Showing posts with label Luis Collazo. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Luis Collazo. Show all posts
Monday, September 2, 2013
Collazo re-emerges with victory over Sanchez
Collazo re-emerges with victory over Sanchez
Mark E. Ortega
RingTV.com
September 2, 2013
When Luis Collazo was fighting championship fights on HBO, Alan Sanchez was barely old enough to drive a car and hadn’t fought as a professional yet.
That experience helped guide the battle-tested Collazo (34-5, 17 knockouts) to a unanimous-decision victory over the ten-year younger Sanchez (12-3-1, 6 KOs) in their ten-round main event on Fox Sports 1’s second Monday night broadcast.
The two felt each other out in the opening round, but Collazo showed his sharpness early, landing straight lefts regularly. Sanchez didn’t open up until a few rounds later, and began landing straight right hands, though Collazo would occasionally land a pretty counter.
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Sunday, September 1, 2013
Sanchez gets called up to the majors
Sanchez gets called up to the majors
Mark E. Ortega
Martinez News-Gazette
September 1, 2013
When Luis Collazo first won a world title by beating Jose Antonio Rivera by unanimous decision in 2005, Fairfield’s Alan Sanchez wasn’t even old enough to drive, being just fourteen years old.
While Collazo had fought names like Ricky Hatton, Shane Mosley, and Andre Berto in fights all televised by HBO by 2009, Sanchez had yet to fight a professional bout.
It’ll be Collazo who Sanchez looks across the ring at on Monday night when the two fight in the ten-round main event of Fox Sports One’s new Monday night boxing program. The show emanates from San Antonio, Tex.
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Monday, March 21, 2011
Tough, tough lucked Collazo ready for another opportunity
Tough, tough lucked Collazo ready for
another opportunity
Mark E. Ortega
Leave-it-in-the-ring.com
March 21, 2011
Despite being only thirty years of age,
former welterweight champion Luis Collazo of Brooklyn, New York has
seen his share of big fight opportunities slip through his hands,
more often than not the cause being something out of his control.
Despite many questions left unanswered over the course of the 30-year
old fighter's nearly eleven year professional career, he has found a
way to move on and let the past be the past, focusing all of his
efforts on a better tomorrow where he hopes another opportunity to
showcase his talents at the upper tier will appear soon.
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