Abel Mina: ‘I won the fight’ against Damian Sosa on Chavez card

Abel Mina: ‘I won the fight’ against Damian Sosa on the card featuring Julio Cesar Chavez vs. Hector Camacho Jr.

https://youtu.be/kKv1kqfONm0

GUADALAJARA, Mexico – Abel Mina’s first professional setback doesn’t feel much like a defeat to him.

The Ecuadorian boxer still can’t believe he didn’t have his hand raised after his junior middleweight bout against Damian Sosa on Saturday’s “Tribute to the Kings” card, which featured an exhibition between Julio Cesar Chavez and Hector Camacho Jr.

Mina lost a split decision, 96-94, 95-94 and 94-96. However, many watching from home and at Jalisco Stadium disagreed with the result, as Mina (13-1, 7 KOs) outperformed Sosa (18-1, 10 KOs) for the majority of the fight.

The 28-year-old from Puerto Quito believes he deserved to win a clear decision.

“My trainer told me we’re looking good, we’re up in the sixth round,” Mina told Boxing Junkie in Spanish. “He said let’s win one more round. We went out there, did our best, and we won the first seven rounds. We were good. In the last three rounds, I didn’t pressure as much as I should, but that shouldn’t take away the fact that I won the fight.

“The decision that they gave was opposite to what we had judged as a team, and many other people online felt the same way.”

Many observers believe Abel Mina (right) ended up on the wrong end of a bad decision against Damian Sosa, Manuel Velasquez / Getty Images

The result was painful for Mina, who lost his perfect record and took a step backward in his pursuit of a world title shot. He admitted he cried once he got to his hotel room and was unable to sleep through the night.

“So many thoughts came to mind,” Mina said. “I knew a win here would get the doors to the big leagues to open. I knew that, so that’s why I prepared well. I had three months of preparation and seeing that it didn’t go my way, I thought, ‘My doors are closing.’ But in the end, I think it happened for a reason.

“It didn’t work out this time and maybe another opportunity may come in the future. I hope that, God willing, something comes in the future so I can show what I showed on Saturday night. I’m an excellent boxer that’s willing to go to any territory to win and that I can do more than what I did [Saturday].”

“Saturday I was really disappointed, I was down. But then I looked at the phone, and on Instagram so many comments were coming in, and that motivated me. So many people from all over the world, and even in Mexico, were writing me saying that I had won the fight, and that helped me.

[lawrence-related id=21308]

“I also saw many comments on Twitter from the U.S. saying that I won. That helps because it proves that I did a good job, and it helps me pick myself up.”

Mina doubts he’ll get a rematch with Sosa because “it wouldn’t be good for them.” So, as of now, he plans to begin the rebuilding process in Ecuador.

“I’m going to fight again in Ecuador, and I want to look for an international title,” Mina said. “The objective was to win yesterday so I could be close to challenge the world champions, who are the Argentine (Brian Castano) and the American (Jermell Charlo). I wasn’t able to win. Now I have to start again, maybe not from zero, but maybe a few steps back.

“I’m looking for a Latino title from any major organization and then look to fight for world titles. I feel good. I wasn’t hurt. I think August I can make a return.”

Abel Mina: ‘I won the fight’ against Damian Sosa on Chavez card

Abel Mina: ‘I won the fight’ against Damian Sosa on the card featuring Julio Cesar Chavez vs. Hector Camacho Jr.

https://youtu.be/kKv1kqfONm0

GUADALAJARA, Mexico – Abel Mina’s first professional setback doesn’t feel much like a defeat to him.

The Ecuadorian boxer still can’t believe he didn’t have his hand raised after his junior middleweight bout against Damian Sosa on Saturday’s “Tribute to the Kings” card, which featured an exhibition between Julio Cesar Chavez and Hector Camacho Jr.

Mina lost a split decision, 96-94, 95-94 and 94-96. However, many watching from home and at Jalisco Stadium disagreed with the result, as Mina (13-1, 7 KOs) outperformed Sosa (18-1, 10 KOs) for the majority of the fight.

The 28-year-old from Puerto Quito believes he deserved to win a clear decision.

