Takahanga Main
Mai i Bayou City Takahanga Center I roto i Houston

 

Pāwhiritia HERE No te Photos i Stephanie Trapp / SHOWTIME

 

HOUSTON (Dec. 10, 2015) - Waru whawhai, tae atu ki ngā opuaraa tūturu whitu, ki te lekooti ngā o 92-1-5, paunatia-i roto i te Rāpare mo te ShoBox: Ko te Generation Newquadrupleheader tango te wahi apopo / Rāmere, ora i runga i SHOWTIME (10 p.m. ET / PT) i Bayou City Takahanga Center i Houston.

 

Headlining te DiBella whakangahau- a ka waiho Savarese Whakatairanga-ka whakanekehia hui amanaki pūmanawa rohe Regis Prograis (15-0, 12 Koó), nei anga hoa hinga kore Apera Ramos (14-0-2, 9 Koó) i roto i te 10-a tawhio noa hui matua super Kōmāmā.

 

I roto i te tahi-āhuatanga, Bryant Cruz (16-0, 8 Koó) e ki runga ki Belgium o Dardan Zenunaj (10-1, 8 Koó) i roto i te a'ee Kōmāmā waru-a tawhio noa.

 

Te whakaawhiwhi i te telecast, Hoiho Woodall (8-0-1, 5 Koó) a Steve Rārangi (12-0, 6 Koó) taupatupatu i roto i te whitu kēmu e waru-a tawhio noa, a nohopuku-aranga Ivan Baranchyk (8-0, 7 Koó) kanohi Shadi Shehadeh (9-0-2, 5 Koó) i roto i te waru-a tawhio kēmu super Kōmāmā.

 

Pauna Official:

Super Lightweights Takahanga Main - 10 Rauna

Regis Prograis - 140 Pauna

Apera Ramos - 139 Pauna

 

Lightweights Co-Āhuahira - 8 Rauna

Bryant Cruz - 132¾ pauna

Dardan Zenunaj - 131½ pauna

 

Middleweights - 8 Rauna

O nga hoiho o Woodall - 159¼ pauna

Steve Rolls - 159½ pauna

 

Super Lightweights - 8 Rauna

Ivan Baranchyk - 139¼ pauna

Shadi Shehadeh - 141¾ pauna

 

Korukī WHAKAMUTUNGA:

Regis PROGRAIS:

"Ko ia te hoariri uaua atu i te takatu kua fehangahangai ahau, me te taata nui, engari au e haere mai ahau ki te riro.

 

"Kua kua ahau e noho ana i roto i Houston whawhai aua whawhai Mexican tiketike mo te whakamutunga 10 tau. I know how to fight tough guys like that. I know what he’s bringing.

 

"Kihai ahau i te tiki i te knockout [ki Amos Cowart], i te mea he aha ahau i hinaaro, engari i ahau te whenua i te rota o te nifó.

 

"Whakaaro ahau ki te ahau i kino Ramos wawe ka taea ki te tango i a ia i roto i ahau, engari ite e ahau e kore e tukino i ahau e ia.

 

“I have a lot of people coming out from New Orleans. I’m not worried about the crowd – I’m here to do what I have to do.

 

“We can fight on the inside and pound it out or fight on the outside. We’re ready for anything.”

 

ABEL Ramos:

"E kore ahau e ite rite ahau e haere ana i roto i rite ki te underdog i katoa. Kua ahau nui atu wheako runaruna me te ake o te mata i ahau ki runga ki a ia.

 

"E haere koe tenei wa ki te kite i te mau Apera Ramos. Au mana'o ahau tino pai. Au ahau ineine me te makatuunga. E haere koe ki te kite i te iti moka o te mea katoa i roto i te mowhiti i runga i te Paraire.

 

"Te ia [Papatono] te taata tino pukumahi i roto i te whakakai me te kaitauhiuhi o te rota o te nifó engari ka kite tatou e nahea tatou i te reira i roto i hapai i te whakakai.

 

"E mohio ana ahau ka taia e ia he rota o te nifó me whakapono ahau e taea e ahau te mea i te taua, engari pai. Kua maka e ia he rota, but they’re not effective. Going anywhere from eight to 10 rauna, Kua ahau he painga ki te kakahu ia ki raro.

