Perez dominates Rodriguez!
Mark E. Ortega
Leave-it-in-the-ring.com
April 15, 2011
WBO #2 Salinas, Calif.-based super
featherweight Eloy “The Prince” Perez [21-0-2, 5 KOs] continued
his winning ways, outboxing Alejandro Rodriguez [12-2, 6 KOs] of
Guadalajara, Mexico to a unanimous shutout over ten lopsided rounds
in defense of his WBO NABO 130-pound title in the televised main
event Friday night of Telefutura's Solo Boxeo from Longshoremen's
Hall in San Francisco, California. The bout marked the second
straight for Perez at the location as he awaits a world title
opportunity that based on his recent performances should be around
the corner.
Perez did what he always does, using
his impressive handspeed, footwork and fluidity to control the fight
against his much slower footed opponent. Perez found success with his
jab at a high clip, which opened up his power punching midway through
the bout. Despite not much of a display of power, Rodriguez was
hesitant to exchange with Perez who dictated the fight with his
volume punching and ring generalship. Perez' conditioning proved
superior as his opponent slowed as the rounds wore on while Perez
looked as fresh in the tenth as he did for the opening bell.
Perez has thus far been denied a big
fight opportunity, having once been offered a non-eliminator against
Puerto Rican Luis Cruz off-television of last week's untelevised
portion of the Erik Morales-Marcos Maidana pay-per-view from last
weekend in Las Vegas. Franco will fight Martin Honorio who slipped in
for former WBO champion Rocky Martinez who pulled out earlier this
month from their clash on the undercard of tomorrow's Juan Manuel
Lopez-Orlando Salido undercard on Showtime. If Honorio were to pull
out, Perez looks to be fresh enough to fill in despite going ten
rounds tonight. Perez prevailed 100-90 on all three scorecards.
After falling off the Morales-Maidana
card, Golden Boy Promotions did right by super prospect Gary Russell,
Jr. [15-0, 9 KOs] of Capitol Heights, Maryland, finding him the easy
to hit Adolfo Landeros [21-19-1, 10 KOs] of Mexico City, Mexico as an
opponent for the televised co-featured bout which Russell won by
easily outclassing his opponent over six one-sided rounds in a
featherweight bout. Russell, a 2008 U.S. Olympian, dropped Landeros
to a knee in the opening round with a right hand that followed a left
hand that initially hurt him. Russell threw speedy seven and eight
punch pitty pat combinations throughout the bout as the game but
outgunned Landeros kept moving forward. Landeros every so often
landed a good right hand but was just too overmatched in speed and
skill. Russell tired a bit in the middle rounds but pressed the fight
in the final stanza in an attempt to get a stoppage, ultimately
prevailing 60-53 on all three cards.
Making his third fight in the Northern
California region, San Pablo, California's Bruno Escalante [3-0, 2
KOs] scored a brutal second round stoppage of Riverside, California's
Shaun Solomon [1-3-1] in a four round bantamweight bout. Escalante
dropped Solomon twice in the first and sent his opponent home at 46
seconds of the second round.
Local debutant Jonathan Chicas [1-0,
KO] of San Francisco earned an early stoppage of fellow newcomer Maja
Khali [0-1] of Oakland, California, finishing him in 1:47 of the
opening round in a four round junior welterweight bout. Chicas
dropped Khali early in the fight with a combination. Khali made it to
his feet but only took more punishment before the referee waved the
bout off following a second dropping.
San Mateo, California fan favorite Joe
Gumina [2-0, 2 KOs] made quick work of Sacramento, California's Harry
Gopaul [0-1], dropping his opponent twice before stopping him against
the ropes. The second knockdown was especially brutal as Gopaul ate a
shotgun blast style right hook while he was in the midst of throwing
his own heat. Gopaul went down hard but gamely made it to his feet
before ultimately eating more power shots from Gumina, who earned the
win at 1:31 of the opening round in a four round light heavyweight
bout.
Fans were woken up to start the card by
an entertaining first round between cruiserweights Lamont Williams
[4-1, KO] and Juan Hernandez [1-1, KO] as both fighters visited the
canvas in the opening few minutes of their four round bout. Williams,
from Fairfield, California, was surprisingly dropped in the first
thirty seconds by a four punch combination near the ropes. Williams
looked wobbly but then found a left uppercut that staggered San
Franciscan Hernandez followed by another left uppercut that dropped
him. The next three rounds saw Williams fight more cautiously while
Hernandez pressed forward. Williams couldn't miss with uppercuts and
stayed outside, boxing the rest of the way to a 40-35 decision on all
three scorecards.
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