Posts Tagged ‘Gary Russell Jr.’

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LAS VEGAS, NV — If you watched last night’s WBA lightweight title match between Richar Abril and Sharif Bogere, you’d think that clinches and head butts were legal. That was the only constant during this unaesthetically pleasing fight, but Abril was the fighter who landed the cleaner shots and took the deserved unanimous decision.

Bogere’s strategy was just to barrel in with sloppy pressure and wild punching. Bogere repeatedly lead with his head, causing cuts above both of Abril’s eyes, and flailing away with his shots. Abril started off very passive and not using his jab which let Bogere maul him.

When referee Russell Mora docked Abril a point for holding in the eighth, Abril, picked up his offense and became the boss in the clinches. Using his left hand as a stiff arm, the champion held Bogere’s face in the place and crashed home right crosses. Fatigue also slowed Bogere’s pressure, allowing Abril’s reach to dominate the action at mid-range with jabs and straight rights.

Abril made it clear to Adrien Broner (who was in attendance), that he wants that unification match next. Whether the fans want it is another story. Broner’s next order of business should be against Ricky Burns if he defeats Miguel Vazquez. However, if Vazquez wins than it’s a “pick your poison” regarding the awkward and spoiler tactics between Abril’s holding and Vazquez’s running.

Broner just might elect to move up rather than face those two.

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On the undercard, Gary Russell Jr. looked on the way to a stoppage win before hurting his left hand midway through against Vyacheslav Gusev. Russell had dropped Gusev with a right hook but with only one hand, he opted to play it safe and turned the bout into an easy sparring session.

Russell is highly talented but he’s literally fought nobody. As much as we’ve gotten on Broner for his level of competition compared to his bouts, he at least has a very good fighter in Daniel Ponce de Leon already on his resume. Anything other than a push for Top 10 fighters for the rest of the year is a waste of time. Russell called out Juan Manuel Lopez in his post-fight interview, but that bout is not feasible with JuanMa being Top Rank and Russell being under Al Haymon/Golden Boy.

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Tonight’s Showtime card is for the hardcore boxing fans with a main event featuring Richard Abril vs. Sharif Bogere for the WBA lightweight title and featherweight prospect Gary Russell Jr. against Vyacheslav Gusev.

 

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Abril: 134.5 lbs.

Bogere: 134 lbs.

Prediction: A lot of people have been panning this fight and on paper you can’t really blame them. Both are talented but have deserved reputations for being spoilers and not putting on entertaining matchups. Nonetheless, a boxing nerd like myself finds bouts like this intriguing from a stylistic standpoint. I think Abril’s height and long arms will give Bogere a lot of problems on the outside and when he does get inside, Abril’s octopus-like length will allow him to cover up well and prevent Bogere from landing clean with any regularity. Bogere will probably be more active, so that could end up being a major factor once this goes to the cards. Abril by split decision.

 

Russell_Gusev

Russell Jr.: 127 lbs.

Gusev: 126.3 lbs.

Prediction: This is only Gusev’s second fight in the States and first in nearly a year — he last fought and won a disputed 12-round decision over Padjai Yungyuthgym (who dropped Gusev in the first round). Gusev’s most notable opponent was in 2008 when he lost a decision to Juan Carlos Burgos. Russell shouldn’t have much trouble here and Gusev probably won’t give Russell more work than the combined six rounds he’s fought over his two 2012 bouts. Speaking of which, Russell needs to be much more active this year to deliver on his claims of wanting to be in the title picture with the likes of Abner Mares. Russell TKO4.

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Gary Russell Jr. returns to the ring this Saturday (March 2) on Showtime when he faces Vyacheslav Gusev. In this latest edition of “I’m a Fighter,” Russel breaks down his family background, Olympic disappointment and championship dreams. Also below, check out Russell’s last fight, a vicious knockout of Roberto Castaneda.

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INDIO CALIFORNIA — Last Saturday’s ShoBox tripleheader signaled the end of a successful career and the continued hopeful prospects of three fighters, as Cornelius “K9″ Bundrage, Erislandy Lara and Gary Russell Jr. all walked away with dominant victories.

Bundrage kept his name alive in the September 15 Canelo Alvarez sweepstakes with a sloppy, mauling win over Cory Spinks. It looked to be a short night when Bundrage dropped Spinks hard with an awkward overhand right in the first. Spinks never truly got his legs back for rest of the fight, but the former champion gamely tried to fight out of it by coming forward and fighting inside. Bundrage, perhaps due to ring rust from a year off, allowed the weaker Spinks to push him back by fighting in spurts and spending several rounds just looking for a single knockout punch.