 

"E hiahia ana ahau ki te whakatapua tenei whawhai ki toku whanaunga Margarito Camacho e haere atu o te whakaeke ngakau tenei Rāhina i anake 43 tau. "

 

Bryant Cruz:

"Kua ahau e noho i konei [Houston] and training here. I’m trained by the best with Ronnie (Shields) and I’ve learned a lot from him. I’m getting a lot of attention with him as my trainer and I’m getting to learn much more about myself as a fighter and my technique.

 

“Of course I believe there’s always more to learn and with a trainer like Ronnie I’ve gained much more confidence. I feel the difference improving my technique.

 

"I te tahi taime noa i ahau te parapara [ki te tiki pukuriri] a ahau e hiahia ana ki te haere i reira, ka hoatu te pēhanga ki runga ki te tino ki te pai i te mano.

 

"Te ia [Dardan] not hard to look for and he likes to come forward. I know he will be right in front of me and I know what to look for there.

 

"Au e ahau te taata New York, na konei i roto i te Houston ahau he iti moka i roto i toku huānga, but I do have some people from back home coming out to support me. I am going to go out there and go for it.

 

"E hiahia ana ahau ki te hoatu ki runga ki te whakaatu pai engari haere ano hoki ahau ki te waiho i te toa atamai, me te haere i roto i te mahere kēmu toku ki te mahi i te mea i haere mai ahau i konei ki te mahi i.

 

"I mohio ahau ko ahau nui e pā ana mekemeke i muri i toku mākutu wā tuatahi. Ua whiua e ahau ake, a mohio ahau kihai i taea e hoatu e tika ahau te taata e. I muri i taua, Mutu ahau paati, mutu inu a tīmata rere, me te whakangungu. A, no te hoki haere ahau i mohio ahau ko ahau rite ki te whiua a ia, ka mea ai ahau.

 

"Mai tīmata ahau, Kihai i ngaro ahau i te ra kotahi i roto i te omaoma; ara, no te kore ahau e whakangungu ahau mo te whawhai Au tonu whakangungu ahau, ka pai ki te mahue i te ra i roto i te omaoma. "

 

Dardan ZENUNAJ:

"Moving ki Oxnard ki te mahi ki a Robert (Garcia) has been a big step in my career. I’ve sparred with (Vasyl) Lomachenko, Mikey (Garcia), (Ihu) Cuellar, Brandon Rios, etahi te whawhai pai o roto i te mekemeke o.

 

"I tohungia ahau ki Lomachenko mō te whā wiki mo tona whawhai whakamutunga.

 

"Ko toku whawhai tuatahi i muri i neke ki Oxnard tenei na tatou e oaoa ki te whakaatu i te mea ta tatou i tei mahi i runga i, whakaatu pehea kua pai ake tatou.

 

"Tango ahau i tenei whawhai i runga i pānui poto, but we’ve been working in the gym. This is a good opportunity for us. This is the fight we’ve been waiting for. He’s undefeated but beatable.

 

"E kore ko ahau pe'ape'a no te mea ko ahau e wha anake e pā ana ki pauna atu-taimaha.

 

"Au e ahau te momo o te taata e hiahia ana ki te whawhai i te mai- whawhai.

 

“I knew that if I wanted to make a real name for myself in boxing I would have to go after it myself. I knew I would have to come to America for I wanted to accomplish.

 

“I have watched Cruz and I know the way he fights. It’s all mental. I have that drive – I’d die in the ring. I’ve seen Cruz and he doesn’t have that.”

 

Hoiho Woodall:

"Kua matou mahi ki a Ronnie Shields mō marama e pā ana ki e rima i teie nei, sparring with Jermall Charlo and Edwin Rodriguez. Having those guys around is a great experience. I’m always in competition with them, e aki ana ahau ki te rohe, me te ako i a ratou.

 

"E e ahau he huarahi fakanatula pukuriri, ara, no te tīmata ahau hei runaruna i 14 tau-tau. Now I am working off different approaches and know that I just need to let my hands go. Ronnie is putting the finishing touches on me.

 

"Na roto i te whakangungu kua ako ahau rerekē huarahi ki toku kāhua. Mai ko eé rerekē i roto i a ki ia o te rerekē whawhai ako ahau momo rerekē. Ko ahau tonu i roto i te whakataetae ki te ako atu, a ko whakangungu ahau tonu.

