Joseph Adorno staves off rally from Hugo Roldan to win unanimous decision

Joseph Adorno staved off a rally from Hugo Roldan to win a unanimous decision on Friday in Atlantic City, New Jersey.

Joseph Adorno had his most successful night in years Friday night.

The former amateur standout, who went 0-1-2 in consecutives 135-pound fights in 2020 and last year, defeated Hugo Roldan by a close unanimous decision at 140 at Bally’s Event Center in Atlantic City, New Jersey.

It was the 23-year-old’s first victory in a scheduled 10-round bout.

Adorno (17-1-2, 14 KOs) played the matador to Roldan’s bull, waiting for the aggressive, sometimes-wild Argentine to attack and then countering.

Joseph Adorno didn’t hold back in celebrating his victory over Hugo Roldan. Stephanie Trapp / Showtime

He did that particularly well in the first half of the fight, when he connected on one left hook after another to stun Roldan (21-1-1, 7 KOs) a few times and build a lead on the scorecards.

Adorno’s biggest round was the second, when he scored a flash knockdown with a left hand moments before the bell rang.

However, the tough, determined Roldan rallied down the stretch, outworking a less active Adorno to climb back into the fight and leave the outcome in doubt.

And, indeed, the scoring was close. All three judges scored it 95-94, meaning the knockdown was the difference in result.

Adorno drew with Hector Montes and Jamaine Ortiz and then suffered his only career loss in his biggest fight, a wide decision against talented Michel Rivera this past March.

He rebounded to stop two journeymen in scheduled six-round fights — his first at 140 — after the setback but needed a more significant victory to get back on track.

He got it on Friday even though it wasn’t as dominating as he would’ve liked to be.

He now is in position to get another significant fight, although it’s not clear whether it will be at 140 — where he might be giving away some power — or 135.

Joseph Adorno staves off rally from Hugo Roldan to win unanimous decision

Joseph Adorno staved off a rally from Hugo Roldan to win a unanimous decision on Friday in Atlantic City, New Jersey.

Joseph Adorno had his most successful night in years Friday night.

The former amateur standout, who went 0-1-2 in consecutives 135-pound fights in 2020 and last year, defeated Hugo Roldan by a close unanimous decision at 140 at Bally’s Event Center in Atlantic City, New Jersey.

It was the 23-year-old’s first victory in a scheduled 10-round bout.

Adorno (17-1-2, 14 KOs) played the matador to Roldan’s bull, waiting for the aggressive, sometimes-wild Argentine to attack and then countering.

Joseph Adorno didn’t hold back in celebrating his victory over Hugo Roldan. Stephanie Trapp / Showtime

He did that particularly well in the first half of the fight, when he connected on one left hook after another to stun Roldan (21-1-1, 7 KOs) a few times and build a lead on the scorecards.

Adorno’s biggest round was the second, when he scored a flash knockdown with a left hand moments before the bell rang.

However, the tough, determined Roldan rallied down the stretch, outworking a less active Adorno to climb back into the fight and leave the outcome in doubt.

And, indeed, the scoring was close. All three judges scored it 95-94, meaning the knockdown was the difference in result.

Adorno drew with Hector Montes and Jamaine Ortiz and then suffered his only career loss in his biggest fight, a wide decision against talented Michel Rivera this past March.

He rebounded to stop two journeymen in scheduled six-round fights — his first at 140 — after the setback but needed a more significant victory to get back on track.

He got it on Friday even though it wasn’t as dominating as he would’ve liked to be.

He now is in position to get another significant fight, although it’s not clear whether it will be at 140 — where he might be giving away some power — or 135.

Joseph Adorno has opportunity to make statement on ShoBox

Joseph Adorno has an opportunity to make a statement against Hugo Alberto Roldan Friday on “ShoBox: The New Generation.”

Joseph Adorno will have his best chance Friday to show that he’s better than he demonstrated in his only loss this past March.

Adorno, who was outpointed by talented lightweight contender Michel Rivera, will face Hugo Alberto Roldan in a scheduled 10-round junior welterweight “ShoBox: The New Generation” bout at Bally’s Event Center in Atlantic City, New Jersey (Showtime).

The one-time amateur standout was a late replacement for Shinard Bunch, who pulled out of the fight with Roldan for personal reasons.

“This fight is definitely an opportunity to reset my career a bit. After the loss, I look at this as my get-back. I’m determined to make up for what happened on that night. I’m extremely happy that I got the call and I can’t wait for the bell to ring.

“I’m so excited for this fight I don’t even know how to explain it.”

The setback against Rivera was only the last leg of a rough stretch for Adorno (16-1-2, 14 KOs) beginning in 2020, in which he failed to win in three consecutive fights.

He drew with Hector Garcia Montes in January 2020 and then did the same against the unbeaten Jamaine Ortiz in April of last year before Rivera defeated him by a one-sided decision (97-93 on all three cards) on Showtime.

Adorno bounced back from the Rivera loss to stop journeymen Juan Santiago and Roberto Almazan Monreal in scheduled six-rounders in May and July, respectively.

