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Friday Nov 30, 2007


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Can Junior Match J.C. Chavez Sr.?

By David A. Avila

In a mere four years Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. has engaged in 34 pro fights faster than you can say lickety-split.

 

The 21-year-old son of Mexico’s purported greatest boxer has also amassed a following throughout the Southwest from Mexican immigrants who blindly follow him in his adventure toward a world championship.

 

But can he possibly fill his father’s gargantuan footsteps?

 

Chavez Jr. meets Ray Sanchez (20-1, 15 KOs) in that fighter’s home state New Mexico in a junior middleweight bout that could be the biggest leap to stardom for the son of an icon. The 10-round fight takes place at Tingley Coliseum in Alburquerque. It will be televised on pay-per-view television and is promoted by Top Rank.

 

Father and son don’t look alike or fight alike, in fact it’s easier to say that it’s the younger brother Omar who more resembles the father. But Junior has slowly shown that he’s picking up facets of the sport here and there like a marching army crossing numerous battlefields and collecting discarded weapons.

 

“Over his last few fights he has looked very good and is much more settled as a fighter,” stated big Julio during a press conference this week. “I really like what I see in him.”

 

As a teen Junior and Omar Chavez lived in Riverside, California with their mother who was estranged from their father. Often the two could be seen boxing in numerous gyms in the area. Junior always had the dedication.

 

“The expectations of greatness will always be there because of my name,” said Junior Chavez (33-0-1, 26 KOs) who began fighting as a lightweight and now is a junior middleweight. “But I knew that from the start and continue to live with it.”

 

Despite a spindly appearance that included the face of a choir boy when he first stepped into a prizefight ring in 2003, Chavez has slowly rumbled through a list of Midwestern opponents with an occasional Mexican fighter thrown in as he marched to this moment.

 

But Sanchez, 24, poses many problems for Chavez starting with his left-handed stance, impressive record and hometown support.

 

Chavez can feel the pressure.

 

“My biggest concern is that he is left-handed,” Chavez said at the El Paseo Inn in Los Angeles earlier this week. “I have never fought a lefty before.”

 

Even papa Chavez hesitates a bit with his son facing a southpaw.

 

“He’s (Sanchez) a very tough fighter and left-handers are always difficult to fight,” said Chavez Sr. who fought a total of 115 pro bouts and a few lefties in his career like Hector Camacho.

 

Soaking in the entire press junket like an amused bystander, Sanchez knows that a win would propel him into the forefront. He doesn’t think a win is farfetched.

 

“We are both hungry and both want to prove we belong at the highest level,” said Sanchez. “This is the first step for both of us.”

 

The New Mexico boxer has a lot to prove though he’s only suffered one loss and that came five years ago. But Sanchez’s resume doesn’t impress. He’s never beaten a veteran fighter with a winning record. Sanchez has never been truly tested.

 

“I couldn’t be more ready for this fight,” said Sanchez who is also a Junior.

 

Chavez already knows if he can beat Sanchez that he will be fighting Alfonso Gomez of the Contender reality television series. The fight will take place in March, but first things first. Sanchez stands in front of him.

 

And one more thing: his father’s shadow stands before him larger than the city of Culiacan, Mexico.

 

“My father’s shadow will never go away completely,” said Chavez Jr. “But I believe I have shown some people that I am a capable fighter and I know I have some fans of my own because of the way I fight.”

 

Well said. Almost as precise as a left hook to the liver that his father perfected.

 

“I think my son has more skills and is the stronger puncher of the two,” said Papa Chavez.

 

Other pay-per-view fights

 

Jorge Arce, like Chavez Jr., know if he beats his opponent Medgoen Singsurat (53-4, 39 KOs) in a battle for the vacant WBC Latino bantamweight title. It’s a dangerous fight because Arce is a flyweight moving up two divisions and the Thai fighter can really bang.

