Arreola with weight on his shoulders,
not in midsection
Mark E. Ortega
May 27, 2011
When Friday night's original main event
from the Reno Events Center in Reno, Nevada between Josesito Lopez
and Steve Upsher fell apart following a training injury sustained by
Lopez a few weeks ago, heavyweight contender Chris Arreola was called
upon to step in and headline the ESPN televised Friday Night Fights
on short notice. Arreola [31-2, 27 KOs] will be stepping in against
journeyman Kendrick Releford just two weeks after scoring a third
round stoppage of the game Nagy Aguilera in Carson, California away
from the cameras in an off-television appearance.
What the southern California based
Arreola showed in that fight was a renewed dedication to the sport as
he tipped the scales at 234 pounds, the lightest he has weighed in at
since July of 2007. The main concern with the fan friendly Arreola
has always been his commitment. In his two biggest opportunities to
date, Arreola weighed in north of 250 pounds in his world title shot
against Vitali Klitschko in September of 2009 and his important
crossroads bout with Tomasz Adamek less than a full year later.
Losses in both bouts sent Arreola to the back of the line, usually
with a paycheck that had a couple less zeroes than he had grown
accustomed to.
That Arreola has found himself under
240 pounds against less than stellar opposition is promising for his
future. For this fight, Arreola weighed in at 236 pounds.
Releford [22-14-2, 10 KOs], of Fort
Worth, Texas, is a journeyman caliber opponent but one that has only
been stopped twice in his fourteen defeats, often giving his more
credible opposition more than they expect in a losing effort.
Releford will be the smaller man as he weighed in at 230 pounds.
A win likely won't result in Arreola
moving much closer to a title shot, but keeping the heavyweight
active and away from the cervezas promises to be a positive thing.
One can only hope that getting back in the ring so soon doesn't carry
a negative result as sometimes fighters can feel overtrained, as many
expect the case was with James Kirkland and his return from a long
layoff. While the bout is scheduled for ten rounds, not many expect
it to see the distance.
Although Arreola brings the star power
to Friday night's card, the heavyweight bout that sees the most on
the line is the IBF mandated box-off between #6 Maurice Harris and #7
Tony Thompson in a twelve-rounder that will determine who will meet
former title challenger Eddie Chambers in an eliminator for a shot at
the winner of the much anticipated Wladimir Klitschko-David Haye
title unifier later this summer. The bout serves as an intriguing
rematch of a fight that took place in the November 2002 Thunderbox
Heavyweight Tournament finals, which Harris won on points. Although
the bouts didn't register on their official records, Harris scored a
$100,000 prize for winning the eight-man tournament which can be
given credit for helping inspire the recently established
Prizefighter series over in the United Kingdom.
Harris [24-14-2, 10 KOs], of East
Orange, New Jersey, carries a record similar to that of journeyman
Releford, but is on a four bout win streak since returning to the
ring following a nearly three year layoff. Harris began his career at
just sixteen years of age, compiling a 9-8-2 record before hitting
his stride as a pro. His eighth loss came at the hands of Larry
Holmes in a USA Tuesday Night Fights main event that saw Harris
outwork and outbox his elderly, vastly more experienced opponent.
Although Harris wound up on the wrong side of a controversial
decision, the defeat served as a huge confidence builder that would
lead Harris on a seven fight win streak before being brutally knocked
out by Derrick Jefferson in an HBO Boxing After Dark co-feature.
Harris continued to fight tough opposition at a .500 clip, handing
future WBO heavyweight champ Sergei Liakhovich his first defeat in
his biggest victory.
Thompson [35-2, 23 KOs], of Washington,
D.C., is credited with giving heavyweight kingpin Wladimir Klitschko
perhaps his toughest challenge over the younger brother's most recent
title run. Thompson was eventually stopped in the eleventh but put up
a solid fight that kept his stock from falling too far. What has kept
Thompson back is his lack of a personality as he has been dodged by
the bigger name heavyweights otherwise. At the press conference
following Chris Arreola's loss to Adamek, Thompson challenged Arreola
to a fight, at which the Mexican-American basically laughed it off as
a joke.
Thompson has done his part to earn
another shot in stopping his last four opponents and is two fights
away from being in line for another title opportunity. At 39 years
old, a loss would be devastating to his career and would likely end
any hopes of another big fight opportunity. Thompson will carry a
size advantage into the ring as he weighed in at 255.5 pounds against
Harris' 244.
Well touted junior middleweight
prospect and 2008 U.S. Olympian Javier Molina [6-0, 4 KOs] is also
making a quick return to the ring after decisioning Danny Figueroa
over four rounds two weeks ago in Carson. The Norwalk, California
based fighter will be met in a four-round bout by David Lopez [3-5-3]
of Caldwell, Idaho. Molina weighed in at 149 pounds while Lopez came
in at a half pound heavier at 149.5.
In an interesting rematch, former
esteemed amateur standout Michael Ruiz, Jr. [7-0-1, 3 KOs] of Fresno,
California will go at it again with Jonathan Alcantara [4-4-2] of
Novato, California in a return of their bout from last November on
the undercard of Andre Ward-Sakio Bika. The bout was a much more
measured one than privy boxing fans expected, but both camps are
expecting more of a slugfest this time around. Ruiz felt he didn't
deliver his best effort last time around and expects to come away
with a victory in their six-rounder. Ruiz weighed in at 119 while
Alcantara came in a pound heavier at 120.
Exciting super featherweight Guy Robb
[3-0, KO] of Sacramento, California meets Nogales, Sonora, Mexico's
Noe Lopez, Jr. [7-7, 4 KOs] in a four-rounder. Robb is coming off of
an explosive decision victory over Manuel Morales from March in
Fairfield, California in a bout that was so good it deserved to be
televised but was unfortunate in missing the telecast. Robb is a fan
friendly fighter who has never failed to deliver excitement while
Lopez expects to stand up to the young fighter's ferociousness.
2000 U.S. Olympic silver medalist
Ricardo Williams, Jr. [17-2, 10 KOs] of Cincinnati, Ohio will step
into the ring for the second time in 2011 as he takes on trial horse
Chris Grays [9-22, 5 KOs] of Traverse, Michigan in a scheduled six
rounder. Williams was once considered the best natural prospect to
come out of the 2000 Olympics, but he failed to reach the level many
expected, likely due to his being overwhelmed by a large signing
bonus at such a young age. Williams is still young enough at 29 to
make a real go of things, but he will have to step in against a real
opponent sooner rather than later if that is to happen. Both fighters
weighed in at 148 pounds.
Knockout artist Tyrone Brunson was left
off the card as six bouts will be featured on the Goossen-Tutor
Promotions headed card.
Tickets
for the May 27 boxing card at the Reno Events Center are priced at
$100, $59.50 and $29.50.
Tickets may be purchased at Reno Events Center, Eldorado and Silver
Legacy's Ticket Offices, or by phone at 1-800-745-3000 and on line at
www.ticketmaster.com.
Doors
open at 4 p.m. with the first bout at 5 pm. The first ESPN televised
bout is set for 9 p.m. PT / 6 p.m. PT.
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