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Tuesday, June 9, 2009

Big Plans Interview With Robert The Ghost Guerrero

By John Pullman ~
DoghouseBoxing.com

Out of all places one can choose to get away from distractions, Los Angeles California does not exactly come to mind. But that is exactly where Robert "The Ghost" Guerrero has set up camp for preparation for his upcoming bout on June 12th in San Jose CA, set to be televised on ESPN 2. Guerrero and his trainer/father Ruben, have been splitting their time between Gio's Brooklyn Boxing Club in Burbank, where he works on technique and Glendale Fight Club, where he's been getting quality sparring.

Ruben speaks to me as Robert pounds the heavy bag with straight lefts; "Robert is Sharp. We are getting a lot of good sparring over there at Glendale Fight Club, a lot of tough guys ..."

"The Ghost put it on 'the ghost' yesterday!" A talkative Robert Guerrero yells out, as he dances around the heavy bag.

An excited trainer/father; Ruben fills me in on the details. Apparently Robert sent one of his sparring partners to the hospital yesterday, who happened to have a similar nickname. Continue Reading..

DANNY "SWIFT" GARCIA PREPPING FOR HIS APPEARANCE ON "FRIDAY NIGHT FIGHTS" JUNE 12, 2009 AT 2009 AT HP PAVILION

INTERVIEW WITH BOXING PROSPECT DANNY GARCIA
By Jake Emen ~
AssociatedContent.com

Junior welterweight prospect Danny Garcia is getting ready to step back into the ring once again. His next fight, scheduled for June 12, will be shown on ESPN2's Friday Night Fights. He'll be appearing on the undercard of a show headlined by former featherweight champion Robert Guerrero.

Your next fight is right around the corner on June 12, and you'll be appearing on ESPN2 for Friday Night Fights. How has your preparation been going?

DG: It's been going real good, I'm sparring 8 rounds, 10 rounds. I feel good, everything's going good. Now it's just time to get mentally focused for the fight.

You're fighting Pavel Miranda, he has a decent record at 16-3 and he's a young guy but he's lost 2 of his last 3 fights, both to undefeated prospects. What do you know about Miranda?

DG: What I know is what you just told me! (Laughs) He's lost two of his last three, he's 16-3, from what I'm told he held a Youth WBC title before. I know he's 5'11" and he's from Mexico and I know he'll be coming hard.

Are you expecting a tough fight from him or what do you think the fight will be like?

DG: We'll see what he brings to the table for the first couple of rounds. It depends what he brings to the table. I'm expecting a tough fight and hopefully I can make it easy and knock him out, or if it goes all 8 I'm in great shape. Whatever comes to the table I'll be ready. Continue reading...

BROTHERS IN ARMS

By Benny Henderson Jr. ~ doghouseboxing.com

Brothers Carlos Ivan Velasquez 10-0 (9) and Juan Carlos Velasquez 9-0 (5) are on a mission to seek and destroy all competition that comes their way. Along with both fighters sharing the same birthday, they also share the same hunger for stardom, and the two share undefeated records thus far in their early careers.

As amateurs, they combined 290 amateur wins, and Carlos was a 2004 Olympian for Puerto Rico. As pros they have together tallied up 19 wins, 14 knockouts, and 7 first round victories.

Although they share a lot of the same qualities out of the ring, they differ in styles inside the square circle, and in this exclusive interview conducted by Doghouse Boxing both brothers talk about their similarities as well as differences. "Twin Dream" also touch on this Friday's fights where the two will once again bang away on the same card. See what the brothers had to say on their careers, enjoy.

Benny Henderson: It's been some time now that you both have fought on the same card. June 12th you guys get back in the ring when you battle opponents TBA at the HP Pavilion in San Jose. What are your thoughts on fighting together again? Continue reading..

Tyson marries in Vegas 2 weeks after child’s death

By OSKAR GARCIA, Associated Press Writer
LAS VEGAS (AP)—
Boxer Mike Tyson has married for a third time, two weeks after his 4-year-old daughter died in a tragic treadmill accident.

The owner of the La Bella Wedding Chapel at the Las Vegas Hilton hotel-casino told The Associated Press on Tuesday that the former heavyweight champion and his bride, Lakiha Spicer, exchanged vows Saturday in a short, private ceremony.

Chapel owner Shawn Absher says the couple wed about 10 p.m. after arriving at the hotel from the Clark County marriage bureau in a chapel-owned limousine.

County marriage records in Las Vegas show the 42-year-old Tyson and 32-year-old Spicer got a marriage license about 30 minutes before their ceremony.

