Brinkley on the ropes
Mark E. Ortega
Leave-it-in-the-ring.com
April 27, 2011
Friday night, Jesse Brinkley will be an
underdog for the third straight bout as he takes on Golden Boy
Promotions prospect Peter Quillin in the main event of Telefutura's
Solo Boxeo. For the second time in as many years, Brinkley will be
enjoying a home-field advantage against his favored opponent as he
fights Quillin at the Reno Events Center in Reno, Nevada on a card
co-promoted by Golden Boy and Brinkley's Reno-based promoters Terry
and Tommy Lane of Let's Get It On Promotions.
The Lanes were able to match Brinkley
[35-6, 22 KOs] successfully over the course of the last few years
against beatable opposition en route to a IBF ranking and eventual
eliminator at home on ESPN against Curtis Stevens last February where
the former Contender reality star scored a wipeout unanimous decision
victory against an opponent much younger than the now 34-year old
Yerington, Nevada native.
Brinkley looked shaky for the first few
rounds as the power punching Stevens opened up early, closing his
right eye in the first with one of his wild shots. Brinkley withstood
the pressure and eventually boxed and slugged his way to a victory,
dropping Stevens twice. Prior to the bout, Stevens took Brinkley
rather lightly as he made comments along the way to the fight that
suggested Brinkley was a phony who padded his record to get up the
rankings.
After proving his mettle against
Stevens, Brinkley proved his heart in his title shot opportunity
against IBF 168-pound champion Lucian Bute last October as he fought
bravely despite being heavily outgunned, ultimately getting stopped
on a body shot in the ninth round. Brinkley seized his title
opportunity and never gave up and because of his brave showing he
finds himself in another big fight against Quillin, who after joining
forces with Freddie Roach in Southern California has upped his game
to its highest point.
Quillin [23-0, 17 KOs] also has the
powerful Golden Boy Promotions moving him. Quillin signed with Golden
Boy late last year around the same time that they announced a
partnership with Brooklyn's Barclays Center, the future home of the
New Jersey Nets which is slated to open in July 2012. Quillin seemed
to be the centerpiece that Golden Boy hoped to build the New York
region around, yet Quillin has yet to fight near home since the two
joined forces at the end of the year.
While Brinkley is no doubt the
underdog, he still represents the biggest challenge that Quillin has
faced in his career, and not by any marginal amount. In his last
fight on Telefutura in Fairfield, California, Quillin headlined
against an opponent in Dennis Sharpe that had quite a few other
respected writers questioning the licensing of Quillin's opponent for
a fight where he was heavily overmatched.
Quillin carried Sharpe through the
first three rounds before finally opening up a bit more to stop his
outclassed opponent. Against Brinkley, Quillin will have to work much
harder than that.
Brinkley worked hard to restore
credibility to his name after The Contender first season and
subsequent losses to Joey Spina and Robin Reid rendered Brinkley as a
never was to the general boxing public. Brinkley first joined up with
the Lane brothers for his fight against Dallas Vargas in July of
2007, a fight that would begin an eight bout win streak that
culminated in the eliminator win against Stevens and the respect of
those who had already written him off.
Jesse was favored against every
opponent he stepped in against during that run sans Stevens. But each
opponent presented something a little different and helped build
Brinkley into a regional star, something which is sorely missing from
boxing that helped carry the sport the past few centuries.
His “Civil War” with Joey Gilbert
was one of the most anticipated turf wars put together in the last
few years, and the fight only didn't live up to the expectations
because Brinkley battered Gilbert so easily, busting Gilbert's nose
early in the bout which put him in retreat. Brinkley marched to a
wide decision win.
A heavily overweight Brinkley was given
a short training camp to ready himself for lefty Mike Paschall in a
light heavyweight bout. It serves as the only bout Brinkley looked
soft and rusty in as he had to come down from over 200 pounds to try
and make the 175-pound limit. Things looked bad for Brinkley early,
but he turned it on in the late rounds in order to secure a tight
win. The Jesse Brinkley of just a few years before that would have
likely fallen to the pressure and tried to find an excuse for his
slip-up while this version of him gritted his teeth and toughed it
out.
One wonders what will happen if things
don't go well for Quillin out the gate, or if he builds a lead that
Brinkley begins to put a dent in midway through the bout. He's
handled quite a bit outside the ring; overcoming managerial problems
and several injuries that kept him out of the ring for almost a
year-and-a-half just as his career was beginning to build momentum.
At 27 years old, Quillin doesn't have
too much time to try and get into the mix at the top of 160 or 168. A
win over Brinkley establishes himself as a legitimate contender,
bridging the gap from promising prospect in one move. Friday night,
we'll see if Quillin can clench his teeth and work through what
promises to be a tough fight to keep the train rolling. Jesse
Brinkley promises to offer heavy resistance in front of his home
crowd Friday in what could be the best matched fight the Spanish
network has seen thus far in 2011. Let's hope it's as competitive in
the ring as it looks to be on paper.
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