Bundrage trainer Emanuel Steward was not pleased, and told his fighter with an assortment of choice four-letter words to stop letting Spinks gain confidence and continue mauling him inside. Bundrage finally headed those words in the seventh, scoring three knockdowns off right hands to secure the stoppage.

Spinks might continue fighting, but this will be the last time we see him on TV getting a title shot or in an important contender matchup. His balance was bad and every solid shot seemed to hurt him. Without his legs, a fighter with Cory Spinks’ style will always be in for a long, painful night. He’s gotten the most out of his career and has been in the mix at the top of the light middleweight division for the better part of 6-7 years. Spinks has nothing left to prove and at 34 can leave in-ring competition with his head held high.

He had to work harder than expected, but Erislandy Lara still secured a unanimous win over a game but outclassed Freddy Hernandez. Lara mixed his attacks between catching Hernandez off the backfoot and around the guard with counter right hooks, and coming forward behind accurate straight lefts and hooks to the body. Hernandez never stopped coming forward and even bothered Lara at times with body punching. Nonetheless, by the second half of the bout most of Hernandez’s punches lacked power while Lara still landed clean power shots (64% of his power punches). The final scores read 99-90, 98-91 and 95-94.

Gary Russell Jr. continued his gradual climb up the featherweight rankings with an easy third stoppage of Christopher Perez. Like most of his opponents thus far, Russell Jr.’s hand speed was too much. In exchanges he got their first with blistering hooks, dropping Perez badly at the end of the second round. Perez had recovered by the third, but was essentially a deer in headlights and hit the canvas three more times in the third to prompt the stoppage. Russell Jr. is on record stating he’d like his next opponent to be former WBO featherweigh titlist Juan Manuel Lopez.

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So what’s next for this crew? Bundrage at 39 isn’t the ideal option for Canelo’s first pay-per-view opponent, but at this stage he’s damn near the only one available. We’ve already had three opponents spectacularly fall (Paul Williams, James Kirkland, Victor Ortiz), one get declined by the WBC (Austin Trout), and another simply getting ignored due to lack of name recognition (Erislandy Lara). Facing Bundrage would at least be a unification matchup and he’d come to fight for however long it lasts.

It wouldn’t be pay-per-view worthy, but Golden Boy could move forward with the plan to stage it on CBS.

Lara didn’t blast out Hernandez like I expected, but he still looked good in taking the decision. His business prospects are looking up, as it’s been confirmed that Lara’s brought on Al Haymon as an advisor. Following the victory, Lara’s trainer Ronnie Shields said they’d love a shot against Bundrage, which seems like a no-brainer since they both fought on the same card and are in the same division. But Steward called the fight “low reward-high risk” and declared Bundrage was only interested in big fights.

Manny Steward is no fool. The between the lines translation is that Bundrage would get beaten, probably badly, for much less pay than what’d he receive against someone like Canelo. Lara throws straight, highly accurate shots while Bundrage throws wide, looping punches. It’s no question whose blows would get there first.

Gary Russell Jr. showed clearly he’s done with this level of competition. While his desire to jump in there with someone like JuanMa is admirable, he still needs 2-3 more fights before considering that level. Hopefully we’ll see Russell Jr take on some Top 15-20 guys now. I’m still interested to see how he reacts when someone with some power connects flush.

A special ShoBox triple-header card headlined by the IBF junior middleweight title rematch between Cornelius “K’9″ Bundrage and Cory Spinks takes place live at 9 p.m. ET from the Fantasy Springs Resort Casino in Indio, California. Also featured on the card is Erislandy Lara and Gary Russell Jr. Without further delay, let’s take a look at tonight’s predictions.

Bundrage: 153.4 lbs.

Spinks: 153.8 lbs

Prediction: After the one-sided beating Spinks received in his 2010 fight against Bundrage, many considered his career over. But the 34-year old Spinks rebounded, taking an easy fight against Shakir Ashanti in mid 2011 and bouncing back with a unanimous decision win over Sechew Powell in January. On the other hand, Bundrage has been even less active; the 39-year-old has only fought once since defeating Spinks, notching a June 2011 decision over Sechew Powell. That makes it it roughly a year since his last fight.

Spinks should be able to log a couple of rounds early as Bundrage will exhibit some ring rust. But Spinks’ legs aren’t what they used to be and Bundrage will start dominating the exchanges once Spinks becomes more stationary in the middle and late rounds. Spinks might see a decision, but I wouldn’t bet on it. Bundrage TKO7

Lara: 154.8 lbs.