 

"E hiahia ana ahau ki te whakaatu i te kaiwhakawa, me nga pā pēhea te nui o te tikanga tenei whawhai ki ahau. E haere ana ahau ki te kia pukuriri engari ka whawhai mohio me te.

 

"Ko te whawhai faufaa hoki ahau tenei ahau kua no te mea kua anake i roto i te nuinga o toku whawhai, engari tenei te wa e mama e konei fakataha ki toku teina, tuahine me te teina i roto i--ture. Toku mama Ko nui toku faaururaa a ki te whai ia ia i konei te tikanga o te ao ki a ahau. "

 

STEVE Rolls:

“He’s a young hungry guy that is coming to fight. E kore ahau e ahau tango ia ia whakahawea ana. This is definitely the toughest fight for both of us.

 

"Ite ahau nui. Kua i ahau e ono ki te waru wiki o te whakangungu, me te ite e ahau nui, me te rite.

 

"Ua hi'o ahau he iti moka [o Woodall] and learned about him. He looks aggressive and has a good amateur background, rite te mahi ahau.

 

"Tukua e ahau toku kaiwhakangungu mataara te rīpene whawhai, me te tika kite ahau mea katoa e hiahia ahau ki te kite. Ahau aroha ki te whakanui ana hoki i te hape o toku hoa tauwhainga.

 

"Pai atu ake ake ahau ite. I roto i te rere, me te whakangungu e ahau ite nui, pai atu i te wa i ahau i roto i toku uofulu. Noa'tu o toku matahiti, Ite tonu ahau e kore i tae noa ahau toku pirimia.

 

"Na, ano he toa, Ahau nui atu māia me te ake māhorahora ki toku rautaki ahau.

 

“I’ve been waiting for this opportunity to fight on national TV against an undefeated guy. This is my big shot.”

 

Oy BARANCHYK:

“I have been training very hard for this fight. This opportunity is what I have been working so hard for.

 

"Ka rite ki te kuao, toa hihiri, E hiahia ana ahau ki te ki te whakapai ake, me te kahore hoki e mutu te mahi ki te whiwhi pai i nga ra katoa tonu.

 

"A, no te ahau te tuatahi tīmata whakangungu, ara hei runaruna, Ite e ahau te pūmanawa, me te pānga o toku tokua kaha.

 

“I do not stop training. I am extremely motivated and will keep working harder than anybody else to get where I want to be.”

 

SHADI Shehadeh:

“I am not worried that I took the fight on short notice. I stay prepared and I have been in the gym staying in good shape.

 

“I am always busy. When I’m not working, Ahau i roto i te whakangungu omaoma.

 

"E mohio ana ahau e hiahia ana ahau ki te uru te reira ki runga, get inside and outside. I’m going to throw out a little bit of everything.”

 

# # #

 

ShoBox: Ko te Generation New
Mai i tōna urunga i roto i te Hōngongoi 2001, te raupapa mekemeke SHOWTIME arohaehae, manohi, ShoBox: Ko te Generation New ki āu fifi kua ngā taranata taitamariki. Te ShoBox kaupapa, ko te ki te televise whakaongaonga, kua takoto mano-ahuareka, me ngā tākaro whakataetae i te whakarato i te whenua ata mohiotia hoki opuaraa pai ki te whawhai mo te taitara ao. Ētahi o te rārangi e tupu o te 65 whawhai nei i puta i runga i ShoBox me te matatau ki te ngaki taitara ao ngā: Andre Ward, Deontay Wilder, Erislandy Lara, Shawn Porter, Gary Russell Jr., Lamont Peterson, Guillermo Rigondeaux, Omar Figueroa, Nonito Donaire, Devon Alexander, Carl Froch, Robert Guerrero, Timothy Bradley, Jessie Vargas, Juan Manuel Lopez, Chad Dawson, Paulie Malignaggi, Ricky Hatton, Kelly Pavlik, Paora Williams me te ake.

Jarrett Hurd KNOCKS I FRANK GALARZA I matchup o tūturu Super Welterweight Tuhinga I MATUA MAHINGA OFSHOBOX: THE NEW whakatupuranga ON SHOWTIME®

 

 

Sergiy Derevyanchenko & Rawiri Benavidez Ulo Ki te knockouts Tere

I Hard Rock Hotel & Casino, Las Vegas

 

Pāwhiritia HERE Hei Tikiake Photos

Credit Photo: Stephanie Trapp / SHOWTIME

 

Las Vegas (Nov. 14, 2015) - Tūturu amanaki Welterweight superJarrett Hurd ringa Frank Galarza te mate tuatahi o tona mahi ki te TKO a tawhio tuaono i roto i te hui matua o ShoBox: Ko te Generation Newi runga i Rāhoroi i te Joint i Hard Rock Hotel & Casino, Las Vegas.

