‘Ringside,’ documentary on two boxing prodigies, to premier on Showtime

Showtime has acquired the rights to the award-winning documentary “Ringside,” which will premier on the network on June 12.

Showtime has acquired the rights to the award-winning documentary “Ringside,” which will premier on the network at 8:30 p.m. ET / PT on June 12.

“Ringside” chronicles the journeys of two boxing prodigies on the perilous streets of their rough neighborhood on the South Side of Chicago.

The documentary, filmed over nine years, focuses on amateur standouts Kenneth Sims Jr., and Destyne Butler Jr., as well as their fathers, who train them. The film was directed by Andre Hörmann.

“Filmed over the course of nine years, “Ringside” is a complex, emotional account of two youths fighting to survive both professionally and personally,” said Stephen Espinoza, President, Sports and Event Programming, Showtime Networks Inc. “This remarkable film follows two gifted young boxers and the fathers who guide them, as they strive to overcome a seemingly never-ending series of personal and societal obstacles.

“The result is a moving story about hope, ambition, self-discipline, resilience and redemption. It is this type of provocative story, at the intersection of sports and society, that has become the hallmark of Showtime Sports Documentary Films.”

Both fighters are now professionals. Sims (14-2-1, 5 KOs) has fought four times on “ShoBox: The Next Generation.” Butler (9-0, 5 KOs) has bounced back from a prison term.

Showtime’s Stephen Espinoza expects ‘great fights’ post-coronavirus

Stephen Espinoza, the president of Showtime Sports, believes boxing matchmaking can benefit after the coronavirus subsides…

Showtime Sports President Stephen Espinzoa is in the same boat of uncertainty as everyone else in the boxing world because of the coronavirus pandemic. Showtime cards in March and April have been canceled. And no one will be surprised if the same thing happens in May.

Amid the chaos, however, Espinoza sounded a note of optimism about boxing’s eventual return in a recent conversation on the Showtime Boxing Podcast. 

“I’m excited,” Espinoza said. “I think we’re going to see an action-packed, jam-packed schedule whenever we return.”

Espinoza believes that an unintended side effect of the coronavirus is that it could potentially boost the quality of boxing cards because of the truncated calendar.

“There’s a lot of fighters that need fights to happen, and I think we could be in for an interesting period of time where there’s a lot of activity in a relatively short window,” Espinoza said. “It’s tough for us competitively to be in that window, tough for anybody in that window to cut through that noise [from other sports].

“We may see [fighters] taking a slightly different tack for picking fights. I’m cautiously optimistic that we’ll see some really great fights in that short amount of time.” 

Showtime was one of the few networks that went ahead with its scheduled show – a Shobox card featuring rising prospect Brandun Lee – on March 13, two days after the sports world began shutting down events. Top Rank and Premier Boxing Champions also canceled their shows that weekend. Showtime decided to move forward with the event — closed off to the public — because its staff was already at the venue in Hinckley, Minnesota, thereby eliminating the need for last-minute air travel that could endanger staff.

Showtime has since joined the rest of the boxing world in the waiting game. With the coronavirus potentially shutting down cards for months, industry people are thinking creatively. One idea is more cards with no spectators. Espinoza believes that could be something we see on a more regular basis.

“I believe that [there] will be some period of time where we’re doing it in the absence of large crowds,” Espinoza said. “Maybe [not for] a few months or a year … but I do think we will find a solution to have crowdless events before we figure out the solution to have a full crowd.

“So when that is, who knows. But when that starts to happen, there [will be] a tidal wave of sporting events that remains to be rescheduled.” 

That means the usual venues – from Barclays Center in Brooklyn to Staples Center in Los Angeles – might not be as available to boxing promoters.

“It’s going to be tough to get a venue if all these sports are going to play catch-up at one time,” Espinoza said. “It’s going to be a little strange. At the same time, having said that, it’s going to be a wild ride. There’s a lot to be made up.” 

In the meantime, Espinoza plans to make use of Showtime’s vast library of classic fights and documentaries as ways to accommodate its boxing-deprvied subscribers.

“Our goal is fill that gap with a lot of stuff that we have,” Espinoza said. “We have a deep library of documentaries. We are definitely surfacing much more of the archive on demand, and we’ll look at it on linear more regularly. Whether that means a programming slot or an occasional one.”