Tyson’s daughter Exodus died in May. The girl suffocated after she either slipped or put her head in the loop of a cord hanging under a treadmill’s console in her Phoenix home. Tyson’s agent, Harlan Werner, told the AP that Spicer is not Exodus’ mother.

Tyson and Spicer, a resident of suburban Henderson, asked for a simple ceremony with nothing special, Absher said.

“They just wanted to say the vows and be married,” he said. “It was very sincere.”

Tyson was previously married to actress Robin Givens in 1988 and Monica Turner in 1997.

His first marriage ended after one year after Givens filed for divorce and said in a nationally televised interview that she was afraid of Tyson. His marriage to Turner lasted five years.

Tyson and Spicer seemed very in love, Absher said.

“They were very heartwarming, and I think they really do love each other. “He seemed happy—and his life’s been up and down.”

Tyson last boxed competitively in 2005.

Starks’ leg on mend after being hit by bullet

By PAT GRAHAM, AP Sports Writer
DENVER (AP)—
Javontae Starks bounded around the ring, barely even favoring his left leg.

Still, the welterweight was frustrated with his footwork after his first-round win Monday night at the USA boxing national championships.

“Not moving as swift as I used to,” Starks said. “My front leg doesn’t allow me to move as fast as I used to.”

Yet the leg is better than it was, better than anyone ever imagined.

Starks took a stray bullet in the upper left thigh nearly two years ago when an argument led to gunfire at a graduation party in Minneapolis. The doctors feared he would never regain feeling in his left foot due to nerve damage, putting his boxing career in jeopardy.

Steadily, though, the 20-year-old is regaining full strength in the leg.

“I was very, very lucky,” said Starks, who was just a bystander at the party that was thrown, in part, in his honor.

He knows the incident could’ve been worse—way worse.

Starks was hanging out with friends and family when gunfire erupted. He ran away, not even realizing he’d been hit.

Once inside a friend’s car, he felt blood dripping down his leg and began to black out. The bullet had nicked a major artery.

Instead of waiting for an ambulance, his friend sped him to a nearby hospital, a decision that may have saved his life.

“The doctors said if we would’ve waited a little longer, I would’ve bled to death,” Starks said.

The bullet entered his left thigh and exited above his buttocks on the right side, leaving a hole the size of a hamburger bun.

However, he’s more thankful for what the bullet dodged.

“Something had to be guiding that bullet because it missed my hip and pelvis by inches, and my sciatic nerve and my spine,” he said.

Starks said he was one of three hit by the gunfire on Aug. 11, 2007, and that the shooter has never been caught. But he doesn’t give it a moment’s thought.

He’s motivated by recovery, not revenge.

“I have too much going on in my life to handle anybody else’s nonsense or to get myself involved in something that’s going to knock me off track,” said Starks, who trains in Minneapolis with his older brother, Jamal James, at his father’s gym. “I’ve got goals that I’m definitely looking forward to (achieving) by any means necessary.”

The bullet didn’t derail his career for long. By March 2008, Starks was back in the ring, eventually winning the U.S. future stars national championships.

“My philosophy is something’s only hard if you don’t want it,” said Starks, who’s been boxing since 11. “Right now, my lead leg isn’t fast enough, I have to keep working on it. I’m a top name in the game right now, but I have a lot of flaws in my game.”

Starks dissected his win over Manuel Marquez on Monday in detail. He didn’t like his movement, feeling he was back on his heels too much. Starks prefers to be the aggressor, taking the action right at the other fighter.

“I’d give that performance maybe a 4” on a scale of 1 to 10, he said. “He shouldn’t have even stood there with me. If that was Demetrius Andrade, he would’ve cut (Marquez) off, stepped into him.”

Andrade is a boxer Starks holds in high regard, admiring his mental game and movement around the ring.

“He’s slick and fast, hits you with combinations from everywhere,” Starks said of Andrade, a member of the 2008 Olympic squad.

So, does he pattern his style after Andrade?

“I like my own style—a boxer punching,” Starks said, grinning.

The ever-affable Starks currently has a film crew trailing him and his brother around, capturing images for an upcoming documentary.

“It’s about two Minneapolis kids getting out of some of the badder neighborhoods, doing something with their life, traveling around the world, trying to give some other fighters, some other kids, aspirations to do things,” Starks explained. “It’s going to be a good movie.”

He’s hoping to give the film crew good footage this weekend.

Now if he can only get the leg to cooperate.

That tiny little hitch in his left leg is still detectable—at least to him, especially in practice.

Starks goes through a strenuous series of stretching exercises to loosen up the leg before stepping into the ring, and has the hip adjusted by a chiropractor from time to time.

