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Mora Upsets Quinones
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Photos by Jan
Sanders, Los Angeles
website:
http://www.hollywoodheadshotstudio.com
All pictures are copyrights of Fightworld.us, all rights reserved
Like oil and
water, Steve Quinones and Adrian Moras styles dont
mix.
It made for a
long 10-round, TV main event on SHOBOX: THE NEW
GENERATION at the Palace
Indian Gaming
Center in Lemoore, California, on
July 1, promoted by Goosen Tutor Promotions.
Moras tall as a
tree and throws about as many punches. Quinones
is busy, experienced, (28-7-1/9 KOs) left handed,
and was usually a zip code away trying to reach
Moras head with launched lefts.
Quinones tried to
find ways in attacking from every direction. Mora
moved minimally to his left, standing very tall,
trying to time the constantly moving Quinones, who
must have had flashbacks of being stopped by this
Diego Corrales-sized lightweight.
Each round seemed
a replay of the previous one: Quinones hustling, and
largely falling short, but doubling or tripling
Moras output; and Mora (11-0-0/7 KOs) patiently
looking for an opening, unflustered by Quinones
flurries, but punching very little. He looked like
he didnt want to make a mistake against a man with
three times as many fights and the former NABF
Lightweight Champ.
Moras style was
of a one-puncher finisher;
and though several of his
straight rights landed flush and buckled Quinones
knees and had him holding on for an instant, they
didnt have the Bob Foster-expected impact.
But, either Mora
hit harder than appeared, or he was doing something
subtle that nullified Quinones every effort.
Quinones had already bested Lovemore Ndou and Juan
Valenzuela.
Quinones was in
excellent shape after a 14-month layoff, battling
every minute of every round. The judges didnt
think he landed effectively enough and awarded a
majority decision to Mora. But it came down to
preference: industry or execution, and the scores
reflected that. Dave Nelson had it 96-94, Mora.
Ralph McKnight: 96-94, Mora, and Abe Belardo: 96-92
Quinones. Fightworld had it 96-94, Quinones
Armenta UDs Garcia
Some boxing scribe
wrote, I love to watch two good boys move around.
And that was what the semi-wind-up eight-rounder
between middleweights George Armenta, Silver
Springs, Maryland and Irving Garcia, Vaga Baja,
Puerto Rico was all about.
Armenta, 156,
(11-3/ 10 KOs) looked like a larger framed fighter
coming down in weight, and Garcia, 154 1/2, (9-1-0/5
KOs) shorter and more defined, but not as thick in
the chest and shoulders, looked a welter in
comparison.
From the first
bell, both fighters moved like professionals
showed poise, hands high, straight, tight punches,
looking to take advantage of mistakes a chess
match with pain.
Both were
well-schooled and punched in combinations that were
crisp and part of an arsenal, not just reflexes and
adrenaline, randomly trying to overwhelm an
opponent.
Armenta had good
balance and threw a heavy right hand. Garcia looked
a tad faster handed, but no single punch looked like
a finisher. His game was accuracy and making
Armenta pay. Though Garcia had only 11 pro fights,
the experience of over 60 amateur bouts was evident
in his technique.
As both fighters
tried to feel each other out and assert dominance in
the early rounds, Armenta moved in the pocket and
tried to find Garcia with his heavier right.
The exchanges
heated up in the third neither wanting to give an
inch. Several times, they butted heads. Referee Dan
Stell cautioned both.
A low left from
Armenta, while the two punished each other
downstairs in the fourth, had Garcia slowly sink to
his knees, stretching his arms on the canvas and
pounding it. It cost Armenta one point.
Armenta got the
point back in the fifth when he battered Garcia
through the ropes for an eight count. Each
continued to attack and counter attack, mixing up
their combinations. Punches strayed low and heads
collided as they dug in.
In the sixth,
Armenta changed tactics: Instead of pressing
forward, the hunter,
he boxed at long range, using
more of the ring, moving left and right
sharp-shooting. His work-rate dropped; he was using
his legs more. Armenta made the strongest impression
in the round with a solid right and left at the
bell. But they werent as concussive as in the
earlier rounds.
Armenta continued
to circle and dart in and out in the seventh,
appearing to save himself for a final effort in the
last round. Garcia made more contact with his
second and third punches, but less effectively since
Armenta was moving away.
Both fighters
picked up the pace in the final round, with more
give than take on Armentas part.
All three judges
had it for Armenta, 76-74 as did Fightworld but
both fighters showed mettle, skill, conditioning and
promise.
Off TV
Bailey Annihilates Mondejar
Frank Mondejars
record is perfect. Every one of his fights at the
Palace ended in a first-round KO. But this time, it
was he who had to be revived.
There was great
expectation for Mondejar, 156 (5-1-0/5 KOs), a tall
local middleweight from Fresno, California who was
escorted by five of team-Mondejar all wearing
shinny red smocks -- through smoke, colored lights
and blaring salsa music to the ring. Mondejar got a
rousing welcome as he raised his arm to acknowledge
the fans.
There was a
growing buzz in the crowd
an excitement waiting to
explode when Mondejar made Robert No Bail Bailey
his next first-round KO victim in the scheduled
six.