One example is the possibility of showcasing the first three fights from the four-fight Israel Vasquez vs. Rafael series on March 28, one of the network’s cancelled dates.

“That is typically a three-hour window for us,” Espinoza said. “That’s what we allocate from a scheduling perspective. … That’s a nice opportunity for us. What’s about three hours? Well, we could do Marquez and Vasquez 1, 2, 3. That would fill the hole nicely.

“The boxing audience is definitely still very important to Showtime. We’re going to do everything we can to continue to serve them to the maximum extent that we can.”

Keith Hunter, Sanjarbek Rakhmanov do it again tonight on Showtime

Junior welterweight prospect Keith Hunter outpointed Sanjarbek Rakhmanov in February of last year, They do it again tonight in Las Vegas.

Keith Hunter and Sanjarbek Rakhmanov have some unfinished business.

Hunter, a junior welterweight prospect, defeated Rakhmanov by a split decision in a spirited eight-round fight in February of last year, Hunter putting Rakhmanov down in Round 2 and controlling the early rounds only to see the Uzbek rally later in the bout.

Hunter (11-0, 7 KOs) outpointed Rakhmanov (12-2-1, 6 KOs) 77-74, 76-75 and 75-76, which was hardly a conclusive result.

They pick up where they left at a contracted weight of 143 pounds tonight in Las Vegas on Showtime.

“I think I convincingly beat him the first time,” said Hunter, who weighed in at 141½. “It’s good that I’m getting him a second time because I’m going to show that it’s not even going to be close. I could see how some people thought it was a close fight the first time, but it won’t be close this time. He got some clean shots on me, but he never hurt me. I dropped him early. If I didn’t do that, it could have been a different story.

“I’m going to get him out of there. I think it’s going to be an exciting fight. I had unleaded gas the last time around, but I now have premium gas in the tank.”

The Las Vegas-based Rakhmanov, who weighed 143, is as confident as Hunter.

“I’ve been wanting this rematch forever,” he said. “I one hundred percent feel that I won that fight. I was dominating for five or six rounds. I’m so happy that this will be a 10-round fight. The more rounds I have, the better my chance. We had him last time, and I let him off the hook. That was a mistake and I won’t let him off the hook this time.

“I was waiting too much in the first few rounds. I started too slow. This time, I will start fast. I give him respect for taking the rematch. I’m very motivated. I want to avenge the loss. I want to make everybody know that the judges made a mistake the first time. There is a lot on the line and this win will open many doors for me.”

In the ShoBox co-main event, 2016 Olympian and junior welterweight prospect Richardson Hitchins (10-0, 5 KOs) faces Nick DeLomba (16-2, 5 KOs) in a 10-round bout. And Las Vegas native Kevin Newman II (11-1-1, 6 KOs) fights Albania’s Genc Pllana (7-1-1, 4 KOs) in a 10-round super middleweight matchup to open the telecast.

Ruben Villa outclasses Alexei Collado, closer to title shot

Ruben Villa enhanced his featherweight credentials with his tactical skill in a decision over Cuban Alexei Collado on Friday.

Ruben Villa continues to be a prospect likable for what he does in the ring. And out of it.

Villa, who honored the memory of Kobe Bryant by wearing the Laker legend’s No. 8 jersey in his walk to the ring, enhanced his featherweight credentials with a thorough implementation of tactical skill in a decision over Cuban Alexei Collado Friday night on ShoBox in Shreveport, Louisiana.

It was unanimous on the cards and dominating in every other way.

“I feel like I put on a good show,’’ said Villa (18-0, 5 KOs), a Salinas, California fighter who was 2-2 as an amateur against featherweight champion and 2016 Olympic silver medalist Shakur Stevenson.

It was a show of potential that promises to put Villa, a two-time National Golden Gloves champion, closer to a shot at a 126-pound belt, perhaps later this year.

“He was a big knockout puncher, and he’s no pushover,’’ Villa said of Collado.

Collado, who lives in Miami, had no argument with the cards – 98-92, 99-91, 98-92, all for Villa.

“He moves a lot, and he’s a smart fighter,’’ Collado said. “I feel like when I threw a lot, I hit him. But I wasn’t active enough.”