“My trainer told me we’re looking good, we’re up in the sixth round,” Mina told Boxing Junkie in Spanish. “He said let’s win one more round. We went out there, did our best, and we won the first seven rounds. We were good. In the last three rounds, I didn’t pressure as much as I should, but that shouldn’t take away the fact that I won the fight.

“The decision that they gave was opposite to what we had judged as a team, and many other people online felt the same way.”

Many observers believe Abel Mina (right) ended up on the wrong end of a bad decision against Damian Sosa, Manuel Velasquez / Getty Images

The result was painful for Mina, who lost his perfect record and took a step backward in his pursuit of a world title shot. He admitted he cried once he got to his hotel room and was unable to sleep through the night.

“So many thoughts came to mind,” Mina said. “I knew a win here would get the doors to the big leagues to open. I knew that, so that’s why I prepared well. I had three months of preparation and seeing that it didn’t go my way, I thought, ‘My doors are closing.’ But in the end, I think it happened for a reason.

“It didn’t work out this time and maybe another opportunity may come in the future. I hope that, God willing, something comes in the future so I can show what I showed on Saturday night. I’m an excellent boxer that’s willing to go to any territory to win and that I can do more than what I did [Saturday].”

“Saturday I was really disappointed, I was down. But then I looked at the phone, and on Instagram so many comments were coming in, and that motivated me. So many people from all over the world, and even in Mexico, were writing me saying that I had won the fight, and that helped me.

[lawrence-related id=21308]

“I also saw many comments on Twitter from the U.S. saying that I won. That helps because it proves that I did a good job, and it helps me pick myself up.”

Mina doubts he’ll get a rematch with Sosa because “it wouldn’t be good for them.” So, as of now, he plans to begin the rebuilding process in Ecuador.

“I’m going to fight again in Ecuador, and I want to look for an international title,” Mina said. “The objective was to win yesterday so I could be close to challenge the world champions, who are the Argentine (Brian Castano) and the American (Jermell Charlo). I wasn’t able to win. Now I have to start again, maybe not from zero, but maybe a few steps back.

“I’m looking for a Latino title from any major organization and then look to fight for world titles. I feel good. I wasn’t hurt. I think August I can make a return.”

Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. loses decision to former MMA star Anderson Silva

Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. lost a split decision to former MMA star Anderson Silva on Saturday in Guadalajara, Mexico.

Editor’s note: This article was originally published on MMAJunkie.com.

***

GUADALAJARA, Mexico – Anderson Silva was successful in his return to professional boxing.

The former UFC middleweight champion defeated Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. via split decision in the main card of Tribute to the Kings. The scores read 75-77, 77-75, and 77-75 in favor of Silva. It was an eight-round professional boxing bout.

Right off the gate, The 46-year-old Silva took the outside of the ring while Chavez Jr. stalked and pressured him. That was the tale of the first three rounds of the fight. Silva used his footwork to move around and pick his shots, while Chavez Jr. attacked often to the body and head.

Silva definitely held his own in the first three, but Chavez Jr. seemed to land more often and connect with the cleaner blows. Towards the end of round three, Silva was taunting and showing his vintage bravado against Chavez Jr., a signal that the tides were turning.

From the fourth point on, Silva picked up the pace and began to push forward. The MMA star constantly connected on Chavez Jr. and would even trap him against the ropes and batter him in close quarters. Chavez Jr. had a tough time landing on Silva, who did well at avoiding big shots.

It was a dominant showing in the second half of the fight for the Brazilian. He looked the liveliest he’s looked in years with an explosive and passionate performance.

The bout with Chavez Jr. marked Silva’s third professional boxing contest. Silva has previously competed in 1998, losing his pro debut via corner retirement, and then again in 2005, picking up a second-round KO. He’s now 2-1 as a pro boxer.

Chavez Jr. missed weight for the bout on Friday morning, coming in at 184.4 pounds. He forfeited $100k of his purse to Silva, who was on weight at 182 pounds.

Silva’s fame in the combat sports world came mainly from his years competing under the UFC – the premier MMA promotion in the world.

