Arreola has chance to make history
Mark E. Ortega
FightFanNation.com
September 25, 2009
To be the first Mexican anything
in boxing is impressive, and Cristobal Arreola has a chance to do
that tomorrow night in front of a basically hometown crowd at the
Staples Center in Los Angeles, California, one of the best places to
see a fight bar none. Not to mention the fact that it is HBO's lone
televised bout tomorrow night, and it is being featured with a replay
of Floyd Mayweather, Jr.'s dismantling of Juan Manuel Marquez that
met a reported one million pay-per-view buys last weekend. Arreola is
going to receive the ultimate exposure, and if he is somehow able to
pull off the upset [Arreola is at least a 4:1 underdog most places],
he would become the first heavyweight of Mexican descent to claim a
piece of the heavyweight championship of the world, which was at one
point the most prestigious championship in all of sports.
Most fans are hoping Arreola pulls off
the upset; it would mean a big change in the heavyweight title
picture and would open up a window to a series [yes, plural] of
potential exciting fights in the division that would also put a lot
on the line. If Arreola wins, fights could be made with David Haye,
who is fighting WBA champion Nicolay Valuev later this year, in a
potential unification fight. A fight could be made in-house against
Eddie Chambers, who, like Arreola, is promoted by Goossen-Tutor
Promotions. Chambers may be fighting for a world title in 2010 also.
If Vitali Klitschko [yes, this is the
first time his name is mentioned in three paragraphs discussing a
fighter that is challenging for Klitschko's title] wins, much
will stay the same in the division. And anytime something terrible is
left stagnant, a fouler smell is produced. The heavyweight division
is long past due, and nothing but a shot of youth could fix that.
Now what are Arreola's chances tomorrow
night? I would say the oddsmakers are about right. Arreola will be in
a big fight for the first time in his career, how exactly will he
respond? He was knocked down in a fight against Travis Walker [I
know, not exactly world-class] in a stadium just a few blocks from
where he grew up, but he was able to get up, dust himself off, and
hurt his opponent and floor him twice to setup a third-round
knockout. One problem with this is that Vitali has never been visibly
buzzed in a fight [that I've seen at least] and his only loss are
fights that he was giving a good account of himself in.
On top of that, Klitschko's jab is one
of the most difficult to get away from in the sport. This fight could
very well be Klitschko jabbing Arreola to death, possibly stopping
him on cuts or multiple knockdowns. If Arreola doesn't see the big
right hand coming, it could be over early.
Arreola's best chances likely lie in
the early rounds as well, where he could hope to catch Klitschko
off-guard with his surprisingly quick combination punching that
nobody in the division has been able to handle yet. The jury is still
out on whether Arreola came in the best shape possible as well as how
prepared he is to go eight or more rounds if it becomes that kind of
fight. We haven't really seen Arreola have to deal with that yet, it
could be a key factor in the fight.
Arreola himself has thought about what
kind of history he is on the verge of making. “I want this to
become a pop culture trivia question. Who was knocked out by boxing's
first heavyweight champion of Mexican descent, Cristobal Arreola?”
If Arreola pulls off the upset, it
would definitely become an event worth remembering, and one that
helps build towards other memorable moments.
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