 

Galarza (17-1-2, 11 Koó), i whawhai hoki tona wa wha i runga iShoBox ka titiro atu ki te Hurd āhua unknown, ka te 136th toa ki te tukua tona mate tuatahi i runga i te raupapa, whanaketanga amanaki. NGä ATAATA: http://s.sho.com/1NTILdM

 

Hurd (17-0, 11 Koó) ko te koi, more accurate fighter from the opening bell against the largely stationary Galarza. Hurd floored Galarza with a huge right uppercut –his favorite weapon– with less than 30 hēkona e toe i roto i te wha o, knocking “The Brooklyn Rocky” down for the first time in his career. Galarza made it to the bell, engari i āta tukino i a kore ora ake.

 

Hurd, o Accokeek, MD., i ngingio Galarza ki tetahi uppercut nui i roto i te ono, forcing a clearly finished Galarza to turn his body away in defeat. Referee Russell Mora had seen enough and stepped in to stop the bout at :59.

 

"Mohio ahau i ia he ite, toa uaua, engari piri ahau ki toku mahere kēmu, whakarongo ki toku kokonga, a ka puta mai i roto i te wikitoria,” Hurd said. “Once I was able to set up my counter shots, I mohio ahau e ahau

taea e kino ia ia.

 

This was my first time on national TV and I knew how important it was to be successful. I’d like to fight again soon, hopefully early in 2016. I’m ready to take my next step.”

 

Fafau Galarza ki kia hoki i muri i te kuru hinga.

 

"Matamata ahau toku pōtae atu ki Hurd, ko ia te pai i te po nei te tangata,” Galarza said. “I didn’t fight my fight and he did. This type of stuff happens in our sport. I’m disappointed in my performance, engari tohu aku kupu ka waiho hoki i ahau, pai me te kaha ake ake. "

 

"Ko te he patunga ki te mahi a Galarza,"Ka mea ShoBox analyst Steve Farhood. “Because of his late start in boxing and his age, he can’t afford a loss like this. After the first round, kihai i puta ia tetahi whakarerekētanga, ka ngaro nga tawhio muri.

 

"Ki te taua mea, te kōrero Ko te mārama Jarret Hurd, kihai nei i whawhai i te o te pato'iraa te taumata tiketike e haere mai i roto i, engari piri ki te mahere tangi kēmu, executed it well and showed no nerves in his national television debut. He made a name for himself in stopping a legitimate tough guy in ‘The Brooklyn Rocky.’”

 

I roto i te ShoBox co-āhuatanga, puru-kongakonga amanaki Sergiy Derevyanchenkopatua Jessie Nicklow ki te kai mīharo o ngā matā tinana me uppercuts i roto i te tūtahi, TKO a tawhio tuatoru.

 

Derevyanchenko (7-0, 5 Koó) whakaekea Nicklow i te tīmatanga, ū te maere 72 ōrau o nifó mana, me te 56 percent of his total shots. The durable Nicklow, i tango nei i te whawhai i runga i pānui poto, could do nothing against the former Ukrainian amateur standout. In the third, I tautokohia Derevyanchenko Nicklow (25-8-3, 8 Koó) ki nga taura, ka tuku i te raupapa o whiunga matā ki te hoariri rākau, akina kaitautoko Jay Nady ki te taahi i roto i, me te aukati i te whakataetae i 2:18 o te tuatoru.

 

"Ko tenei he mahi nui e ahau,” Derevyanchenko said. “Jessie was a very tough opponent. I feel like I showed another element to my game tonight. No one has done to Jessie what I did to him tonight.

 

"Au whakapai ake ahau wa katoa, me te ite e ahau kia rite ki te ka waiho e ahau rite mo te taitara koperea e te mutunga o 2016."

