Dirrell prevails, Avalos derails
Mark E. Ortega
Leave-it-in-the-ring.com
December 2, 2011
December 2, 2011
Friday night from the Chumash Resort &
Casino, WBC #1 super middleweight Anthony Dirrell took one step
closer to his aspirations of winning a world title, scoring a fourth
round stoppage of #2 rated Renan St Juste of Canada in the
twelve-round main event of a ShoBox: The New Generation televised
card promoted by Gary Shaw Promotions.
Dirrell [24-0, 21 KOs] more or less
controlled the action throughout despite a hesitancy to engage early
on. Dirrell worked well in the opening round, landing a few nice
combinations behind his jab.
In round two, both landed big hooks
simultaneously while Dirrell's moved St Juste [23-3-1, 15 KOs]
backwards. There was a solid exchange at the end of the round that
signaled a change in the tempo for the remainder of the bout.
Round three saw St Juste more effective
as Dirrell opened up his offense a little more due to a grow in
confidence.
Dirrell began touching St Juste
regularly with his jab and straight right in the fourth before a
headbutt put him down and made cause for a pause in the action.
Following the restart, Dirrell landed a
big right hook, which would be the eventual downfall of his 39-year
old opponent. A flurry against the ropes followed and St Juste began
to fall forward while clutching his arms around Dirrell's waist.
Dirrell lifted his arms up so as to signal to referee Jack Reiss that
he was falling from his punches and not being dragged to the canvas.
St Juste fell, and when he returned to
his feet, his arm was in an awkward position and he quite possibly
suffered a dislocated shoulder. Referee Reiss immediately signaled
the end to the fight, prompting Dirrell to immediately launch into a
somersault in the ring in celebration. The official time of the
stoppage was 2:54 in the fourth round.
With the win, Dirrell, of Flint,
Michigan, sets himself up for a shot at the WBC title pending the
result of the Super Six World Boxing Classic finale in two weeks
between Andre Ward and Carl Froch. Dirrell could very well be
fighting for a vacant title.
In the opening televised bout, unbeaten
but unknown Jhonathan Romero [20-0, 12 KOs] survived a first-round
knockdown to go on and spoil the hopes of Chris Avalos [19-2, 15
KOs], winning a ten-round split decision in an upset that was largely
booed by the crowd.
Romero, of Cali, Colombia, showed good
technical skills despite hailing from a country that is known mostly
for straight-forward brawlers. In the opening round, Romero got beat
up a bit on the ropes and when the referee called to break, Avalos
went after him. A barrage at the end of the round dropped Romero
right before the bell.
The early knockdown may have hurt
Avalos, who came in mostly recklessly after that. Romero did a good
job taking advantage, countering off the ropes when Avalos would
unleash a flurry. More often than not, Romero landed the better shots
when these exchanges would occur.
In the third, Romero was clubbed down
to a knee but it was missed by the referee.
Through the first third of the fight,
Avalos was doing the better work. As the rounds poured on, Avalos
began to slow and every shot Romero caught him with sent his head
snapping back, particularly lunging uppercuts and long straight
rights. Avalos may have been the bigger puncher yet Romero's shots
seemed to be more effective.
In the eighth, Avalos stunned Romero
and looked as though he might finish him. Romero held on and even
fought his way off the ropes. Avalos had punched himself out and
Romero was able to regain his legs and a stronghold in the fight.
Midway through the ninth, Romero hurt
Avalos for the first time in the fight and made Avalos look silly
down the stretch in the final round as he was able to land
combinations and move out of the way before Avalos could chase him
down with offense of his own.
Though Avalos was the more local of the
two, hailing from Lancaster, California, Romero got the benefit of
the doubt on the scorecards, prevailing via split decision. Patrick
Connolly had it 95-94 for Avalos, which was overruled by the scores
of Marcos Rosales and Kermit Bayless who had it 96-94 and 96-93
respectively for Romero. LIITR scored the bout 95-94 for Avalos, but
many of the rounds were close and the fight could have easily gone
either way.
