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Saturday Jun 27, 2009

Lopez headlined a fat card, with 10 bouts in all, in Atlantic City. Who'd you like to see him fight next, fans?

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JuanMa Stops Lontchi In Atlantic City

By George Kimball

ATLANTIC CITY ---   Considering that only one of Juan Manuel Lopez’s 25 fights had lasted as long as nine full rounds – and that 17 of his victims hadn’t made it through three -- what odds do you suppose you might have gotten before Saturday night’s 10-bout card at Boardwalk Hall that JuanMa’s would be the longest bout of the night ? 

Lopez was the last man standing in any case. The WBO junior bantam champion successfully defended his title, preserved his knockout skein, and made Olivier Lontchi cry uncle.  

“Every fight is a learning experience, and I learned a lot in this one,” said Lopez (26-0), who had knocked the game Lontchi down twice (in the second and ninth) and held a commanding 89-80 lead on all three official scorecards when Lontchi’s Canadian trainer Howard Grant asked referee Alan Huggins to stop the fight after the ninth. 

Although he was the one who made the entreaty, Grant revealed later that Lontchi, who had injured a rib in training, had wanted to quit after the eighth after taking a Lopez shot to the same area. 

It was the first defeat suffered by Lontchi, who is now 18-1-2.  

“He was very difficult,” said Lopez, who outpunched his Cameroon-born foe by a whopping 244-84. “It wasn’t that he threw a lot of punches, but that he was moving so effectively.”  
 

Two of the four other bouts featured on last night’s PPV telecast ended in the third round, although it must be said that one result – Jorge Arce’s devastating knockout of Filipino Fernando Lumacad -- was considerably more satisfying than the other, in which an inadvertent head-butt forced the Yuri Foreman-Cornelius Bundrage co-feature to a premature conclusion.  

Meanwhile, the virtuoso performance of the evening was turned in by 23 year-old Vanes Matrorosyan, the 2004 US Olympian who utterly dominated his junior middleweight bout against veteran Andrey Tsurkan for the six rounds it lasted, forcing the Ukrainian's corner to run up the white flag. 

The Top Rank card was officially labeled Latin Fury 9, but after Arce’s performance might have been rechristened “And the Horse You Rode In On.”  

Arce was cut following a second-round collision of heads, but brought matters to a swift conclusion a round later. Early in the third he waved a jab at Lumacad, and then thumbed his mesmerized opponent with a sneaky right behind it that left him for dead. 

Arce, who was boxing under trainer Nacho Beristain for the first time, said his game plan had been to box Lumacad, “but when I saw the opening for the right I threw the most tremendous right hand I’ve ever thrown in my life.” 

The IBF junior middleweight eliminator between Foreman and K-9 Bundrage appears to have eliminated both from title contention, at least for the present. Foreman sustained a serious cut along his right eyebrow after a second-round collision of heads, and when the wound caused Eddie Cotton to halt the bout a round later, not enough rounds were in the books to allow for a tally of the scorecards. 

The result goes into the books as No Decision, and if the IBF sticks to its guns, a rematch would seem likely. (Though it seems unlikely that last night’s crowd, which was already booing when the bout was in its second minute, would likely vote for one.) 

Although Cotton ruled that the damage had come from an butt, Foreman and Bundrage accused one another of having initiated the damage.   

“Whichever it was, it wasn’t intentional,” said K-9’s cornerman Javon Hill. 

Foreman (27-0) called the outcome “extremely disappointing. 

“I’d trained really hard for this fight,” he said, expecting that it would in lead to a mandatory fight against Cory Spinks. Instead it now appears that it may lead to a mandatory fight against Cornelius Bundrage. 

The IBF, by the way has a rule requiring participants in title fights (and official eliminators, which the Foreman-Bundrage fight was) to re-weigh on the day of a fight ensure that they have gained no more than ten pounds over what they did at the previous day’s weigh-in. 

But until three stars appeared in the sky on fight night Foreman’s fundamentalist strain of Orthodox Judaism required not only abstinence from “work,” but barred the use of electricity. Since Foreman wouldn’t leave his room, a scale had to be brought to his hotel. It couldn’t be the digital scale he weighed in on Friday, but a plain, old-fashioned bathroom scale. Moreover, since Foreman couldn’t speak on the telephone, the entire arrangement had to be brokered through an infidel in his camp.  