In a co-main event, Ukrainian welterweight Taras Shelestyuk (18-0, 10 KOs), a 2012 Olympic Bronze medalist, scored a unanimous decision over Luis Alberto Veron (18-2-2, 9 KOs) of Argentina.

Ruben Villa, former amateur star, fighting way into title mix

Former amateur star Ruben Villa hopes his fight against Alexei Collado on Friday on ShoBox is another step toward title contention.

Ruben Villa is introducing himself to fans as someone to watch. He’s a potential contender, a featherweight trying to fight his way into the title mix.

But Villa needs no introduction to a featherweight already with a title. Shakur Stevenson knows him, knows him well.

As an amateur, Villa went 2-2 against Stevenson, who faces Miguel Marriaga on March 14 at New York’s Madison Square Garden in the first defense of a 126-pound belt he won in a unanimous decision over Joet Gonzalez on Oct. 26.

“It was back in 2015 and 2016 before he went on to the (2016) Olympics and won a silver medal,’’ said Villa (17-0, 5 KOs), who hopes to add a victory to his credentials as a prospect Friday night against Cuban Alexei Collado (26-2, 23 KOs) on Showtime’s ShoBox at Hirsch Memorial Coliseum in Shreveport, Louisiana. “I knew then that I was fighting somebody special. I knew it wouldn’t take him long to win a world title.’’

Villa, of Salinas, California, says he continues to learn from his amateur experience against Stevenson, who at 22 is a couple of months younger than Villa.

“I like the way he counters, I like the way he boxes,’’ said Villa, who says he has been concentrating on improving his own counter punching in training for the dangerous Collada.

“Collado is a real strong aggressive guy,’’ said Villa, who also beat Devin Haney, a current lightweight champion, in the Junior Olympics in 2014. “He’s a veteran. I have to be cautious because of his power and play it very smart on our end.”

Villa hopes the Collado bout is the first of three in 2020.

“By the end of the year,” he said, “I’m hoping to fight my way into spot for a mandatory shot at a world title.’’

Conspicuous absence and the politics of promoter-network relations

Lou DiBella used to put on a lot of shows for Showtime, but that hasn’t been the case recently. The promoter gives his take on why.

Showtime has presented a robust slate of programming in recent months featuring the likes of Gervonta Davis, Claressa Shields, and most recently, welterweight contender Danny Garcia. The same goes for ShoBox, the premium network’s long-running series devoted to up-and-coming prospects.

But conspicuously missing from these shows have been fighters connected to Lou DiBella, the longtime New York promoter who has worked extensively with Showtime in the past.

What’s going on?

DiBella says he has been embargoed, meaning Showtime isn’t doing business with him. Stephen Espinoza, president of Showtime Sports, insists that isn’t so. The only thing we know: Fighters from DiBella’s stable, many of whom need dates, aren’t fighting on the network.

The only recent exception was DiBella-promoted Alicia Napoleon, who fought on the Claressa Shields-Ivana Habazin card on Jan. 10. And DiBella cautioned not to read anything into the inclusion of Napoleon. “That’s only because they wanted Alicia as a future opponent for Claressa,” he said.

The fissure evidently stems from a meeting set up by DiBella that brought together heavyweight champion Deontay Wilder, the star of the Premier Boxing Champions stable who fights on Fox and Showtime, and DAZN, a rival of PBC, in March of last year.

Plus, DiBella has brought other fighters to the U.K.-based streaming service, including Regis Prograis. The former junior welterweight titleholder’s most-recent fight on Showtime was against Julius Indongo on March 9, 2018. His next fight was on a Top Rank-promoted main event on ESPN. Afterward, Prograis joined the World Boxing Super Series, in which he lost in the final to Josh Taylor. That fight was streamed on DAZN.

“No one is beholden to a network. [DiBella] doesn’t owe me his business, but at the same time there is a consistent evaluation,” Espinoza told Tha Boxing Voice in a Jan. 22 interview. “Part of the calculation of who we do business with … part of it is who is loyal and who we believe does business in the right way with us. I was not happy that we put that much into Regis Prograis and he went somewhere else.

“OK, that doesn’t mean I’m never doing business with Lou again but [Sergiy] Derevyanchenko, [DiBella] took him to DAZN. … Put it another way. You’re in my shoes, you’ve seen guys come up with Lou and then see them pay off somewhere else. Would you forget [that]?”