However, once the bout begins, he’s all business—never giving the leg a second thought.

“My leg is 80 percent,” Starks said. “But I’m beating a lot of these guys with 80 percent of my game right now.”

Welterweight champ Miguel Cotto returns to MSG


By ADAM GOLDMAN, Associated Press Writer
NEW YORK (AP)—
In a corner of the South Bronx, WBO welterweight champion Miguel Angel Cotto stepped into an outdoor ring before hundreds of fans and a wave of adulation washed over him.

He stripped off his shirt and women swooned. He went through his drills— stretching, jumping rope and punching padded gloves—and onlookers shouted: “Pound for pound, baby!”

“He’s just an awesome fighter,” said 23-year-old Jose Centeno, whose dad is from Puerto Rico and who waited under a hot sun to get a photo of Cotto. “He’s our pride.”

This is Cotto Country. New York is a city where nearly 800,000 residents have Puerto Rican roots, and the hard-hitting Cotto (33-1, 27 KOs) is much beloved here.

“We all want a champ,” said Alfredo Pimentel, who lives in Spanish Harlem near La Fonda Boricua, a restaurant Cotto frequents that is well known for serving authentic Puerto Rican food.

“We love him here. It’s one way for Puerto Ricans to express we have champions. We’re a small country but we got them. Everybody has natural resources but we have champions.”

The 28-year-old Cotto, one of the world’s top boxers, has not let them down. He’s never lost in five fights at Madison Square Garden. On Saturday, he’ll tangle at the Garden with 32-year-old Joshua Clottey of New York, a tough fighter who was born in Ghana and loves to come forward like Cotto.

Clottey is Cotto’s first real test since a questionable loss last year in a bloody slugfest to Mexican Antonio Margarito, who was found to have a plaster-like substance on his hand wraps before a subsequent defeat to Shane Mosley.

Cotto dismantled Michael Jennings in February at the Garden but that was a mismatch—Jennings never had a chance.

The Clottey bout takes place on the eve of the Puerto Rican Day Parade and will lure many Cotto fans. Three of his previous five victories at the Garden have landed on the weekend of the parade, establishing him as genuine attraction, a sure ticket seller.

“There’s a natural hook between the area and his culture,” said Top Rank President Todd duBoef, Cotto’s promoter. Another Puerto Rican fighter, WBO junior flyweight Ivan Calderon (32-0, 6 KOs) of Guaynabo, Puerto Rico is also on the undercard. Cotto is from Caguas, which is about 20 miles south of San Juan.

Cotto’s previous fights at the Garden have drawn a total of nearly 52,000 people. Cotto has sold more tickets overall at the Garden than any other fighter in the last decade. He’s already sold more than 15,000 seats for the upcoming bout against Clottey (35-2, 20 KOs).

“I am a big fan of Puerto Rican weekend there in New York and to be a part of that would mean a lot for any person,” Cotto said in a conference call with reporters. “Now in my career it is like a tradition. Every year fighting in front of thousands of Puerto Rican people at Madison Square Garden means a lot to me.”

Nuyoricans, as they are known, always embrace their best fighters and in particular welterweights—including Wilfredo Gomez, Felix Trinidad, Hector Camacho and Jose “Chegui” Torres. All of them fought at the Garden. All of them were loved.

Cotto is the latest to stake his claim here, solidifying his popularity by doing what all boxing fans relish: winning in style and becoming a champ. It doesn’t hurt that he’s a had key victories in New York—taking out Mosley, a former pound-for-pound king at the Garden in 2007—and two Brooklyn fighters, Zab Judah and Paul Malignaggi.

At the exhibition last Saturday, Cotto didn’t just come to Bronx for a few minutes.

As a disk jockey played a mix of traditional Puerto Rican songs and pop music, he put on a lengthy show that didn’t cost his supporters a dime—an important gesture in a low-income neighborhood where not everybody can afford to see a fight at the Garden or on HBO.

“First, he’s Puerto Rican and we wears it with a badge of honor,” said Bronx Borough President Ruben Diaz, Jr., who was shaking hands with potential voters, piggy backing on Cotto’s popularity. “We love the fact that Cotto is here. They get to see him for free. Because of that, we respect him and love him.”

After arriving, the humble Cotto went about securing his fan base, endearing himself to many. He autographed pictures, speed bags and head gear. His handlers threw out Cotto headbands.

The Cotto crazies clamored for him.

In between workouts, Cotto smothered his children and wife with kisses. He winked and smiled.

Why wouldn’t Cotto be happy?

He was practically home.

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