#    #     # 

With fifteen seconds left to fight in the sixth of a scheduled 10-rounder, Ron Katz, the matchmaker for Joe DiGuardia’s Star Promotions, made his way through the ringside seats to hailing distance of Andrey Tsurikan’s corner. 

For three rounds Vanes Martirosyan had contented himself with making Tsurkan look silly, leading him on a merry chase around the ring and pausing just long enough to flick out with the occasional teasing jab.  

But for the last three Martirosyan had been inflicting actual damage as well. Although still allowing Tsurkan to move forward, now he would stop, plant, and fire, and he wasn’t missing much of anything. 

“Mikey!” Katz summoned the attention of Tsurkan trainer Mike Skowronski, before shaking his head and waving his arms in the universal gesture of surrender. 

When the bell rang Skowronski allowed Tsurkan to take a seat on his stool before summoning referee Steve Smoger and apprising him of the capitulation. Although it was announced to to the crowd that the referee had stopped the fight on the advice of the ringside physician, Dr. Eric Wormser, in fact it was Mikey Skowronski who stopped it – at the urging of Katz, a man not generally disposed to humanitarian gestures. 

“Aw, he’s too nice a kid,” said Katz of Tsurkan, whose eyes were both puffy and discolored from the beating he was taking. “Everybody knows how tough Tsurkan, but at least he used to throw punches. Tonight he wasn’t even doing that.” 

Although assistant trainer Jesse Reid was the chief second in his corner Saturday night, Martiroysyan, now 25-0, revealed that early that morning he had phoned Freddie Roach, who had remained in California to work with Amir Khan this weekend.  

“We talked about everything I would do in this fight,” said Martirosyan. “Box, move, apply pressure. I could tell right from the start I was going to knock this guy out.” 

Tsurkan falls to 26-5 with the loss. 

Russian middleweight Matt Korobov (7-0) scored a first-round KO over Californian Benjamin Diaz (9-3-2), but he might have gotten more work (and certainly would have saved Arum some money) had he just gone three minutes with a heavy bag. Diaz went down seconds into the fight, apparently from a gust of wind that blew through a door. A minute into the bout a Korobov left caught him right on the schnozz, and when Korobov dug him with a left to the ribs a few seconds later it was plain that the end was near. 

Diaz pitched forward and buried his face in the canvas, but eventually rose by the count of seven. At this point he realized that if he stayed on his feet there was a distinct chance referee Brian O’Melia might make him fight again, and re-assumed his position on the canvas, where O’Melia obligingly counted him out. 

And Korobov-Diaz was positively elegant compared to another ungainly minute-and-a-half bout that followed it. Puerto Rican Carlos Negron remained unbeaten at 3-0, when, following two knockdowns of West Virginia opponent Kenneth (Boy) George, Steve Smoger intervened at 1:18 of the first. George is now 9-3-1. 

Another prelim saw Puerto Rican junior lightweight Mario Santiago (20-1-1) post a unanimous decision over Gilbert Sanchez-Leon (21-7-1) of Mexicali, Mexico. Despite having two points deducted by O’Melia for low blows, Santiago handily led on all three scorecards. (John Pasquale 79-71, Barbara Perez 78-74, John Poturaj 77-74) 
 

New Jersey junior welters Jeremy Bryan (11-0) and Michael Torres (13-0) remained undefeated, posting a pair of 6-round unanimous decisions over Josh Beeman (4-3-2) of Providence and Humberto Tapia (13-11-1) of Tijuana, Mexico.  

Puerto Rican lightweight Hector Marengo came to Atlantic City an undefeated fighter, scrappy Texas opponent Angel Rodriguez a .500 one, and both left that way after the judges split three ways in ruling their 6-round prelim a draw. Perez had it 58-56 for Rodgriguez, Pasquale the same score for Marengo, while Potruaj had it even at 57-all. Marengo (5-0-3) incurred his third career draw, while Rodriguez returned to Texas 3-3-2.  