 

But Arce (47-4-1, 36 KOs) knows a victory leads him immediately to a match against former junior bantamweight titleholder Martin Castillo.

 

“I not only need to win but I need to look tremendous doing it,” said Arce. “If I win I get to fight Martin Castillo and that fight will be like Morales-Barrera and Vazquez-Marquez.”

 

Also on the fight card is the talented but seldom recognized WBO strawweight titleholder Ivan Calderon of Puerto Rico. He could possibly be the best boxer in the world but his diminutive size keeps the boxing world from noticing.

 

Calderon (29-0, 6 KOs) moves faster than a bullet train and is harder for opponents to hit than a fly in the dark. He defends his title against Mexico’s Juan Esquer (22-2-1, 17 KOs) who probably hopes Calderon slips and falls.

 

 

 

 


Contact David A. Avila @ TheSweetScience.com


THE ANSWER...:  NO.
Friday Nov 30, 2007
Saul:  He might beat Ray Sanchez, but he will NOT get passed Alfonso Gomez!!!
Friday Nov 30, 2007
wayne:  Chavez Jr, matching Chavez Sr. My guess is the answer will be known in about five years. Chavez Jr. is talented. Much more so than some might think. At least from my point of view. One thing for certain Chavez Sr. was mean inside the ring. Chavez Sr. showed no mercy. If Chavez Jr. shows that well he will be on his way to being a great prize fighter. Chavez Jr. has the talent. Chavez Jr. needs to be a killer inside the ring since the better fighters will be gunning for him once he steps up competition. Beating Chavez Jr. the name alone will provide added motivation. I loved Chavez Sr. as a fighter. I like Chavez Jr. too.
Friday Nov 30, 2007
donputo69:  this guy chavez jr and chavez sr are and will always be OVERRATED..is just a tradition for these mexicans fighters to fight 60 bums and make their record look good..same goes for jr..i believe one time chavez was 80-0..name me 1 good boxer that he fought? its ok i'll wait..thank you.
Friday Nov 30, 2007
TOMMY:  DONPUTO U CLEARLY DONT KNOW UR BOXING AS CHAVEZ FOUGHT A WHOS WHO OF WORLD CHAMPIONS DURING HIS UNDEFEATED STREAK AND BEAT THEM ALL, SURE HE FOUGHT HIS SHARE OF GUYS WHO DIDNT HAVE BIG CARREES BUT HE WAS ALSO 1 OF THE MOST ACTIVE FIGHTERS AROUND AND SANDWHICHED THOSE EASIER FIGHTS IN BETWEEN FIGHTING CHAMPION AFTER CHAMPION IN DIFFERENT WEIGHT CLASSES IN ORDER TO STAY SHARP, DO YOUR HOMEWORK BEFORE MAKING ABSURD STATEMENT
Saturday Dec 1, 2007
Boxer:  Rosario was considered unbeatable when JCC beat him to a pulp. He also beat Roger Mayweather who was known as the Mexican Killer until Chavez beat him. There were many more he destroyed. Donputo69 brother, you must be real young not to know that stuff.
Saturday Dec 1, 2007
donputo69:  ok ok..so then he beat 2 average fighters..so his record will be then 82-0...whoopi damn do!!
Saturday Dec 1, 2007
TOMMY:  Mario Martinez 33-1
Sunday Dec 2, 2007
TOMMY:  Mario Martinez 33-1 ruben castillio 64-3 roger mayweather 21-2 rocky lockridge38-4 fransico da cruz 27-1 edwin roario 31-2 rafiel limon 51-14 rodolfo aguilar 21-0 jose luis raminrez 101-6 roger mayweather again- 34-5 Alberto de las Mercedes Cortes 44-0 meldrick taylor 24-0 John Duplessis 36-1 Kyung Duk Ahn 29-1 lonnie smith 29-2 angel hernandez 37-0 frankie mitchell 29-1 hector comacho 40-1 greg haugen 32-4 terrence ali 52-7 frankie randell 50-2 meldrick taylor again 32-3 tony lopez 45-4 giovanni parisi 29-1 joey gamache 45-2 is that enough world champions that he beat? many of which are hall of famers and im missing a few- now go crawl back in ur whole