For many years, the Brazilian was arguably the biggest star for the promotion, as he had a historic run of 16 consecutive wins where he captured and held the UFC 185-pound title. Silva was champion from 2006 to 2012 and defended the belt 10 times.

Silva last fought with the Las-Vegas based promotion in October, when he headlined UFC Fight Night 181 against Uriah Hall. He lost the bout via fourth-round TKO. The bout with Hall ended a 15-year run inside the octagon spanning 24 fights.

Below are the full main card results for Tribute to the Kings:

  • Julio Cesar Chavez Sr. vs. Hector Camacho Jr.
  • Anderson Silva def. Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. via split decision (75-77, 77-75, 77-75).
  • Ramon Alvarez def. Omar Chavez via unanimous decision (80-73, 80-73, 79-73).
  • Damian Sosa def. Abel Mina via split decision (96-94, 94-96, 95-94) – to win the WBO Latino super welterweight title..
  • Jorge Luis Melendez def. Kevin Torres via unanimous decision (77-75, 77-74, 76-74).

Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. loses decision to former MMA star Anderson Silva

Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. lost a split decision to former MMA star Anderson Silva on Saturday in Guadalajara, Mexico.

Editor’s note: This article was originally published on MMAJunkie.com.

***

GUADALAJARA, Mexico – Anderson Silva was successful in his return to professional boxing.

The former UFC middleweight champion defeated Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. via split decision in the main card of Tribute to the Kings. The scores read 75-77, 77-75, and 77-75 in favor of Silva. It was an eight-round professional boxing bout.

Right off the gate, The 46-year-old Silva took the outside of the ring while Chavez Jr. stalked and pressured him. That was the tale of the first three rounds of the fight. Silva used his footwork to move around and pick his shots, while Chavez Jr. attacked often to the body and head.

Silva definitely held his own in the first three, but Chavez Jr. seemed to land more often and connect with the cleaner blows. Towards the end of round three, Silva was taunting and showing his vintage bravado against Chavez Jr., a signal that the tides were turning.

From the fourth point on, Silva picked up the pace and began to push forward. The MMA star constantly connected on Chavez Jr. and would even trap him against the ropes and batter him in close quarters. Chavez Jr. had a tough time landing on Silva, who did well at avoiding big shots.

It was a dominant showing in the second half of the fight for the Brazilian. He looked the liveliest he’s looked in years with an explosive and passionate performance.

The bout with Chavez Jr. marked Silva’s third professional boxing contest. Silva has previously competed in 1998, losing his pro debut via corner retirement, and then again in 2005, picking up a second-round KO. He’s now 2-1 as a pro boxer.

Chavez Jr. missed weight for the bout on Friday morning, coming in at 184.4 pounds. He forfeited $100k of his purse to Silva, who was on weight at 182 pounds.

Silva’s fame in the combat sports world came mainly from his years competing under the UFC – the premier MMA promotion in the world.

For many years, the Brazilian was arguably the biggest star for the promotion, as he had a historic run of 16 consecutive wins where he captured and held the UFC 185-pound title. Silva was champion from 2006 to 2012 and defended the belt 10 times.

Silva last fought with the Las-Vegas based promotion in October, when he headlined UFC Fight Night 181 against Uriah Hall. He lost the bout via fourth-round TKO. The bout with Hall ended a 15-year run inside the octagon spanning 24 fights.

Below are the full main card results for Tribute to the Kings:

  • Julio Cesar Chavez Sr. vs. Hector Camacho Jr.
  • Anderson Silva def. Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. via split decision (75-77, 77-75, 77-75).
  • Ramon Alvarez def. Omar Chavez via unanimous decision (80-73, 80-73, 79-73).
  • Damian Sosa def. Abel Mina via split decision (96-94, 94-96, 95-94) – to win the WBO Latino super welterweight title..
  • Jorge Luis Melendez def. Kevin Torres via unanimous decision (77-75, 77-74, 76-74).