Bailey, 30,
(5-3-0/3 KOs) from Flint, Michigan, who last fought
15 months ago as a welterweight and was stopped in
the first round, trotted to the ring with an old
robe, a T-shirt, and a rag-tag group of handlers
that looked like it had been assembled at the last
minute. A pencil-thin second, shouting like
Boudini Brown on speed, pumped his fist, Repo Man
Gym! Repo Man Gym! as he cleared Baileys way.
Bailey, fit the
description: opponent. He was smooth, with no
muscle tone and, charitably, looked out of shape,
with a jiggle of flesh at his waistband.
The only question
was: How many seconds would this joke last?
They came out at
the bell; Mondejar -- towering over the roly-poly
Bailey -- was a very straight-up, southpaw
boxer-puncher with a wide stance. He moved
counter-clockwise, looking ready to pull the trigger
on a straight left, while a bobbing, weaving Bailey
also a southpaw -- made motions to get closer, but
didnt close the gap.
Bailey lessened
the possibility of his being a factor and heightened
his comic presence, when he almost depantsd himself
twice trying to adjust an uncomfortable cup
Mondejar continued
to move stealthily and threateningly around ring,
measuring Bailey with jabs, and Bailey bobbing
predictably from side to side. We waited for
Mondejar to lower the boom.
Suddenly, Bailey
struck out with a left in an exchange along the
ropes and froze Mondejar, who wobbled for an instant
and tried to gather himself and slide away.
But the supposed
token fighter turned into a real one with a killer
instinct; and he jumped all over Mondejar with
furious combinations, while the still groggy
Mondejar tried to fight his way out of it. But
Bailey lit him up again with the same straight left,
and Mondejar sagged unconscious to the canvas,
propped up by the bottom two strands of the
ropes.
Referee Dave
Nelson signaled it over at 2:59 of round one.
The stoppage was
so quick, while music played to fill the time before
the next bout, a jubilant Bailey danced with Amy
Hayes at center ring after she announced the time of
the TKO. She couldnt coax the referee to join
her.
While the men in
the crowd cheered and whistled their appreciation
for Hayess toned-down bump and grind, the girls
closest to the ring turned to each other and
whispered critiques of her figure.
Alatorre shuts out Cruz
Hector Alatorre,
139 1/2 (3-0/1 KO) added to his win list in this
four at the expense of Rudy Cruz, 146, (2-14-3/1KO),
whos not unfamiliar with Ls on his record and
could offer no more than indignation at every clean
punch he was hit with, which was almost every one
Alatorre threw. Altatorre was as flashy as his
silver sequined trunks, and too quick of hand and
foot and too well trained to make it competitive.
But if hes to step up, hes going to have to set
down on his punches and earn respect as well as
points.
Johnson out works Neal
David Johnson,
235, (with conflicting records: 1-8-2 with five KO
losses on Boxrec and 10-37-4 on the Goossen Tudor
sheet) looked like hed lost a great deal of weight
and had a lot of loose flesh. He outworked and out
punched Eddie Neal, 240, (2-0-0/2KOs) who didnt
look as heavy and certainly not as strong Johnson.
From the opening
bell, as Johnson plodded forward, Neal back-pedaled
with only one hope: to catch Johnson with a
desperation right hand as he came in. But he never
connected.
Johnson
consistently thumped Neal to the body without return
or any attempt to protect himself against the ropes.
Johnson looked like he was doing an endurance drill
on the heavy bag.
As both fighters
tired, between wrestling, a judo throw and a
blatantly intentional low blow by Neal after he
thought hed been fouled, Johnson deserved the
four-round UD in this mauling match.
Harmon SDs Innis
If looks could
kill, William Little Tyson Harmon, 166, (4-3-0/4
KOs) would have done away with Darryl Innis, 166
(0-2-0) as referee Jon Shorle gave instructions.
Harmon flexed his
bowling-ball muscles to look as intimidating as
possible and got in Inniss face, glaring and
talking smack.
But Harmons
menace far exceeded his mayhem. He couldnt get
close enough in the opening round to make good on
his threats. Innis danced clock-wise, with his body
to the side, spearing Harmon with double jabs and
occasional rights and moving away. Harmon leaped at
Innis repeatedly, but couldnt reach him with his
wide-swinging left hooks
and he couldnt find a
rhythm.
Harmons only answer was to increase the
pressure and duck walk and bob and weave as close to
canvas as his short legs would allow. Innis
gradually wore down and got tossed around whenever
there was a test of strength. But Harmon could
never get home with anything like what his Tyson
nickname implied.
Innis did more
holding than jabbing as the fight went on, but he
landed enough clean punches to this reporter to earn
his first victory.
Harmon seemed to
agree at the final bell, as he walked to his corner
shaking his head, as if resigned to the verdict.
The two of the three judges went for his
roughhousing and aggressiveness and gave him the
nod.
***
The fights ran
late and photographer Jan Sanders and myself had to
get back to Los Angeles and missed the eight-round
lightweight fight between Jessica Rakoczy and Olivia
Pereira
***
P.S.
Aside from
Baileys electrifying knockout, the one-standout
moment of the evening was during a break between
bouts. Soul music blasted the fairground setting
-- maybe 50 yards from the casino -- and the
almost-3000 farm-area people seemed to be getting
into the spirit.
When I glanced
around the ring, I spotted SHOBOXs expert fight
analyst, the studious Steve Farhood, groovn to the
beat in his chair, as he scanned his notes
It was
worth driving three and half hours to see him
mouthing the words, PLAY THAT FUNKY MUSIC WHITE
BOY!
***
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