DiBella doesn’t buy that story. The promoter contends that the real reason he is “persona non grata” at Showtime is because of the meeting between Wilder and DAZN’s Executive Chairman John Skipper. Wilder’s managers Al Haymon, who heads PBC, and Shelly Finkel were also reported to have attended the meeting, in which Skipper reportedly offered Wilder a $100 million, three-fight deal to fight on the streaming platform. Wilder turned it down, citing “dishonesty” from DAZN, and went on to face Dominic Breazeale on Showtime and reportedly made in the neighborhood of $20 million. (Skipper later conceded to The Athletic that he was “too brash” during negotiations.)

DiBella promoted nine straight Wilder fights, beginning with his first title defense against Eric Molina in June 2015 and ending with his first fight with Tyson Fury in December 2018, according to BoxRec.com. DiBella believed he was acting “out of incredible loyalty” to Wilder when he arranged the meeting with DAZN but that it did not sit well with Espinoza, Finkel and Haymon, who has lucrative output deals with Showtime and Fox.

It’s not clear whether DiBella’s decision “to go rogue,” if that’s what it was, forced Haymon and Espinoza to meet DAZN’s outsize financial offer to ensure that Wilder did not join a rival entity. But as DiBella put it, “My only loyalty was to Deontay.”

“DiBella Entertainment is not embargoed by Showtime,” Espinzoa told Boxing Junkie in a statement. “No promoters are. But it would not serve any useful purpose to continue this in a public forum. Lou and I can discuss future business privately.”

DiBella feels differently. Showtime’s main content partner is the PBC; the two entities have a deal that takes them through next year. With that being the case, DiBella believes there was never going to be a significant offer from Showtime to have Prograis appear on its main platform precisely because the majority of Showtime’s budget was allocated to PBC fighters.

“Even though I was embargoed by Showtime because of the Wilder-DAZN meeting, after the conclusion of the WBSS, I personally offered Regis to Showtime in a meeting with Espinoza at the Palm restaurant [in New York City] on Friday, November 15, 2019,” DiBella said. “I made it clear to him that we were open to one fight or a multi-fight deal with Showtime. On a stack of Bibles and my father’s grave, I have not received any offer from Showtime, for one or more fights, to this date.

“In fact, in multiple conversations, Stephen conveyed to me that he was concerned about a lack of big fights for Regis because Al Haymon would not provide his fighters to fight Regis on Showtime. Obviously, Regis is managed by Pete Berg, Sam Katkovski and Mark Wahlberg, not Al. Obviously, I am no longer a PBC promoter. Stephen also reminded me that he had a Haymon-PBC deal through the conclusion of 2021 and that most of his budget was committed to that deal. All of the above has been conveyed to Regis’ management. ANY offer would have been conveyed and strongly considered. It still would be.”

Added DiBella: “This has nothing to do with Regis. I continued to work with (Showtime) a year after, including Wilder-Fury 1, and ShoBox events (O’Shaquie Foster-Jon Fernandez on Sept. 21), after Regis moved on from Showtime and prior to the Wilder meeting with DAZN. It has everything to do with the meeting between Deontay Wilder and DAZN.”

In addition to not getting dates on Showtime, DiBella no longer promotes any PBC-related cards in the New York area. For several years, DiBella was the chief promoter for PBC events at Barclays Center. The last PBC show he promoted was the Showtime-televised main event between Brain Castano and Erislandy Lara on March 2, 2019. He orchestrated the Wilder-DAZN meeting roughly two weeks later. Most of the Barclays Center cards since then have been promoted by California-based Tom Brown of TGB Promotions.

Timothy Smith, spokesperson for the PBC, said in a statement that “The PBC has a deal with Showtime where we provide content for its boxing programming. Showtime uses other promoters for its SHOBOX programming. Whatever the business relationship is between Stephen and Lou, you have to ask them about that.

“As far as being embargoed by PBC, I’m not sure I know what that means. We have consolidated much of the promotional work for the PBC with TGB because they do a fantastic job. We continue to work with other promoters, depending upon the show. We’re currently working with Top Rank to help stage Wilder-Fury 2.”