Anderson Silva vs. Julio Cesar Chavez Jr.: Live blog, results

GUADALAJARA, Mexico – MMA Junkie is on the scene and reporting live from tonight’s Tribute to the Kings: Anderson Silva vs. Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. boxing event. Silva, a former UFC middleweight champion, makes his return to boxing, as he takes on …

GUADALAJARA, Mexico – MMA Junkie is on the scene and reporting live from tonight’s Tribute to the Kings: [autotag]Anderson Silva[/autotag] vs. [autotag]Julio Cesar Chavez Jr.[/autotag] boxing event.

Silva, a former UFC middleweight champion, makes his return to boxing, as he takes on Chavez Jr. in a professional, eight-round boxing bout in the main event of Tribute to the Kings.

Tribute to the Kings goes down on Saturday, June 19 at Jalisco Stadium in Guadalajara. The pay-per-view main card is set to go live at 9:00 p.m. ET on FITE, while the undercard will stream at 7:00 p.m. ET also FITE and beIN Sports.

Silva vs. Chavez Jr. was contracted for 182 pounds, but unfortunately, Chavez Jr. missed weight, recording a weight of 184.4 pounds. The bout still goes on, but Chavez Jr. will forfeit $100k of his purse to Silva for the weight miss.

In the co-main event of the card, the legendary Mexican boxer [autotag]Julio Cesar Chavez[/autotag] Sr. fights former rival’s son [autotag]Hector Camacho Jr.[/autotag]. The bout is a four-round exhibition. It’s set to be Chavez Sr.’s last performance in the boxing ring.

The pay-per-view main card also features a trilogy fight between Chavez Sr.’s youngest son [autotag]Omar Chavez[/autotag] taking on Canelo Alvarez’s brother [autotag]Ramon Alvarez[/autotag].

Keep it locked here for fight results as they happen, as well as live behind-the-scenes updates from Jalisco Stadium.

Tribute to the Kings full weigh-in results: Cesar Chavez Jr. misses weight for bout against Anderson Silva

Watch Anderson Silva weigh-in ahead of his June 19 boxing clash against Julio Cesar Chavez Jr.

GUADALAJARA, Mexico – MMA Junkie is on scene and reporting live from Friday’s Tribute to the Kings ceremonial weigh-ins.

The early, official weigh-ins took place at the Tribute to the Kings host hotel in Guadalajara were preceded by the ceremonial weigh-ins for the fans, which take place at 3 p.m. ET at Teatro Degollado.

Tribute to the Kings goes down on Saturday, June 19 at Jalisco Stadium in Guadalajara. The pay-per-view main card is set to go live at 9:00 p.m. ET, while the undercard will stream at 7:00 p.m. ET on FITE and beIN Sports.

In the main event of the card, former UFC middleweight champion [autotag]Anderson Silva[/autotag] returns to the boxing ring in almost 16 years, as he’s set to take on [autotag]Julio Cesar Chavez Jr.[/autotag] in an eight-round, 180-pound contest.

Unfortunately, Chavez Jr. missed weight for the bout, recording a weight of 184.4 pounds. He will forfeit $100k of his purse to Silva.

The co-main event features the legendary Mexican boxer[autotag] Julio Cesar Chavez Sr.[/autotag] who fights former rival’s son [autotag]Hector Camacho Jr.[/autotag] The bout is a four-round exhibition. It’s set to be Chavez Sr.’s last performance in the boxing ring.

The pay-per-view main card also features a trilogy fight between Chavez Sr.’s youngest son [autotag]Omar Chavez[/autotag] taking on Canelo Alvarez’s brother [autotag]Ramon Alvarez[/autotag].

The full Tribute to the Kings weigh-in results include:

MAIN CARD (Pay-per-view, 9 p.m. ET)

  • Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. (184.4) vs. Anderson Silva (182)
  • Julio Cesar Chavez Sr. () vs. Hector Camacho Jr. ()
  • Omar Chavez (161) vs. Ramon Alvarez (160)
  • Kevin Torres (138.4)vs. Jorge Luis Melendez (137.8)
  • Damian Sosa (153.4) vs. Abel Mina (153.6)

UNDERCARD (FITE and beIN Sports, 7:00 pm E.T.)