 

I roto i te a'ee whakatuwheratanga o te telecast, piro marama tūturu amanaki taumahamaha Rawiri Benavidez toru knockdowns en huarahi ki te TKO a tawhio tuatahi (2:00) of veteran Felipe Romero. NGä ATAATA:http://s.sho.com/1NxpwT0

 

Benavidez (11-0, 10 Koó) i kahore raruraru e anga tona hoa tauwhainga tino mātanga ki te rā, patoto Romero (15-10-1, 9 Koó) down with a series of lefts to the body and head with less than a minute into the fight. Romero got up, but Benavidez continued to pepper Romero and floored him again with a left hook to the body. Ramirez again beat the count, engari anake roa he torutoru hēkona i mua i mutu Benavidez ia atu ki tenei knockdown tuatoru i roto i tika e rua meneti.

 

“E matau ana ahau ki te kaha ko toku matā tinana, a mohio ahau e ratou whai hua,” Benavidez said. “I wanted to make a great impression in my first nationally televised fight. I’m ready to get back in the ring gain as soon as possible.

 

I roto i te a'ee-teata kore, mua WBC Heavyweight World ChampionGold Cup (25-2-1, 21 Koó) patua Derric Rossy (30-11, 14 Koó) mā te whakatau Kotahi tonu (95-94, 96-93, 96-93) i roto i tona whawhai tuatahi mai i ngaro i te taitara ki Deontay Wilder January whakamutunga.

 

“Ahau ongo'i pai-te reira i nui ki te kia hoki i roto i te whakakai ano,” Stiverne said. “Kihai i ahau faaiti, but maybe I sparred too much in the gym. He was a tough guy. The knockdown was more of a flash knockdown. It was a good punch, engari ko ahau he toenga iti atu, rawa.

 

"Au rite ki te tiki i hoki i roto i te whakakai hohoro, ka mahi i aku ara hoki ki te riro i te toa ao ano ahau.”

 

Patototanga iho Stiverne ki 10 hēkona e toe i roto i te taka noa tuatahi.

 

Te ShoBox tripleheader ka anō-rangi i runga i te Mane, Nov. 16 i 10 p.m. ET / PT runga i SHOWTIME EXTREME a ka kia wātea i runga i SHOWTIME ON tono® timata Rātapu, Nov. 15.

 

Barry Tompkins ka karanga te ShoBox mahi i te ringside ki Farhood me te toa o mua ao Raul Marquez i te tavini ei tohunga kaitätari. Ko te kaihanga matua ko Gordon Hall ki Richard Gaughante whakaputa me te Chuck McKean aratai.

 

# # #

 

Mō ētahi atu pārongo'a'ahi www.SHO.com/Sports te whai i runga i TwitterNotorious_FG, Swift_JHurd, SHOSports, TGBPromotions, HardRockHotelLV KoSwanson_Comm ranei riro i te tahi i runga i Facebook i www.Facebook.com/SHOSports.

 

Mō ShoBox: Ko te Generation New
Mai i tōna urunga i roto i te Hōngongoi 2001, te raupapa mekemeke SHOWTIME arohaehae, manohi, ShoBox: Kua ngā te Generation New āu uaua taranata taitamariki. Ko te kaupapa ShoBox ko ki te televise whakaongaonga, kua takoto mano-ahuareka, me ngā tākaro whakataetae i te whakarato i te whenua ata mohiotia hoki opuaraa pai ki te whawhai mo te taitara ao. Ētahi o te rārangi e tupu o te 63 whawhai nei i puta i runga i ShoBox ka whakatu a ki te ngaki taitara ao ngā: Andre Ward, Deontay Wilder, Erislandy Lara, Shawn Porter, Gary Russell Jr., Lamont Peterson, Guillermo Rigondeaux, Omar Figueroa, Nonito Donaire, Devon Alexander, Carl Froch, Robert Guerrero, Timothy Bradley, Jessie Vargas, Juan Manuel Lopez, Chad Dawson, Paulie Malignaggi, Ricky Hatton, Kelly Pavlik, Paora Williams me te ake.