#    #    # 

LATIN FURY 9

BOARDWALK HALL

ATLANTIC CITY, NJ

June 27, 2009 
 
 

JUNIOR FEATHERWEIGHTS: Juan Manuel Marquez, 121 1/2, Caguas, Puerto Rico vs. Olivier Lontchi, 120, Cameroon (WBO title) 

JUNIOR MIDDLEWEIGHTS: Yuri Foreman, 154, Gamel, Belarus No Decision vs. Cornelius Bundrage, 153 1/2, Detroit (3)  

Vanes Martirosyan, 154 1/2,  Glendale, Calif. TKO’d Andrey Tsurkan, 154, Lugansk, Ukraine (6)  

JUNIOR BANTAMWEIGHTS: Jorge Arce, 115, Los Mochia, Mex. KO’d Fernando Lumacad, 114 1/2, General Santos City, Philippines (2) 

CRUISERWEIGHTS: Carlos Negron, 184, San Juan, P.R. TKO’d Kenneth George, 181, Elkins, W.Va. (1) 

SUPER MIDDLEWEIGHTS: Matt Korobov, 162 1/2, Orotukan, Russia KO’d Benjamin Diaz, 162 1/2, Maywood, Calif. (1) 

WELTERWEIGHTS:   Jeremy Bryan, 140 1/2, Paterson, N.J.  dec. Josh Beeman, 141, Providence, RI (6) 

Michael Torres, 140 1/2, Jersey City, NJ dec. Humberto Tapia, 140 1/2, Tijuana, Mexico (6) 

LIGHTWEIGHTS: Hector Marengo, 133 1/2, Arecibo, P.R. drew with Angel Rodriguez, 133 1/2, Houston, Tex.

JUNIOR LIGHTWEIGHTS: Mario Santiago, 128 1/2, Ponce, P.R. dec. Gilbert Sanchez-Leon, 127, Mexicali, Mex.
 
 