  • Cesar Gutierrez (140) vs. Oscar Mejia (137.8)
  • Jose Acosta (129.8) vs. Leonard Padilla (129.2)

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[vertical-gallery id=617335]

Anderson Silva enjoying post-UFC venture into boxing: ‘I’m a free man’

Anderson Silva enjoying post-UFC venture to boxing, saying “I’m a free man.”

Editor’s note: This article was originally published on MMAJunkie.com.

***

GUADALAJARA, Mexico – Anderson Silva is having fun in the latest chapter of his storied combat sports career.

The former UFC middleweight champion and all-time MMA great gets excited at the prospect of being able to try his hand in a wide range of combat sports now that he’s no longer under contract with the UFC. Silva fought his final bout with the Las-Vegas based promotion in October, when he headlined UFC Fight Night 181 against Uriah Hall.

The bout with Hall ended a 15-year run inside the octagon spanning 24 fights. The 46-year-old is glad he finished his contract with the UFC, as he’s now able to dictate his future – something fellow MMA star Georges St-Pierre wasn’t able to do when UFC blocked him from fighting Oscar De La Hoya in boxing.

“I put in my heart and I helped put the UFC in a different level,” Silva told MMA Junkie. “Of course my era is done in the UFC, but I just finished (my contract) because when I came in the UFC I was a free man. When I come out of the UFC, I’m a free man.

“I just want to do something I love to do. And let me tell you something important, nobody can say something for you, ‘You can’t do this, you can’t do that.’ You can do everything in your life when you have passion and love. The people can’t hold you. Of course, maybe George (St-Pierre) has contract, then he has contract, but that doesn’t make sense. Dana White doesn’t need this.”

Silva is days away from accomplishing a long-time dream, which involves him jumping into the sport of boxing against former WBC middleweight champion Julio Cesar Chavez Jr.. The two meet in the main event of the “Tribute to the Kings” event on Saturday in Mexico.

The Brazilian wanted to box Roy Jones Jr. years ago before the recent wave of MMA fighters crossing into the boxing world. Silva and Jones Jr. had publicly stated interest in putting together the bout, but the bout never materialized.

“I put (it) on the table many, many years ago that opportunity to show the world,” Silva said regarding not getting the opportunity to box Jones Jr. “I gave the opportunity for the UFC to change everything, but it didn’t happen at the moment and that’s fine. I think now everything is new and people want to see the entertainment.”

Silva has his eyes set on his boxing return this Saturday, but beyond that, “The Spider” has no idea what lies next for his career. And that’s more than fine with him.

“Everything is possible,” Silva explained.”Now I’m just trying to challenge myself. Maybe I fight on the same card my son is fighting kickboxing. Maybe fight jiu-jitsu – GI or no GI. Maybe muay-Thai. I’m very excited to go to Thailand, and train and fight in Thailand. I don’t know. Everything is possible.”

[lawrence-related id=21101,21098]

Anderson Silva enjoying post-UFC venture into boxing: ‘I’m a free man’

Anderson Silva enjoying post-UFC venture to boxing, saying “I’m a free man.”

Editor’s note: This article was originally published on MMAJunkie.com.

***

GUADALAJARA, Mexico – Anderson Silva is having fun in the latest chapter of his storied combat sports career.

The former UFC middleweight champion and all-time MMA great gets excited at the prospect of being able to try his hand in a wide range of combat sports now that he’s no longer under contract with the UFC. Silva fought his final bout with the Las-Vegas based promotion in October, when he headlined UFC Fight Night 181 against Uriah Hall.

The bout with Hall ended a 15-year run inside the octagon spanning 24 fights. The 46-year-old is glad he finished his contract with the UFC, as he’s now able to dictate his future – something fellow MMA star Georges St-Pierre wasn’t able to do when UFC blocked him from fighting Oscar De La Hoya in boxing.

“I put in my heart and I helped put the UFC in a different level,” Silva told MMA Junkie. “Of course my era is done in the UFC, but I just finished (my contract) because when I came in the UFC I was a free man. When I come out of the UFC, I’m a free man.

