Harris looks to right the Vicious
Vivian Express
Mark E. Ortega
Leave-it-in-the-ring.com
April 6, 2011
It doesn't seem that long ago that
“Vicious” Vivian Harris looked to be one of boxing's brightest
young emerging talents, having lifted his first world title at just
24 years of age with a resounding second round stoppage of Diosbelys
Hurtado to claim the WBA 140-pound championship back in October of
2002. Now Harris [29-5-1, 19 KOs] stands at the crossroads of his
career against Golden Boy Promotions prospect Jessie Vargas [14-0, 7
KOs] in the headlining bout of a Telefutura Solo Boxeo televised card
from Primm, Nevada this Friday.
Harris' three year title reign would be
plagued by inactivity as he was unable to land big name opposition.
He made three successful defenses of his title which included two
wins abroad against Oktay Urkal in his opponent's stomping grounds of
Berlin, Germany. In his first defense, Harris was able to rise off
the deck against Souleymane M'baye to earn a wide decision.
He finally looked to be earning some
spotlight as his defense against the unheralded awkward human
punching bag Carlos Maussa served as one of the chief supporting
bouts to Floyd Mayweather, Jr.'s HBO pay-per-view debut against
Arturo Gatti. As the main event's result seemed pretty predetermined,
Harris had an opportunity to announce his arrival if he were able to
score an impressive win. Maussa was a substitute for Arturo Morua,
whom Maussa had lost to just two fights prior by twelve round
decision.
“Vivian Harris isn't going anywhere,
I'm taking it one fight at a time,” voiced Harris prior to his
showdown with Maussa. “Everybody will see that Vivian Harris is the
best fighter at 140 pounds this Saturday.”
The always bashful Brooklyn, New Yorker
by way of Guyana had gotten into a scuffle with Mayweather at the
press conference for the card and had long claimed that Floyd was
ducking him. Amongst hardcore boxing fans, Harris was perceived by
many as a possible threat to Mayweather, and one capable of handing
him his first career blemish.
In a division that, at the time
featured Mayweather, Gatti, Miguel Cotto, and Ricky Hatton, Harris
was easily the most often forgotten.
Against Maussa, it was evident early on
that Harris was not quite prepared for his opponent's unorthodox
fighting style. Maussa had the oddest of footwork which made his wide
and loopy shots harder to avoid than would normally be the case.
Harris started off the fight quickly, looking to land something
meaningful to end the night early. Maussa ate his best shots and kept
pressing forward, which didn't deter Harris much from trying to land
the home run.
Harris had the luxury of having the
incomparable Emanuel Steward in his corner, who offered up the advice
in between rounds of working the jab more instead of firing off power
punches. Despite the advice, Harris did not throw so much as a single
jab, showing his lack of experience at the top level. It's hard to
criticize Harris when he had a guy in front of him that windmilled
his punches and left his chin right out to be blasted.
Despite the obvious separation in class
between the two, Harris engaged in a fight that favored Maussa's
awkward style, winging shots that he otherwise wouldn't dare throw
against an upper level opponent. As the fight began to slip away, so
did Harris' confidence and he got on his bicycle. A left hand in
round seven sent Harris crashing down to the canvas and he was unable
to beat the count.
Harris would rebound from the loss and
win two HBO televised fights against a well finished Stevie Johnston
and a close encounter against Juan Lazcano before once again going on
the road in a world title bout, this time to the UK and Junior
Witter.
In that bout, Harris looked listless
before being stopped brutally in seven. A return to the ring came a
year later and he was dropped twice in the opening round against
journeyman Octavio Narvaez before scoring a stoppage in the sixth.
It was at this point that Harris was
signed by Golden Boy Promotions, most obviously as an opponent to be
used for some of their more touted fighters, such as Oxnard's Victor
Ortiz. Harris was given a ESPN Friday Night Fights slot to earn a win
on national television against Noe Bolanos in his first fight with
the company.
Unfortunately for Harris, an accidental
headbutt occurred in the second round. Harris walked around for a
minute before collapsing to the canvas. Harris would leave the ring
on a stretcher in a situation that had many worried for his future
health.
Harris would return against hard
hitting undefeated prospect Lucas Matthysse six months later and find
himself again in a controversial situation. After four competitive
rounds, referee Gelasio Huerta stopped the bout for no logical reason
as Harris had not taken a high amount of punishment. Matthysse seemed
intent on giving Harris a rematch, as did Golden Boy head Oscar De La
Hoya, but alas, the opportunity never came. De La Hoya considered it
one of the worst stoppages he had ever seen.
Instead, seven months later Harris
would be fed to Victor Ortiz, who was on his own comeback of sorts
after being stopped by Marcos Maidana. That fight would not be so
competitive and Harris was done in three rounds.
Harris is not in over his head in this
one, as Vargas has looked rather pedestrian in his most recent
fights. Against trial horse and oft-used opponent Cristian Favela in
February, Vargas failed to impress. His most impressive win to date
is oddly over Arturo Morua, the man Witter was supposed to face
instead of Maussa, where he scored a sixth-round stoppage in only his
tenth professional bout.
In Friday's main event against Jesse
Vargas, it could stand as Harris' last chance to reignite the Vicious
Vivian Express. A loss to a level of opponent of Vargas, who is seen
by many as a solid prospect, would most definitely slip Harris into a
perennial opponent situation. If Harris suffers a defeat similar to
the brutal ones he has before, one would hope he elects to hang them
up. Either way, this bout will go a long way in establishing whether
or not Harris has anything left at this point in his career. Here's
hoping he has enough to make it through this bout unscathed.
This
night of world class professional boxing is presented by Golden Boy
Promotions in association with Roy Englebrecht Promotions’ special
edition of “Fight Club Primm,” and sponsored by Cerveza Tecate
and AT&T. Doors open at 6:00pm PT, the first bell rings at 7:00pm
PT and the televised Solo Boxeo broadcast begins at 11:30pm ET / PT
(10:30pm CT).
Tickets,
priced at $50 (Floor) and $20 (General Admission), may be purchased
at the Star of the Desert Arena Box Office or online at
www.primmvalleyresorts.com.
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