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AFN a pirate no more:  Dish down for a while now, so I'll have to track this one down on the net tomorrow. Glad to hear Juanma kept one third of the new holy trinity going, sorry Ortiz lost a slugfest. Toonoy
Saturday Jun 27, 2009 11:13:38 PM
Fe'Roz :  Since I'm the fool that paid for this fight it looks like I get first say. Juanma is a great looking fighter who needs to stay within himself. He was fighting a very awkward and elusive opponent who came prepared with a strategy to frustrate JML. And he did. In the end, JM settled down and took away his legs and his body with powerful body work ....and forced Longchi's corner to end the fight. But in doing so, Juanma was sloppier than I had seen before. He is very if not over-confident in his physical gifts. He was head-hunting more than he should and throwing wider than necessary. He got sloppy on defense and tagged with right hands flush three times in one round.....not something you want to see happen against fighters who can punch. Longchi can't. Overall, props to JM....but not his most impressive win.
Saturday Jun 27, 2009 11:16:36 PM
Radam G, a humble PacManite big screen watching da rumbles, stumbles and tumbles 4 free:  Wow! Here in the Pilipinas, we don't pay for jack. We get all the bouts from around the world free. Anyway, Juanma fights up or down to his competition. He is still quite green, but will -- no doubt -- became one of the Ricans' RGOAT. I'm serious! I can see the kid become that good. Holla!
Saturday Jun 27, 2009 11:49:01 PM
Fistic Fury:  Juanma has the potential to be lb 4 lb #1 in the future and I think he will be...
Sunday Jun 28, 2009 01:02:59 AM
donputo69 with a hangover:  thats my boy juanma...i did see the fight, but i heard he gave that bum a beatdown...lol...the world demands juanma vs vazquez...holla back!!!
Sunday Jun 28, 2009 07:39:33 AM
donputo69 with a hangover:  ooops...correction...I DIDNT SEE THE FIGHT...holla back!!!
Sunday Jun 28, 2009 07:41:08 AM
Fe'ROZ:  Juanma would be well served fighting an aging Vasquez or marquez. He would learn a helluva lot from these two master warriors. I think he would end both of their distinguished careers.
Sunday Jun 28, 2009 11:38:18 AM
Real Talk:  This guy is quickly becoming one of my favorite fighters . Only thing he needs to work on his slip game . I didn't see last nights fight but in the Penalosa fight he was eating a lot of shots , but then again Penalosa is sharp an a warrior . His heart is 2nd to none , but he was in with a murderous puncher . I would love to see Juan Ma against Vasquez or Marquez . That will be explosive but I can't agree with Fe'Roz on his comment . I think Juan Ma would be tested like never before an if he aint on his A-game could get slumped . He aint fought anyone of that class yet . Especially Vasquez who's left hook is lethal . I would be pulling for Juan Ma but Vasquez is one of my favorite fighters too . He brings the heat every time gotta love him . Dueces
Sunday Jun 28, 2009 12:41:17 PM
Fe'Roz @ Real Talk:  You might be right. We haven't seen Juanma tested. I do know he can't fight Vasquez like he did last night. He took flush rights that would have stopped any fighter if Lontchi could bang harder. the Mexican stars will also push JML to places he has never been and test his stamina and will......assuming they can take what Juanma can dish. The boy has serious power......power that will serve him well for a long time.
Sunday Jun 28, 2009 12:49:37 PM
brownsugar:  I'm surprised JuanMa was able to land anypunches at all,.. the fight reminded of that Rocky movie,... with Sylvester Chasing the Chicken,... it's hard to find,..let alone hit those survival types,.. Lontchi needs to apply for the New York Marathon.... Things are going get real thrilling after JuanMa dispatches Vasquez (Yeah I said it),.. Vasquez is on the decline and JuanMa is on the incline,.. Arum who also promotes Gamboa is looking to put those 2 guys together if circumstances permit,.. meanwhile,...I'm about to put JuanMa's picture on the wall,.. right between Pacman and Mayweather....
Sunday Jun 28, 2009 02:03:23 PM
Pin Galarga:  Juanma won his tune-up fight, looked great against a good boxer with no punch and Victor forgot to box against a strong street fighter and got his ass whipped. But the worse part was the lack of heart and that He quit. Maybe He should train in Tampa with Cotto and see if He can pick up some cojones down there.
Sunday Jun 28, 2009 08:48:39 PM
Master Snake :  Who cannot like Arce? The guy gives it all he's got in the ring; and even with a little flair. Tough fighter. Was set up to receive all the credit he deserves from years of success until he ran into Vic D. Only three losses in ten years. Two of those to two very accomplished fighters - Vic D (one of the best of all time?)and Michael Carbajal. Now that Vic has moved up in weight, Arce should focus his efforts at winning a major title and then unifying the division. At 29, he can be a force for at least three more years. He may even become a 60 win boxer when it's all said and done. I think he can do it. He'll make his mark in the next few years to be remembered as one of Mexico's greats!
Monday Jun 29, 2009 07:31:18 AM
Anony:  JUANMA!!! JUANMA!!! JUANMA!!!! I haven't see the fight yet but I read an interview and he said this was his most difficult fight because of Lontchi's UNIQUE style. That's why some of you say he didn't look impressive. But Lontchi's is one in a thousand and Vazquez and Marquez are more conventional style boxers. He also said Bob Arum told him not to speak of Celestino Caballero because the money is in the winner of Vazquez / Marquez so hold on to your sits ladies, Arum has the eye on the ball and a fight with either one of these true warriors is what we all crave for. Penalosa fight showed Juanma can take a punch a keep the train running. Exactly how Vazquez or Marquez love to fight. If you think about it, the three of them has kind of the same style. Always forward and fearless!!!!! Boxing looks good for 2010!!!!
Monday Jun 29, 2009 08:01:18 AM
ko mike:  how can a crowd boo the 2nd minute of the first rd of the brundige vs. foreman fight. those are not boxing fans they are mma fans. boxing is an art and when i real boxer gets in the ring with someone like k9 the result is the boxer wins 3 rds to 0. in the 3rd rd the action got better and there wasnt one boo. foreman deserves the championship challange cause he was way to good for k9. foreman isa "true boxer and beautiful to see.'
Wednesday Jul 8, 2009 12:54:16 AM

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