In the Tha Boxing Voice interview, Espinoza went on to say: “Lou has never once said to me any of the names (prospects Junior Fa and Charles Conwell) that you just said, not one time. Lou has a lot of business at DAZN and when he is tired of doing business over there he’ll pick up the phone and call me. Never once – and I will say this to you definitively – he has never once mentioned any one of those names to me and that’s not what a good promoter does. If a good promoter wants guys on a network, he is emailing, texting, sending me flyers, [direct messaging] me, saying, ‘You’ve got to see this guy,’ and I’ve never once heard any one of those names once from his mouth in a conversation.”

DiBella not only remembers the situation differently, but he called Espinoza’s explanation “empirically false,” pointing out that Showtime had a contractual claim on Prograis.

“I asked Stephen if there was an interest in stepping up because (at that point) Regis was looking for more money and not being on ShoBox and Stephen basically told us to take that opportunity,” DiBella told Boxing Junkie. “Regis went to ESPN and WBSS amicably. I have unequivocal proof of that. Showtime waived the right of first negotiation-last refusal that they were granted when they televised Prograis-Indongo. In exchange, I told Showtime that I would offer them Regis’ first fight after the tournament.

Added DiBella: “I’m in shock over the [Espinoza] interview. I thought we were finally getting to normalized things. I’m beyond disbelief.”

DiBella was referring to the fact that his fighter, Napoleon, fought on the Shields-Habazin main event on Jan. 10. Espinoza’s interview with Tha Boxing Voice took place two weeks later. DiBella takes issue with Espinoza’s comment that he was not offering his fighters to his network, citing what he believes is the ongoing embargo. Recently, DiBella says Espinoza offered another ShoBox date to one of his fighters, middleweight prospect Charles Conwell. Dibella is hopeful that this is the beginning of a thaw.

“I recently just had Alicia Napoleon on a Showtime fight time card,” he said.” I thought the embargo was lifted a month or two ago. He called me to use Alicia Napoleon in a fight. How come the embargo was sort of finally lifted and [Showtime senior vice president] Gordon Hall told me and [co-promoter] Tony Holden that Charles Conwell has a April ShoBox? So that happened because I was never offering him or that happened because maybe he was lifting an embargo? If this all started with Regis Prograis, how come I did so much work for Showtime after Regis fought on ESPN?

“What can a good promoter do when he’s embargoed?”

Vladimir Shishkin wins decision; Shohjahon Ergashev scores first round KO

Russian super middleweight Vladimir Shishkin dominated Ulises Sierra in the main event of a ShoBox card in Sloan, Iowa.

Undefeated Russian super middleweight Vladimir Shishkin turned in 10 workmanlike rounds against Ulises Sierra en route to a unanimous decision win at the WinnaVegas Casino & Resort in Sloan, Iowa (Salita Promotions). 

Two of the judges scored it 99-91, while another had it 100-90, all in favor of 28-year-old Shishkin.

Shishkin (10-0, 6 KOs) worked behind a steady slew of 1-2 punches as he won nearly minute of every round against an otherwise cagey opponent. While Sierra (15-1-2, 9 KOs) was never truly hurt in the fight, he lacked the consistency and, perhaps, even desire to truly make it a competitive fight. Indeed, Sierra, who has served as a sparring partner for the world class likes of Canelo Alvarez, Sergey Kovalev and Andre Ward, seemed content on this night to simply pick up a paycheck.

After a couple of close rounds, Shishkin, who lives in Detroit and trains at the Kronk Gym, began to separate himself from Sierra in Round 3, landing a barrage of right hands to the head and body. Sierra responded by shelling up behind a high guard. That would become a repeated pattern throughout the night.

In Round 5, Sierra landed his best combination in the fight with a left to the body and head that momentarily stalled Shishkin’s momentum. But Sierra eased off the pedal and settled back into his low-energy ways, as Shishkin came back to land several hard rights before the end of the round. From then on, it was all Shishkin, who was effective, if somewhat dull, with his straight right hand leads. He used his jab sparingly and his hook was largely nonexistent. Still, against the listless Sierra, the right hand would prove to be more than enough. 

After the bout, it was reported that Shishkin had injured his left biceps prior to the fight, which may explain his limited offensive repertoire. 

