Bay Area title tilt generating buzz
Kessler, Ward weigh-in for
tomorrow's Super Six bout
Mark E. Ortega
FightFanNation.com
November 20, 2009
When Oakland, California's Andre Ward
vies for his first world title against WBA super middleweight
champion Mikkel Kessler tomorrow night, it will mark the first major
world title fight in the Bay Area in just over eight years. That
November 10th, 2001 card that took place at San
Francisco's Bill Graham Civic Auditorium featured two somewhat
recognizable names in separate title fights both televised by HBO's
Boxing After Dark.
That card featured Floyd Mayweather,
Jr. and Manny Pacquiao in separate title defenses, with Floyd
defending a super featherweight crown for the eighth time and
Pacquiao defending his recently gained super bantamweight title. To
put into perspective how long ago that really was, it was only
Pacquiao's second appearance in the United States and his second of
what would come to be six* world titles in six different weight
classes. Floyd was still defending the first of five world titles he
would eventually win. Today, these two are the biggest names in the
sport and stand to make the largest purses of all-time if they
eventually step into the ring.
Kessler's defense against Ward marks the first world title fight in
Oakland in twenty-five years, the last being when Carlos De Leon
defended his cruiserweight title with a 12-round decision over Bash
Ali in June of 1984.
“Oakland was a fight town in the '80's, and there hasn't been this
much excitement in quite awhile,” remarked Ward, who is taking it
in stride that he has an entire city strapped on his back. “I'm
just thankful to be apart of it, and I feel that it's my time.”
Ward only previously fought in Oakland once, his May 16th
bout with Edison Miranda earlier this year happening at the same
location as tomorrow night's fight, Oakland's Oracle Arena. The fight
drew exceptionally well and proved that there is a market for boxing
in the Bay Area.
“You're proud of the city for getting behind him,” says Ward
promoter Dan Goossen of Goossen-Tutor Promotions. “In this case,
you have a fighter who is, in my eyes, a home team sport. He may not
wear an A's hat or a Warriors jersey, but he is as much of a home
team than any of those organizations.”
This will mark the second time a Goossen promoted fighter attempts to
win the world title as an underdog in the past few months, with
stablemate Chris Arreola failing to realize his goal of winning the
heavyweight title against Vitali Klitschko back in September. Ward
will enter the ring tomorrow night as about a two-to-one underdog,
which both fighter and promoter have handled very well.
“It's like every one of our fighters, winning is everything. You
only hope that the fighter brings everything he's got. There's no
doubt he will do everything he can to have his hand raised tomorrow
night, and that is all you can ask for,” said Goossen.
At the weigh-in, Kessler stepped onto the scales and came in at 167
pounds even, while the hometown favorite Ward scaled in at 166.5
pounds.
UNDERCARD NOTES:
Tomorrow night's main event will be televised by Showtime, but a four
fight undercard will precede the televised action which is scheduled
to take place at 7 PM Pacific.
In the bout directly before the main event, an interesting
eight-round junior middleweight rematch will take place between Daly
City, California's Karim “Hard Hitta” Mayfield [10-0-1, 6 KOs]
and Santa Barbara, California's Francisco “Chia” Santana [11-1, 5
KOs]. The last time these two fought each other on an Andre Ward card
back in March of last year, Mayfield walked away with a razor-thin
split decision over Santana in a six-rounder. Mayfield was dropped in
the fourth round of that fight and held on through the fifth before
winning the sixth round big to earn the decision. Mayfield got some
sparring with future Hall of Famer Shane Mosley in preparation for
this bout. Neither guy has lost since they last met, and this fight
promises to deliver fireworks. Mayfield weighed in at 151.5 pounds
while Santana came in at 150.5.
In an intriguing super-middleweight bout, former rated contender Jose
Celaya [31-5, 16 KOs] of Salinas, California takes on Oakland,
California's own Tony Hirsch [9-3, 5 KOs] in a six-round affair.
These two were previously set to meet on a card earlier this year at
the Playboy Mansion, but Celaya pulled out at the last minute. After
weighing in, both guys jawed at each other for an extended period of
time before commission officials stepped in and separated the two.
Celaya is not the fighter that was led to a #1 ranking at
welterweight before being brutalized by Julio Cesar Chavez, Jr.,
giving Hirsch the opportunity to add a good name to his ledger.
Celaya weighed in at a flabby 166 pounds while Hirsch came in at a
ripped 164 pounds.
Lightweight prospect Stan Martyniouk [7-0, KO] of Antelope,
California will take on former super featherweight title challenger
and current trial-horse Anthony Martinez [21-32-3, 9 KOs] of
Turriabla, Costa Rica in a four-round over the weight lightweight
bout. Martinez, 138.5, hasn't won a fight in over three years and has
become the ultimate short-notice opponent. Martyniouk, 136, is a
fighter who has fought mostly out of Sacramento and has been unable
to secure an active schedule since turning professional at the end of
2007.
In the opening fight of the night, Cincinnati, Ohio's Mel Crossty
[3-0, KO] takes on Carlos Herrera [2-2, KO] of Oxnard, California in
a super featherweight bout. This will mark Crossty's second fight in
Oakland as he searches for his first win at the Oracle Arena, with
his fight with Jaime Rodriguez being judged a draw. Crossty weighed
in at 130 pounds even while Herrera came in a half-pound heavier at
130.5.
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