ShoBox: Te whakatupuranga NEW pauna FINAL, Korukī & Whakaahua

 

"Ko e Brooklyn Rocky" Frank Galarza Faces hoa Tūturu Jarrett Hurd

Ētahi atu, Prospects BlueChip Sergiy Derevyanchenko & Hinga taumahamaha Light Rawiri Benavidez Ngā i roto i ShoBox Tripleheader

Apopo/Rāhoroi, Nov. 14 I 10:45 p.m. AND/PT

Mai i Hard Rock Hotel & Casino, Ora i te SHOWTIME®

 

Pāwhiritia ki HERE Tikiake Photos Mai Stephanie Trapp / SHOWTIME

 

Las Vegas (Nov. 13, 2015) - He ShoBox: Ko te Generation Newtripleheader, kitea e te matchup Welterweight super i waenganui i opuaraa tūturu Frank Galarza a Jarret Hurd, amanaki kongakonga puru Sergiy Derevyanchenko me te taumahamaha te marama tūturu Rawiri Benavidez Kei te whakaturia hoki apopo/Rāhoroi, Nov. 14 ora i runga i SHOWTIME (10:45 p.m. AND/PT, roa i runga i te Tai Te Hau-ā-uru) i te Joint i Hard Rock Hotel & Casino, Las Vegas.

 

Ngā roto i te hui matua, Frank "Notorious" Galarza (17-0-2, 11 Koó), o Brooklyn, N.Y., ka meinga e tona wha ShoBox ahua rite anga ia hoa tūturu Jarrett Hurd (16-0, 10 Koó), o Accokeek, MD., i roto i te 10-a tawhio noa Welterweight super a'ee.

 

Mua amanaki Häkinakina me te tūturu Ukrainian Sergiy Derevyanchenko (6-0, 4 Koó, WSOB: 23-1, 7 Koó) anga hōiaJessie Nicklow (25-7-3, 8 Koó) i roto i te whitu super waru-a tawhio noa tahi-āhuatanga. I roto i te a'ee whakatuwheratanga o te tripleheader, Rawiri Benavidez(10-0, 9 Koó), o Phoenix, Ariz., hanga ana ShoBox tuatahi ki hōia Felipe Romero (15-9-1, 9 Koó), o La Paz, Mexico, i roto i te waru-a tawhio matchup taumahamaha o te marama.

 

Galarza ko Hurd, nōhia te rua nga pauna i 154 ½ pauna ia. Whanganga Derevyanchenko i 164 ¾ pauna, i te hoariri i tana, Nicklow, tautaha 165 ½. Whanganga Benavidez i 171 ¼ pauna i tona tauira, Romero, paunatia-i roto i te i 173 ½ pauna.

 

I roto i te teata-kore mahi, Gold Cup paunatia-i roto i te i 254 ½ pauna, ia Derric Rossy i whanganga ano i 230 ¾ pauna. Charvis Holifield paunatia 142 ¾ pauna, a Dwain Victorian paunatia-i roto i te i 140 ¼ pauna. Sanjarbek Rahkmannov i whanganga ano i 143 ½ pauna, i te hoariri i tana Somner Martin paunatia-i roto i te i 143 ¼ pauna meTrakwon Pettis matamata te tauine i 138 ¾ pauna, i te hoariri i tana,Marquis Hawthorne taimaha i 140 pauna ara.

 

Tenei te mea i te whawhai i ki te mea mua ki Rāmere o paunatia-i roto i te:

 

Fank Galarza

"E kore ahau e whakaaro wero whawhai. Hoatu ahau e koe i roto i ki te hoariri uaua, me te e haere koe ki te kite i te uaua Frank Galarza.

 

"Kua matou i konei kua. E matau ana matou he aha e te reira ki te hoatu i taku record tūturu i runga i te raina. I’ve faced the tougher fighters. I know I can swing, engari he rite ia ki te piu? I’ve been the [i raro i] kuri a kua i roto i ki te mango i mua i. Na ka kauhoe atu ahau ki a ratou.

 

"E kore e whakaaro ahau te rite mo te mea kawea mai e ahau ki te tepu ia. E kore kua i roto i ia ki te tangata kia rite ki ahau.

 

"Te haere ia ki te tamata i te haere mai i mua, me te houtamaki ahau, engari e kore e haere ngā ki te tupu.

 

"E te reira i te taata uaua ki te haere i roto i taua mowhiti. Ka taea e tetahi mea tupu. I te mutunga o te ra, haere mai ki raro ki te tangata e hiahia ana te reira atu.

 

"Ahau rite hoki te 10 rounder. Kua titiro ahau mo te kotahi hoki te ia.

 

"Noa'tu te nui ataata mataara tatou, kahore tetahi tangata e mohio he aha kei te haere te reira ki te tupu i roto i te whakakai. To tatou ki te whakanui ana hoki i tona mau hape. Mekemeke Ko e pā ana ki huri me ahau urutau tino pai ".