“I just want to do something I love to do. And let me tell you something important, nobody can say something for you, ‘You can’t do this, you can’t do that.’ You can do everything in your life when you have passion and love. The people can’t hold you. Of course, maybe George (St-Pierre) has contract, then he has contract, but that doesn’t make sense. Dana White doesn’t need this.”

Silva is days away from accomplishing a long-time dream, which involves him jumping into the sport of boxing against former WBC middleweight champion Julio Cesar Chavez Jr.. The two meet in the main event of the “Tribute to the Kings” event on Saturday in Mexico.

The Brazilian wanted to box Roy Jones Jr. years ago before the recent wave of MMA fighters crossing into the boxing world. Silva and Jones Jr. had publicly stated interest in putting together the bout, but the bout never materialized.

“I put (it) on the table many, many years ago that opportunity to show the world,” Silva said regarding not getting the opportunity to box Jones Jr. “I gave the opportunity for the UFC to change everything, but it didn’t happen at the moment and that’s fine. I think now everything is new and people want to see the entertainment.”

Silva has his eyes set on his boxing return this Saturday, but beyond that, “The Spider” has no idea what lies next for his career. And that’s more than fine with him.

“Everything is possible,” Silva explained.”Now I’m just trying to challenge myself. Maybe I fight on the same card my son is fighting kickboxing. Maybe fight jiu-jitsu – GI or no GI. Maybe muay-Thai. I’m very excited to go to Thailand, and train and fight in Thailand. I don’t know. Everything is possible.”

[lawrence-related id=21101,21098]

Anderson Silva enjoying post-UFC venture into boxing: ‘I’m a free man’

Anderson Silva enjoying post-UFC venture to boxing, saying “I’m a free man.”

Editor’s note: This article was originally published on MMAJunkie.com.

***

GUADALAJARA, Mexico – Anderson Silva is having fun in the latest chapter of his storied combat sports career.

The former UFC middleweight champion and all-time MMA great gets excited at the prospect of being able to try his hand in a wide range of combat sports now that he’s no longer under contract with the UFC. Silva fought his final bout with the Las-Vegas based promotion in October, when he headlined UFC Fight Night 181 against Uriah Hall.

The bout with Hall ended a 15-year run inside the octagon spanning 24 fights. The 46-year-old is glad he finished his contract with the UFC, as he’s now able to dictate his future – something fellow MMA star Georges St-Pierre wasn’t able to do when UFC blocked him from fighting Oscar De La Hoya in boxing.

“I put in my heart and I helped put the UFC in a different level,” Silva told MMA Junkie. “Of course my era is done in the UFC, but I just finished (my contract) because when I came in the UFC I was a free man. When I come out of the UFC, I’m a free man.

“I just want to do something I love to do. And let me tell you something important, nobody can say something for you, ‘You can’t do this, you can’t do that.’ You can do everything in your life when you have passion and love. The people can’t hold you. Of course, maybe George (St-Pierre) has contract, then he has contract, but that doesn’t make sense. Dana White doesn’t need this.”

Silva is days away from accomplishing a long-time dream, which involves him jumping into the sport of boxing against former WBC middleweight champion Julio Cesar Chavez Jr.. The two meet in the main event of the “Tribute to the Kings” event on Saturday in Mexico.

The Brazilian wanted to box Roy Jones Jr. years ago before the recent wave of MMA fighters crossing into the boxing world. Silva and Jones Jr. had publicly stated interest in putting together the bout, but the bout never materialized.

“I put (it) on the table many, many years ago that opportunity to show the world,” Silva said regarding not getting the opportunity to box Jones Jr. “I gave the opportunity for the UFC to change everything, but it didn’t happen at the moment and that’s fine. I think now everything is new and people want to see the entertainment.”

Silva has his eyes set on his boxing return this Saturday, but beyond that, “The Spider” has no idea what lies next for his career. And that’s more than fine with him.

“Everything is possible,” Silva explained.”Now I’m just trying to challenge myself. Maybe I fight on the same card my son is fighting kickboxing. Maybe fight jiu-jitsu – GI or no GI. Maybe muay-Thai. I’m very excited to go to Thailand, and train and fight in Thailand. I don’t know. Everything is possible.”

[lawrence-related id=21101,21098]