UNTELEVISED UNDERCARD RESULTS
Making his United States debut, Breidis
Prescott younger brother Daulis dropped an eight-round split decision
to Glendale, California's Gabriel Tolmaljan in a competitive and at
times action packed super featherweight scrap.
Prescott [23-1, 17 KOs] got off to a
slow start that was further plagued by a suffered knockdown in the
fifth round. Tolmaljan [12-1-1, 3 KOs] managed to win rounds with his
impressive counterpunching early.
Prescott managed to mount a late rally,
wining the final three rounds on two judges' scorecards, but it was
too little too late as Tolmaljan's early success was enough to earn
him a razor thin victory. Two judges had it 76-75 for Tolmaljan while
one judge had it the other way 76-75 for Prescott.
Capping off an impressive first year as
a pro was San Ardo, California super bantamweight Roman Morales, who
earned a lopsided six-round unanimous decision over game but
outgunned Alejandro Castillo of Denver, Colorado.
Morales [8-0, 5 KOs] turned over his
right hand nicely and kept moving forward, slowly grinding down his
tough opponent. Castillo [4-2, KO] hung in tough but wilted under the
immense pressure and precise body attack of Morales, who looked
experienced beyond what his age would suggest. Morales cemented
himself as one of the top 122 pound prospects in the country heading
into 2012.
Highly touted Colombian lightweight
prospect Darley Perez [24-0, 18 KOs] remained unbeaten, pitching an
eight-round shutout of Mexican trial horse Fernando Trejo [33-17-6,
19 KOs]. Perez was unspectacular and workmanlike in his attack
against an opponent whose punch resistance is pretty much nonexistent
these days. Perez never pressed for the knockout and seemed content
to let his opponent reach the final bell.
Filipino super bantamweight Glenn
Porras [27-3, 17 KOs], making his American debut, won a tougher than
scores would indicate eight-round unanimous decision over journeyman
Adolfo Landeros of Hidalgo, Mexico. Porras, of Cotobato in the
Philippines, with the help of Nonito Donaire Sr. in his corner,
outworked Landeros for a majority of the length of the bout. Porras
landed a slew of good flurries throughout but was unable to put
Landeros out. Landeros [21-23-2, 10 KOs], to his credit, gave a game
effort the way he is known for.
Fellow super bantamweight prospect
Jonathan Arrellano [11-0-1, 2 KOs] of Ontario, California earned a
tough six-round unanimous decision over Jonathan Alcantara [4-6-2] of
Novato, California. Alcantara has proven to be a tough test for up
and coming little men in the state of California, and he proved to be
just as much of a test for Arrellano as for anyone. Arrellano was
able to land the flashier punches in a fight that saw a lot of
trading, earning him the decision by scores of 59-55 and 58-56 twice.
Arrellano is trained by Henry Ramirez, trainer of heavyweight
contender Chris Arreola.
Featherweight Roy Tapia [2-0, KO] of
East Los Angeles, California kept opponent Jose Garcia [0-6] of
Bakersfield, California winless, but had to work hard in order to do
so. Tapia, who is from the Black House stable, which features MMA
standouts Anderson Silva and Jose Aldo, had to put up with the early
volume of Garcia, choosing to pick his shots and be accurate rather
than reckless. Garcia had a good second round, snapping Tapia's head
back with a few shots. Neither guy displayed much handspeed and were
content to fight on the inside, ultimately favoring Tapia down the
stretch. Tapia won by scores of 40-36 twice and 39-37.
ShoBox was promoted by Gary Shaw
Promotions in association with Thompson Boxing and will return to
Chumash Resort & Casino in February for another televised card.
Matchmaker John Beninati mentioned matching 154 pound contenders
Jonathan Gonzalez and Gabriel Bracero for the main event.
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