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Brian Viloria


Friday Aug 11, 2006

Nino, the shorter fighter between the two, landed many more jabs and fired five and six-punch combinations. Viloria seemed intent on firing the killing blow. It never came.

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Viloria Loses and Bojorquez Stopped in Las Vegas

By David A. Avila

LAS VEGAS – It was a bad day for California-based prizefighters.

WBC junior flyweight titleholder Brian Viloria was dethroned and Mira Loma’s Carlos Bojorquez, a middleweight, was stopped by technical knockout at the Orleans Casino on Thursday before more than four thousand fans.

The pocket destroyer Viloria (19-1, 12 KOs) was unable to find Mexico’s Omar Nino who befuddled the former champion from the third round until the final 12th.

“It was a regular fight for me,” said Nino (24-2-1, 10 KO), fighting for the first time outside of Mexico. “I saw in the tapes that he didn’t like to fight inside. It worked very well.”

Nino, the shorter fighter between the two, landed many more jabs and fired five and six-punch combinations. Viloria seemed intent on firing the killing blow. It never came.

“I knew he was going for the knockout,” said Nino. “I stayed in my defense.”

All three judges scored it big for the Mexico fighter 119-110, 117-111, 117-112.

It was the third consecutive time a major card held in the Orlean’s Arena resulted in an upset. The first was Vernon Forrest, a 3-1 favorite, losing a rematch to Ricardo Mayorga. The second was Kassim Ouma soundly defeated by Roman Karmazin immediately after the African signed a long-term agreement with Golden Boy. Now it was Viloria losing to the completely unknown Mexican Nino.

“This was my first opportunity to fight for a world title. I waited so long for this moment,” Nino said. “I’m very, very happy.”

In the Mexican middleweight showdown between Bojorquez and Jose Luis Zertuche (19-2-2, 14 KOs), it was the older gatekeeper versus the new.

Both began the first round slowly with Bojorquez stunning Zertuche with a long right hand. Then the momentum shifted as Zertuche seemed to have the quicker hand-speed during the exchanges.

“The fight was not the one we planned,” said Ruben Castanon, who trains Bojorquez. “It just didn’t work out for Carlos.”

Bojorquez (26-9-6, 22 KOs) was hurt badly in the second round but fought out of the trouble. His punching power must have still been strong because Zertuche did not want to take unnecessary chances.

But the rounds kept mounting up against Bojorquez who traded whenever possible as fans screamed and some covered their eyes. At 1:25 of the eighth round an overhand right to the temple stunned the Mira Loma fighter and a left hook to the jaw finally ended matters. Referee Robert Byrd waved it off.

Bojorquez was sent to Valley View Medical Center in Las Vegas for a mandatory CAT scan. Any fighter stopped by knockout is required to take one.

In another middleweight bout, Ireland’s Andy Lee (4-0) used his 6-1 height and left-handed speed to race to a hard-fought victory over Carl Cockerman (12-12-3). There were no knockdowns. The judges scored it 60-54 for Lee.

Lee is trained by Emanuel Steward at Kronk Gym in Detroit.

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Contact David A. Avila @ TheSweetScience.com


francis:  Like i said before, Viloria is an overrated fighter without fighting basically no one with top credentials, plus he ducked Juanito Rubilliar, #1 contender at the time, his excuse? his hand, but after Rubillar had to fight in Japan for an elimination bout , Viloria camp came out with a healed hand and an opponent , Nino, that they thought was going to be a walk in the park. Viloria showed, that he is a chicken with no heart at all..Arum, Sulaiman, should be ashamed of the bad they are doing to boxing...
Friday Aug 11, 2006 05:32:56 AM
Anonymous user:  Francis, you're an idiot.
Friday Aug 11, 2006 03:45:21 PM
facts:  rubillar fought in thailand, not japan, and lost to a guy name wandee singwangcha for the 'interim' title. dont expect wandee and nino to meet anytime soon though as the WBC rack up the sanctioning fees from both of them
Saturday Aug 12, 2006 06:30:20 AM
francis:  Facts, thanks for the correction, yes, indeed was in Thailand a place so hard to win a decision against a local. Rubillars camp complained about the desicion and even the press thought Rubillar won.. I agrree that both Nino and Wandee wont match each other anytime soon, but also i dont think both will last too long as Champs. So sad that the real deals, Cazares, Calderon, Parra, Arce, Dieppa and etc, cant be match against each other coz of the freaking boxing politics. Dieppa will fight Cazares in Puerto Rico soon, that will be a very interesting fight to watch, but, coz of politics and names, they wont attract a pay per view audience. I will prefer to see that fight better than any fight of Viloria. Those guys are champions and ex champions(Dieppa), with pedigree.. Thanks
Sunday Aug 13, 2006 01:23:11 AM

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