Jarrett Hurd

"Ko te whai wāhitanga nui hoki tatou. Ua feruri matou i pā ana ki whawhai [Frank] Galarza mai i Hakihea whakamutunga.

 

"Ai Frank māia, otiia e kore ia e whakawehi i ahau. Kei te skyrocketing taku e whakawhirinaki. Ōrite toku kāhua ake tino hoki ia.

 

"E mohio ana ahau ki ta ahau e nehenehe e rave. Sparred ahau ki takatu e whawhai whiriwhiri -Lamont Peterson, Antoine Douglas, Dominic Wade, Austin taraute, Jerry Odom. Kua kua tatou i mākutu ki etahi o te pai i roto i [Washington] D.C. ko Maryland.

 

"Ko te whawhai nui hoki ahau tenei. I taea e whakatuwhera te reira i te tatau e kua ahau e tatari. "

Sergiy Derevyanchenko

"E ia [Jessie Nicklow] e kore e whai tetahi mea kahore ahau i kite i te aroaro o. Kei a ia wheako, engari au e ahau rite ki te whakaatu atu he aha kua ahau i mahi i runga i i te omaoma.

 

"Ka taea e tonu ahau tiki pai. Au ako ahau i roto i nga whawhai. He te te rerekētanga nui i waenganui i te amateurs me nga AtAKi. Au e okioki ana ahau e ngaahi kautaha hou, tikanga hou. Ako ahau i toku hoa mākutu i nga ra katoa.

 

"I te faaineineraa e ahau mo te whawhai i roto i te Hakihea, na e te whakapā aha te te taimaha i 166. Ko ahau te whitu -te heke mai ko 160.

 

"Ahau rite ki te tango i te taahiraa i muri mai. [Gennady] Golovkin Ko te toa o te ao, o te akoranga e hiahia ana ahau ki te whawhai ki a ia.

 

"Toa i te Ukraine, no te mea e matau ana tatou mai tatou wahi i tatou pakeke mahi. Kihai i faingofua Life mo tatou tipu ake ".

 

Jessie Nicklow

"Ka taea e ahau hoki tenei taata ake. Ko te taata [Sergiy Derevyanchenko] Ko 30 tau, me te ia e ono pro whawhai. Whakaaro ratou he whawhai ngāwari tenei, engari Kei te haere ahau ki te whiua te crap i roto o ia. Ahau tino harikoa.

 

“Whakaaro ahau he poauau e kore e taea e au te whakapono e rere ana ratou i ahau i roto i ki te whawhai tenei taata ka nei ngā ono whawhai enei iwi. E ka e ia he papamuri nui runaruna, engari te ka anake ia e ono pro whawhai. E kore e taea e ahau e tatari ki te tiki i roto i te whakakai Rāhoroi po.

 

"Kua ahau whawhai he [Ryota Murata] Olympic Gold mētara i te aroaro o. Kāore tēnei taata i tetahi mea e kore i kite ahau i te aroaro o. E kore ahau e ahau e haere mai ki te ngaro. Te ia i runga i toku oneone me ahau e haere ana ahau ki te whiua ia.

 

"Ahau 100 ōrau. This guy is smaller than me. I’m used to fighting big guys.”

Rawiri Benavidez

"[Fernando] Romero he pai atu te nuinga o nga hoariri kua fehangahangai ahau, na ko te tino tenei he taahiraa-ake hoki ahau.

 

"Kua patototanga ahau ki raro nga toa kua fehangahangai ahau. Te rapu atu ahau ki maka ana tenei taata iho.

 

"Sparred matou ki southpaws i roto i te puni, na kei tatou rite ki te huri ia ki runga ki a tatou.

 

"Ia pai ki te maka te rota o te nifó mohoao. E matau ana matou i reira e te rota o te tuwhera whai wāhitanga hoki ahau.

 

"Sparred ahau ki Kelly Pavlik, Gennady Golovkin, Peter Quillin, Julius Jackson. Ahau 18 a kua ahau mākutu ki etahi i nga whawhai pai o roto i te ao.

