Arreola stops Releford in seven
Mark E. Ortega
Leave-it-in-the-ring.com
May 27, 2011
Friday night in Reno, Nevada, fighting
just two weeks after stopping Nagy Aguilera in three rounds in
Carson, California, Chris Arreola assumed a role with more spotlight
as he stepped into the ESPN Friday Night Fights main event against
Kendrick Releford that was vacated by an intriguing junior
welterweight bout between Josesito Lopez and Steve Upsher when Lopez
suffered an injury in training.
Arreola [32-2, 28 KOs], who fought
off-television two Saturday's ago on fellow Goossen-Tutor stablemate
Andre Ward's undercard, weighed in at a trim 236 pounds and worked
hard to earn a seventh round stoppage against the durable journeyman
Releford [22-15-2, 10 KOs], who had only previously been stopped
twice in fourteen losses.
Releford got off to a good start,
touching Arreola accurately with a good jab before the heavy [in
odds] favorite Arreola got him into the corner and began pounding
away. Arreola took his time with this opponent, not really pressing
the fight until about the fourth round when Releford seemed to have
run out of gas. It was midway through the fight that the Fort Worth,
Texas native began taking heavy punishment. The end seemed like it
was going to come in round six when Releford sustained a beating in
the corner that forced him to a knee. Arreola tried getting the
finish but ran out of time as Releford survived the round.
It would take almost the full seventh
round for Arreola to finally get his stoppage as a flurry of punches
that left Releford defenseless was enough for referee Russell Mora to
jump in and save Releford at the 2:43 of the seventh round.
Arreola has scored two quick wins
against modest opposition, but the important thing to draw from the
wins is his newfound dedication. One hopes that when he gets into the
ring with a top ten opponent that he carries that same focus.
The evening's most important bout also
served as the most embarrassing, as #7 IBF heavyweight Tony Thompson
[36-2, 24 KOs] of Washington, D.C. scored an easy third round
stoppage over #6 ranked Maurice Harris of East Orange, New Jersey
[24-15-2, 10 KOs] in an IBF box-off to meet Eddie Chambers in an IBF
eliminator. The bout was thought to be a relatively competitive one
going in, but Harris' lack of effort was visible from the gate.
Thompson teed off early, landing mostly behind the head shots
although Harris was wobbled by as much of a jab at one point.
Harris seemed to have no legs
whatsoever and came into the fight in dreadful shape. He neglected to
throw a meaningful punch until the end of the first when Thompson ran
out of gas. The fight wouldn't get any more competitive as Harris was
put down once each in the second and third rounds before ultimately
being stopped on his feet at 1:51 of the third.
That this served the winner up to being
one fight away from a world title shot is an embarrassment as well as
a good illustration of how pathetic the heavyweight division under
the Klitschkos is.
Although Thompson is now the guy with
the fortunate positioning [he gave a game effort against Wladimir
Klitschko in '07, was stopped in eleven rounds], at age 39 it would
be hard to give Thompson a fair chance against any champion. He will
have his hands full with Eddie Chambers, who was stopped in the final
seconds of his Klitschko shot last year.
2008 U.S. Olympian junior middleweight
prospect Javier Molina [7-0, 4 KOs] of Norwalk, California had a
tougher than expected assignment in Caldwell, Idaho's David Lopez
[3-6-3], ultimately earning a unanimous decision win over his
outclassed opponent. What Lopez lacked in footwork, handspeed, and
power, he more than made up for in heart as he unleashed a number of
wild combinations in the closing seconds of nearly every round or
after a successful combination from the favorite. Molina was able to
maintain his poise as he was presented with a more lively opponent
than the record would indicate. Molina was also coming off a two week
break from his last fight.
Fresno, California bantamweight
prospect Michael Ruiz, Jr. [8-0-1, 3 KOs] scored a close and
questionable unanimous decision over game Jonathan Alcantara [4-5-2]
of Novato, California in a rematch of their November draw in Oakland.
Ruiz sustained a late rally in rounds five and six after falling
behind by most ringside accounts. Alcantara was the more accurate
fighter throughout but the action was mostly pressed by Ruiz, who
earned a decision much wider than the action would dictate. Scores
were 60-54 twice and 59-55.
2000 Olympic silver medalist Ricardo
Williams, Jr. [18-2, 10 KOs] of Cincinnati, Ohio won a unanimous
decision over Chris Gray [13-15, KO] of Baton Rouge, Louisiana by
scores of 59-55 twice and 58-56 in a six-round welterweight bout.
Williams turned in a lackluster performance against an opponent he
should have stopped if he is to be serious at this point of his
career. Still only 29 years old, Williams has some time to make
something happen but he is going to have to face a real opponent at
some point.
In a walkout bout, Sacramento,
California's Guy Robb [4-0, KO] turned in maybe the most exciting
performance of the card as he won a unanimous decision against Noe
Lopez, Jr. [7-8, 3 KOs]. The bout featured tons of in-fighting with
Robb coming out on the better end of it more often than not. Scores
were 40-36 across the board.
The card was promoted by Goossen-Tutor
Promotions and televised live on ESPN Friday Night Fights.
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