“I learned a lot in that fight against Rivera,” said Adorno, who weighed in Thursday at 139.5 pounds. “I learned that I need to be a little bit more active. I learned that the undefeated record isn’t everything. Everybody wants to protect it, so you want to fight to protect that ‘0’. But I think I needed that loss.

“I needed that loss to focus more and learn that you’re not going to be perfect at all times so you have to keep working hard. The harder you work, the better you get. Before that loss, I thought I was unbeatable. It helped me. It opened up my eyes a lot. I’m thankful for that loss. It woke me up and is the reason I’m working the way I am now.”

Meanwhile, Roldan (21-0-1, 7 KOs) has the biggest opportunity to show what he can do a large stage.

The Argentine has won four consecutive fights since drawing with countryman Agustin Gerbaldo Kucharski in December 2019. The fight on Friday will be in his first in the United States.

“I do think Adorno is a tougher fighter than the first opponent I was supposed to face,” said Roldan who weighed the division limit of 140. “But it’s also a good opportunity to show everyone what I can do against a fighter of this caliber.

“I have come so far in my career that I’m so happy for this opportunity and I really appreciate the chance to show what I can do. I haven’t thought about the future and what’s next, but I want to keep moving forward and keep advancing.”

[lawrence-related id=29010]

Joseph Adorno has opportunity to make statement on ShoBox

Joseph Adorno has an opportunity to make a statement against Hugo Alberto Roldan Friday on “ShoBox: The New Generation.”

Joseph Adorno will have his best chance Friday to show that he’s better than he demonstrated in his only loss this past March.

Adorno, who was outpointed by talented lightweight contender Michel Rivera, will face Hugo Alberto Roldan in a scheduled 10-round junior welterweight “ShoBox: The New Generation” bout at Bally’s Event Center in Atlantic City, New Jersey (Showtime).

The one-time amateur standout was a late replacement for Shinard Bunch, who pulled out of the fight with Roldan for personal reasons.

“This fight is definitely an opportunity to reset my career a bit. After the loss, I look at this as my get-back. I’m determined to make up for what happened on that night. I’m extremely happy that I got the call and I can’t wait for the bell to ring.

“I’m so excited for this fight I don’t even know how to explain it.”

The setback against Rivera was only the last leg of a rough stretch for Adorno (16-1-2, 14 KOs) beginning in 2020, in which he failed to win in three consecutive fights.

He drew with Hector Garcia Montes in January 2020 and then did the same against the unbeaten Jamaine Ortiz in April of last year before Rivera defeated him by a one-sided decision (97-93 on all three cards) on Showtime.

Adorno bounced back from the Rivera loss to stop journeymen Juan Santiago and Roberto Almazan Monreal in scheduled six-rounders in May and July, respectively.

“I learned a lot in that fight against Rivera,” said Adorno, who weighed in Thursday at 139.5 pounds. “I learned that I need to be a little bit more active. I learned that the undefeated record isn’t everything. Everybody wants to protect it, so you want to fight to protect that ‘0’. But I think I needed that loss.

“I needed that loss to focus more and learn that you’re not going to be perfect at all times so you have to keep working hard. The harder you work, the better you get. Before that loss, I thought I was unbeatable. It helped me. It opened up my eyes a lot. I’m thankful for that loss. It woke me up and is the reason I’m working the way I am now.”

Meanwhile, Roldan (21-0-1, 7 KOs) has the biggest opportunity to show what he can do a large stage.

The Argentine has won four consecutive fights since drawing with countryman Agustin Gerbaldo Kucharski in December 2019. The fight on Friday will be in his first in the United States.

“I do think Adorno is a tougher fighter than the first opponent I was supposed to face,” said Roldan who weighed the division limit of 140. “But it’s also a good opportunity to show everyone what I can do against a fighter of this caliber.

“I have come so far in my career that I’m so happy for this opportunity and I really appreciate the chance to show what I can do. I haven’t thought about the future and what’s next, but I want to keep moving forward and keep advancing.”

[lawrence-related id=29010]

Michel Rivera jabs his way to an easy victory over Joseph Adorno

Michel Rivera jabbed his way to an easy victory over Joseph Adorno on Saturday in Minneapolis.

Lightweight contender Michel Rivera needed only one weapon to outclass Joseph Adorno on the Tim Tszyu-Terrell Gausha card Saturday in Minneapolis.

Rivera used his long, accurate jab — with power shots thrown in here and there — to control the fight and win a unanimous-decision victory in a 10-round bout at The Armory.

All three judges scored it 97-93, seven rounds to three. Boxing Junkie scored it 99-91 for Rivera.

The gifted Rivera (23-0, 14 KOs) kept the jab in the face of Adorno (14-1-2, 12 KOs) for most of the fight. The Dominican followed with some combinations, although not enough of them to break Adorno down.

Meanwhile, Adorno couldn’t (or wouldn’t) find a way to get inside the jab consistently enough to give himself a chance to win the fight.

The Pennsylvania fighter was able to jump in and land power shots on occasion but he spent most of the fight at a distance where he couldn’t get anything done.

Rivera is ranked by all four of the major sanctioning bodies, No. 2 by the WBA, meaning a title fight is coming soon. He just needs to continue doing what he did on Saturday.