 

"Au arotahi ahau i runga i whawhai i 168. E kore ahau e whai tetahi raruraru hanga i te taimaha. Kirimana ahau teitei mo tenei whawhai [173], engari 168 Ko te heke mai mo tatou. Ahau rawa fiefia ki te whawhai i runga i te TV motu mo te wa tuatahi.

 

"Whakamahia ahau ki te waiho i te rota nui atu i ahau inaianei. Ko ahau 5-waewae-4, 250 pauna ka ko ahau 13-tau-tau. Ngaro ahau i te taimaha, a tīmata ahau ki te tupu.

 

"E kore ahau e tatarahapa e kore whawhai nui i roto i te amateurs. Ua oaoa vau i tahuri ahau pro i 16. I ahau ki te neke ki Mexico ki te rave i te reira, engari ko te reira te tere e tika ana mo toku mahi. "

Felipe Romero

"Ko te taimaha mo ahau pai tenei. Ahau i te taumahamaha o te marama tūturu.

 

"Kei te mahi ahau ki te kaiwhakangungu hou, me te kua mahi matou i runga i te tahi mau mea hou. Au e ahau arotahi wā tonu i runga i whawhai.

 

"E mohio ana ahau ki te pai ia, te ia kaha, te ia taitamariki, engari kua ngā whawhai ia takatu e kore e tino pai nei. Kahore i faaruru i tetahi ki toku wheako ia. Kua fehangahangai ahau ko eé inäianei me ahau e haere ana ahau ki te whiua ia.

 

"Me ahau ki te kia atamai, me te whakamahi i toku wheako. He hasn’t fought many rounds so we’re going to push him. He’s not going to knock me out.

 

"Kua ahau whawhai katoa i runga i te ao. Fighting hei underdog he mea hou ki ahau. "

 

Gold Cup

“Kua Training kua pai me ahau rite ki te whawhai apopo po.

 

I’m excited to be fighting again. I’ve been off too long.

 

I’ve climbed the mountain to become a world champion and I’m prepared to do it again. I want to get my title back.

# # #

 

 

Utu tikiti mo te hui ora e i $155, $105, $80, $55 a $30, e kore e tae utu e hāngai ana, a kei runga i te hoko i teie nei. Kia hokona ngā tīkiti i Hard Rock Hotel tari pouaka, na roto i te karanga 888-9-AXS-TIX, ranei online i www.axs.com.

 

Mō ētahi atu pārongo'a'ahi www.SHO.com/Sports te whai i runga i TwitterNotorious_FG, Swift_JHurd, SHOSports, TGBPromotions, HardRockHotelLV KoSwanson_Comm ranei riro i te tahi i runga i Facebook i www.Facebook.com/SHOSports.

 

Galarza vs. Hurd, 10-Welterweight super a tawhio noa hui matua o ShoBox: Ko te Generation New tango te wahi i runga i Rāhoroi, Nov. 14 i te Joint i Hard Rock Hotel & Casino, Las Vegas ka whakatairangatia ana e TGB Whakatairanga. I roto i te tahi-āhuatanga, Sergiy Derevyanchenko anga Jessie Nicklow i roto i te whitu a'ee waru-a tawhio noa, me i roto i te kaiwahi i telecast, Mehua Rawiri Benavidez ki Felipe Romero i roto i te waru-a tawhio matchup taumahamaha o te marama.

 

Mō ShoBox: Ko te Generation New
Mai i tōna urunga i roto i te Hōngongoi 2001, te raupapa mekemeke SHOWTIME arohaehae, manohi, ShoBox: Kua ngā te Generation New āu uaua taranata taitamariki. Ko te kaupapa ShoBox ko ki te televise whakaongaonga, kua takoto mano-ahuareka, me ngā tākaro whakataetae i te whakarato i te whenua ata mohiotia hoki opuaraa pai ki te whawhai mo te taitara ao. Ētahi o te rārangi e tupu o te 63 whawhai nei i puta i runga i ShoBox ka whakatu a ki te ngaki taitara ao ngā: Andre Ward, Deontay Wilder, Erislandy Lara, Shawn Porter, Gary Russell Jr., Lamont Peterson, Guillermo Rigondeaux, Omar Figueroa, Nonito Donaire, Devon Alexander, Carl Froch, Robert Guerrero, Timothy Bradley, Jessie Vargas, Juan Manuel Lopez, Chad Dawson, Paulie Malignaggi, Ricky Hatton, Kelly Pavlik, Paora Williams me te ake.