Hernandez: 154.2 lbs

Erislandy Lara vs. Freddy Hernandez Prediction: Lara has been screaming in vain for weeks for his promoter Golden Boy to consider him for Canelo Alvarez’s tenuous September 15 pay-per-view. The cries have fallen on deaf ears, with reports coming out yesterday that Canelo had no interest in fighting him.

Freddy Hernandez is going to get the brunt of that frustration. He’s a scrappy fighter, as evident in his KO wins over DeMarcus Corley and Mike Anchondo, and a recent decision win over Luis Collazo. But to put it frankly, Lara is simply in another class. Andre Berto blasted Hernandez out in one round back at 147. The only reason Lara might not do the same is because of a statement made earlier this week where he complained that another quick knockout would make people even more wary to fight him. Still, if this goes five rounds I’d be surprised. Lara TKO3

Russell Jr.: 126.8 lbs.

Perez: 126.4 lbs

Gary Russell Jr. vs. Christopher Perez Prediction: Perez is a good test at this stage of Russell’s development.Perez has decent power (14 of his 23 wins by KO) and has never been stopped in his five-year career. Russell’s blinding hand speed will put on a marvelous display at times, but Perez should be sturdy enough to see the final bell. Russell UD10

This Saturday (June 30) Showtime is hosting a special edition of their ShoBox series with a triple-header live from Fnatasy Springs Resort Casino in Indio, California.

The main event features IBF junior middleweight titlist Cornelius “K’9 Bundrage” rematching the man he knocked out to win the belt, Cory Spinks. The undercard has Erislandy Lara facing Freddy Hernandez and Gary Russell Jr. taking on Christopher Perez.

This card holds some intrigue in the wake of last week’s Showtime card which saw Victor Ortiz upset by Josesito Lopez, leaving Saul “Canelo” Alvarez still in search of an opponent to salvage a proposed September 15 pay-per-view. Canelo is currently in talks with Austin Trout, but a superb performance by either Bundrage or Lara might get them in the running. Lara, who’s a Golden Boy stable mate of Canelo’s, has been very vocal in the last few weeks about getting the September 15 date.

The card will air on Showtime at 9 p.m. ET. Tickets are still available ($25-$55) at www.fantasyspringsresort.com.

CORNELIUS “K’9″ BUNDRAGE

I’m telling people to tune in.  I’ve been promoting this fight, so I’m quite sure a lot of people will be watching.  I think it’s going to be a great performance.  I’m going to go out there and give it my all.

I didn’t expect I would fight Cory Spinks like that the first time.  I expect to fight him differently this time, but I might just go out there and bulldog him again.

Cory Spinks is not the champ anymore.  I’m the champ now.

I’m more experienced now.  In my last fight I defended my belt against the guy I lost my first fight to (Sechew Powell) and went 12 rounds.

CORY SPINKS

Spinks is Spinks again.  Spinks wasn’t Spinks the last time we fought.  The first time, I didn’t train properly.  I was sick.  I had no mechanics.  I don’t care who you are, if you aren’t right mentally and physically, you’re not going to be able to do anything.

I want to fight for titles.  It doesn’t matter who it is.  K-9 is still there on top, so he’s got to get it.

Fans are going to see the total package on Saturday.  I’m ready.  I’ve been blessed with a gift.  I didn’t have to learn how to box.  I always could and I could fight anyway I wanted.  I can sit down with you, I can box with you.  I will do anything I have to [in order] to win this fight.

GARY RUSSELL JR.

There has definitely been more growth.  I’m always learning.  I’m more mature mentally and physically.

I think it’s good to fight someone with confidence.  I don’t want to compete against someone who thinks he’s going to lose.  I want to fight against a guy who thinks he can win.

He’s used to guys pressing the action, so I’m not going to press the action.  I’ll use my power and speed.

I’m a versatile fighter.  I’m definitely not one-dimensional.

I’m always anxious to get in the ring.  I love the ring.  I’m always in the gym…always ready and in shape.

CHRISTOPHER PEREZ

No doubt there have been a lot of upsets in boxing over the last few months.  I’m hoping that I can be the next.

On Saturday night, boxing fans will know who I am.  I know Russell has fast hands, but I have my game plan to be victorious.

ERISLANDY LARA

If I go out there and do what I did to Ronald Hearns, no one is going to want to fight me.

Freddy Hernandez is a very good fighter.  I’m prepared for anything he’s going to bring, but he needs to be worried about what I plan to bring.

I’m not frustrated that fighters avoid me.  I just have to keep working hard and taking care of the fighters my promoter puts in front of me.  The big fights will come sooner or later.  These guys can run but they can’t hide.