On the undercard, highly regarded Uzbek lightweight Shohjahon Ergashev barely broke a sweat, sending Adrian Estrella to the canvas in Round 1 with a crunching left hand to the right ribcage. Estrella writhed on the floor, grimacing in obvious pain, as referee Paul Perry counted him out.

The official time of stoppage was 1:32

Ergashev, a stablemate of Shishkin, improves to 18-0,16 KOs. Estrella falls to 29-5, 24 KOs.

Also, undefeated junior bantamweight prospect Jarico O’Quinn decisioned Oscar Vasquez in an eight-rounder that was more competitive than what was reflected in the scorecards.

All three judges scored it 79-73 for the Detroit-based O’Quinn.

At the outset, O’Quinn (14-0-1, 8 KOs) got sucked into Vasquez’s preferred fight early on, on the inside. Vasquez (15-3-1, 3 KOs), Las Vegas, had the early momentum, bullying O’Quinn around the ring and landing some surprisingly clean overhand rights.

But O’Quinn began to get on track in Round 3, picking off Vasquez with quick counter while lying on the ropes. Few jabs were thrown by either man. O’Quinn used his superior size and speed to land frequent combination punches, even if they did not seem to visibly hurt the game Vasquez.

O’Quinn briefly flirted with a stoppage in Round 8 when he seemed to stun Vasquez for the first time in the fight with a straight right.

Originally, the fight was meant to be contested at the junior bantamweight limit, but both fighters both came in overweight. 

KO artist Shohjahon Ergashev headlines ShoBox card

Shohjahon Ergashev, the 140-pound contender from Uzbekistan, is scheduled to face Adrian Estrella in a 10-round bout Friday in Sloan, Iowa

Shohjahon Ergashev has passed every test so far. Next up is a tough Mexican.

Ergashev, the left-handed junior welterweight contender from Uzbekistan, is scheduled to face Adrian Estrella in a 10-round bout Friday in Sloan, Iowa, on ShoBox: The New Generation.

Ergashev (17-0, 15 KOs) appears to have unusual tools. He was an accomplished amateur — with a reported record of 202-14 — and the punching power suggested by his professional record. He can outbox you, he can knock you out.

Now all the Detroit-based fighter needs is a test against an elite opponent. Estrella isn’t that foe but he’s capable.

“I would like to fight the best possible opponents,” Ergashev said. “I’m coming to fight not simply to collect money and win the fight. Every time I’m in the ring, I want to destroy my opponent.

“I understand that there might be better boxers in my weight class, but I’m ready to fight them.”

Shohjahon Ergashev is pictued unloading on Zhimin Wang in 2018. Elsa / Getty Images

Ergashev, 28, said he continues to grow as a fighter under the direction of SugarHill Steward, who has started working with Tyson Fury.

“It has been a big difference for me as professional boxer during the last year,” he said. “I started listening. I was not listening before, I was just stepping in the ring and trying to knock my opponent out.

“Sugarhill didn’t allow me to continue sparring because I was not listening. But after my last fight, I started listening.”

He added that the addition of Fury hasn’t been a problem for him.

“That hasn’t affected me,” he said. “It has only helped me. Theotrice Chambers, Richard Phillips and the entire Kronk Gym team have taken over these past few weeks but Sugarhill is here with me now and will be in my corner on Friday night.”

Estrella (29-4, 24 KOs) will be moving back down to 140 pounds after losing a majority decision to Tony Luis at 147 in his most-recent fight. He has lost three of his past four bouts.

“This is a second chance for me,” Estrella said. “I was once 22-0 and now I’m back. I blew past Christmas and New Year’s and am so focused. I have been disciplined. I have done it before and I will get it done on Friday night.”

Vladimir Shishkin (left) faces Ulises Sierra in a scheduled 10-round bout. Dave Mandel / Showtime

In a co-feature featuring unbeaten fighters, super middleweight prospect Vladimir Shishkin (9-0, 6 KOs) faces Ulises Sierra (15-0-2, 9 KOs) in a scheduled 10-round bout.

Shishkin, a Detroit-based Russian, is coming off an eighth-round knockout of DeAndre Ware in August. He also works with Steward, the nephew of the late Emanuel Steward.

“Working with Sugarhill has been incredible for me,” he said. “I’ve been improving my strength and movement especially. He’s the best trainer I’ve ever had.