Sunday Dec 2, 2007
donputo69:  alot of no names in that list..i never heard of them..maybe mayweather and gamache..oohh and by the way..i forgot..meldrick taylor..but taylor got robbed..everybody knows that..
Monday Dec 3, 2007
Kininski:  Go back to your pokemon card games donputa69. You dont know giña about giña.
Monday Dec 3, 2007
Saul:  Donputo69, your posting priviledges are removed for the period of one (1) month.
Monday Dec 3, 2007
donputo69:  bla bla bla bla bla...im gonna stay with my word..chavez jr and sr are overrated bums..plain and simple..hate me all ya want..but its the truth..im in title for my opinions..
Monday Dec 3, 2007
rb:  Wake me up when Jr. fights someone with a pulse...
Monday Dec 3, 2007
rudy:  Arum has mentioned Baldomir as Chavez Jr's next test -- early '08 the Concrete Chinned Snail in Baldomir vs the Pre-Puberty JC Chavez Jr
Tuesday Dec 4, 2007
Richard Kuklinski:  Can Jr. match Cahvez Sr. ? Lets match them up. I like senior on cuts.
Tuesday Dec 4, 2007
donputo69:  lol @ rb....you are totally right...lol..
Tuesday Dec 4, 2007
chuly:  Julio Cesar Chavez Junior will soon be one of the greatest fighters. He would be a legendary fighter just as his great father. Plus, I believe he has enough potential and he is a great fighter.
Friday Jun 6, 2008
Oscar:  Chavez Jr. has alot to live up to, but it will be no problem for the lad to fit the jeans, cuz its in his genes!!!
Monday Jul 14, 2008
Jelani:  Okay guys lets put this into perspective. Jr has an inflated record....so what!?! The kid is currently a legitamite 37-0-1 ( by most accounts jr won the Vanda fight even though it was close). Sr. was even worse when it came to fighting bums! Check out his first 43 fights before he won a world championship. In fight number 43 he fought a guy that was 1-6, his 42nd fight the guy was 3-3, 41st fight the guy was 0-0! The list goes on. Sr. was a legend but it didn't happen over night. He had to learn how to ply his trade in the ring as well. Cut Jr some slack at least he's fighting live bodies. I believe his potential will be realized in about 3 years. Until then for him it's going to be baptism by fire until he learns the nuances of the game. Another fighter that wasn't great from the beggining but has matured into something truly special is Manny Pacquiao. Think about that...
Friday Sep 5, 2008
Joana Chav3z [mz.happ13]:  donputo u sukk! chav3z is mi bab3. hat3r!!!
Wednesday Jan 14, 2009
alberto :  for: donputo69 you want to know who did he beat that was good for start he beat Joey Gamache 45-2-0 camacho 40-1 David Kamau 26-0 Tony Lopez 45-4 Andy Holligan 21-0 Marty Jakubowski 37-0 Angel Hernandez 37-0 Juan Soberanes 39-7 Lonnie Smith 29-2-1 Tommy Small 23-3 John Duplessis 36-1 Kyung-Duk Ahn 29-1 Meldrick Taylor 24-0-1 Alberto de las Mercedes Cortes 44-0 Roger Mayweather 34-5 Jose Luis Ramirez 101-6 Edwin Rosario 31-2 Danilo Cabrera 30-4 Francisco Tomas Da Cruz 27-1 Rocky Lockridge 38-4 Ruben Castillo 62-4 Mario Martinez 33-1-2 and alot more that i don't remember rigth now. so you must be an idiot or a someone that doesn't know what he is talking about
Wednesday Mar 4, 2009

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