“I looked at the American stars … Muhammad Ali, Mike Tyson, Roy Jones Jr. and Floyd Mayweather Jr. growing up and they are who I model myself after.”

Sierra, a 30-year-old from San Diego, has built a reputation as a good sparring partner but wants more than that.

“Andre Ward was my first big camp and I’ve sparred with a lot of champions,” he said. “But I’m not a sparring partner. I don’t have that mentality. I figure if I’m going to spar with someone, it might as well be with the best. I’ve been in three Canelo [Alvarez] camps. And I’ve also sparred with David Benavidez.

“I get to see how they train and what they do and what makes them great. Canelo is the best of them. Just his technique and his preparation. He’s always on point and works on everything he’s told to do. They are all great champions.

“This is a great opportunity for me. I never get the calls for shows like this, and I don’t know why that is. This is my chance to shine and could change everything for me.”

 

 

 

 

Alberto Palmetta stops Erik Vega with wild flurry in final round

Alberto Palmetta ended a close fight with a wild flurry in the 10th and final round Friday night in Sloan, Iowa.

Alberto Palmetta evidently didn’t feel it was wise leave his fate in the hands of the judges.

Palmetta and Erik Vega were engaged in a competitive welterweight fight when, in the 10th and final round, Palmetta scored a dramatic technical knockout Friday night in Sloan, Iowa on Showtime.

Palmetta, a 2016 Olympian from Argentina, got off to a quick start and dictated the pace most of the fight. He was the more accurate puncher and seemed to slip many of his Mexican opponent’s best shots.

Vega (16-1, 9 knockouts) came on in the middle rounds, as he stood his ground more than he had been and got busier. The fight was close going into the final rounds.

In the end, Palmetta (13-1, 9 KOs) didn’t know it but he didn’t need a knockout in the 10th to win the fight. He was leading 87-84 on two cards and 86-85 on the third; all he had to do was win the round.

Erik Vega (right) couldn’t withstand an onslaught of punches from Alberto Palmetta in the final round. Greg Mandel / Showtime

However, perhaps the fate of countryman Marcos Escudero in the co-feature entered his mind or that of trainer Charles Mooney, who also worked Escudero’s corner. Escudero seemed to outwork opponent Joe George but lost a split decision.

So when Palmetta stunned Vega to some degree with a short right early in the final round, he followed with unrelenting barrage of largely unanswered punches that forced referee Mark Nelson to stop the fight.

The official time was 1:03 of the round.

With the victory, Palmetta, 29, took a significant step toward becoming a contender. The 24-year-old Vega, a significant prospect going into the fight, will have to work on deficiencies.

In the co-feature, a 10-round light heavyweight bout, Escudero (10-1, 9 KOs) came out firing at the opening bell and never stopped throwing, outlanding George (10-0, 6 KOs) roughly 2-1 in punches. The Argentine routinely forced George against the ropes, where the winner was content to cover up and take punches.

George had his best moments when he had space to work in the middle of the ring but he didn’t have the opportunity often, as Escudero controlled distance for most of the fight. In other words, he imposed his will on George.

That’s why Boxing Junkie scored it 97-93 – seven rounds to three – in Escudero’s favor. The official scores: Two judges scored it for George (97-94 and 97-93), one had it for Escudero (96-94).

Marcos Escudero (right) seemed to do enough to beat Joe George but the judges saw it differently. Greg Mandel / Showtime

Escudero definitely was busier than George. Perhaps the two judges who scored it for the winner gave the loser little credit for the punches he threw when George was against the ropes because they believed he landed mostly on his gloves and arms.

And maybe they thought George landed the bigger shots. He seemed to stun Escudero with a right hand in the ninth round, arguably the biggest punch in the fight, but he couldn’t follow up as Escudero held on until he recovered. When he did, he went back to outworking George.

And, in a scheduled eight-round middleweight fight, Amilcar Vidal Jr. (10-0, 9 KOs) stopped Zach Prieto (9-1, 7 KOs) with one second remaining in the opening round.

Neither fighter had dominated the first few minutes when, in the final seconds, Vidal landed a left hook-upper cut that put Prieto down and hurt him. The product of Las Crucez, New Mexico was able to get up but went down again under a barrage of hard shots, prompting the referee to stop the fight.

Videal, from Uruguay, was making his U.S. debut.