R&B Productions Return the Fight Scene to
Caldwell, Idaho
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April 5, 2008
Report and photos by Ricardo
Ibarra
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Fighting in front of a packed and
boisterous hometown crowd, Mario Hernandez (10-0 3KOs 147
½ lbs.) delivered an exciting performance, winning the
vacant North West Boxing Association welterweight title with
a unanimous eight round decision over Daniel Gonzalez
(8-14-2 2KOs 147 lbs.) this past Saturday, April 5th at the
O'Conner Field House in Caldwell, Idaho.
Originally scheduled as a
lightweight contest, Hernandez surprised many when he came
in at a career high weight of 147 ½ lbs., forcing the
bout up to the welterweight limit. There was concern that he
was giving his opponent an unnecessary advantage as Gonzalez
was the naturally bigger man. Those concerns were quickly
dispelled as Hernandez asserted his dominance early in the
bout.
Using his superior foot work and a
snapping right jab, Hernandez set a fast pace early as he
stepped in and out of the pocket, landing with precise three
and four punch combinations. He easily battered his opponent
around the ring for most of the early rounds, snapping his
head back on numerous occasions. Gonzalez, as is usually the
case, remained undeterred and continued to press forward,
looking for openings and landing sporadically with hard
hooks to the body. His determination paid off in the last
two rounds as the body attack, and perhaps the extra weight,
seemed to slow Hernandez.
Gonzalez pressed the fight in the
seventh round, seemingly understanding that he needed a
knockout to win. He found his mark early in the round with
left-right hook combinations. Hernandez, visibly tired,
stood his ground and answered his opponents attack with his
own volley of punches, giving the local crowd some see-saw
moments of back and forth action. Gonzalez, though, had the
edge in the round and closed it out strong, connecting with
a big straight left that had Hernandez in some trouble.
Hernandez came out determined to take back control of the
bout in the last round. He stepped in with solid power
punches, choosing to trade with his opponents rather than
box. The crowd stood and roared in appreciation as the two
fighters traded wildly to close out the bout. All three
judges scored the bout 79-73 for Hernandez.
The bout proved to be a solid test
for the young aspiring prospect. He displayed solid
technical skills, but, more importantly, he came back strong
from a tense situation and displayed the kind of heart and
determination you want to see in a young fighter. His next
bout is scheduled for June in Texas.
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In the evening's co-main event, local favorite Miguel
Albares (5-4-1 2KOs 126 ½ lbs.) lost a six round
majority decision to Albuquerque, New Mexico's Scott Furney
(2-3-1 1KO 125 ½ lbs.). As a professional fighter,
Furney (left) has had an inauspicious start to his career,
losing three of his first four pro bouts. However, he's had
a resurgence of sorts in 2008. In February he was well on
his way to securing an upset victory over amateur standout
Robert Vargas when a head-butt caused a stoppage and a
technical draw. This time out he fought like a fighter eager
to add a win to his record. He pressed the fight early,
firing off solid hooks to the head, controlling the early
portions of the fight. Albares found success in the middle
portions when he was able to control the distance with his
jab. But, Furney was the busier fighter, rallying late to
secure the win. Final judges scores 58-55, 58-55,
57-57.
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Local Jr. Middleweight Edgar Hernandez (7-2-1 158 lbs.)
turned in a dominant performance in his win over Browning,
Montana's James Sangrey (1-5 1KO 151 lbs.). Patiently
working behind his jab, Hernandez (left) hurt his opponent
early in the first round with a solid right hand. A left
hook wobbled Sangrey once again and a right hand forced him
to take a knee. After the mandatory eight-count Hernandez
pressed the fight, firing off hard power punches. A left
hook wobbled Sangrey once again and sent him reeling back to
the ropes where Hernandez teed off, punishing his opponent
for the remainder of the round. In between rounds Sangrey's
corner wisely stopped the bout, awarding the win to the
local favorite Edgar Hernandez.
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Former amateur standout David Lopez (2-0 160 lbs.)
managed to keep his undefeated record intact after a shaky
start, winning a four round unanimous decision over Michael
Birthmark (1-2 160 lbs.). Lopez (right), a skilled boxer,
began the bout uncharacteristically looking to trade with
his opponent. He paid the price as he caught two consecutive
uppercuts on the chin, the second of which put him on the
seat of his trunks. After the eight-count Lopez maintained
his distance and regained his composure. By the end of the
round he was finding success with his counter left from his
southpaw stance. In the second round he took control with
solid boxing, landing repeatedly with straight left-right
hook combinations. For the remainder of the bout he
countered and avoided most of his opponent's punches,
winning the remaining three rounds on all three judges'
scorecards. The final scores read scores of 39-37, 38-37,
38-37.
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A scheduled four round heavyweight bout between Boise,
Idaho's Ija Flapping Eagle (2-1-2 2KOs 261 lbs.) and Denver,
Colorado's Shidevin Brown (2-3-1 1KO 301 lbs.) ended in
disappointing fashion after only two rounds of action. The
two fighters opened up early, swapping heavy punches from
the opening bell. Flapping Eagle (right) dug into his
opponent's body with hard hooks. Brown fired back, landing
with right hands. In the second round a big right hand
buckled the knees of Brown and sent him back to the ropes.
As Flapping Eagle rushed in, the two fighters clashed heads,
opening a cut along the eye brow of Brown. The referee
called time to allow the doctor to inspect the cut and while
the fight was allowed to continue for the remainder of the
round, in between rounds the doctor stopped the bout. The
bout was declared a technical draw due to the unintentional
head-butt.
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In one of the best fights seen in the Pacific Northwest
in recent years, Cristobal Garcia (0-2 146 lbs.) of
Caldwell, Idaho and Josh Flynn (1-0 148 ½ lbs.) of
Sandpoint, Idaho engaged in four rounds of wild, back and
forth, non-stop action. Flynn (in white) pressed the fight
early, opening up with hard hooks to the head. Garcia fired
back with power punches of his own. A big left hook pushed
Garcia back to the ropes. As Flynn rushed in, Garcia
retaliated with a barrage of punches forcing a wild exchange
to close out the round. In the second round Flynn rocked his
opponent early with an overhand right-left hook combination.
A straight right sent Garcia to the canvass. After the
eight-count Flynn rushed his opponent, opening up with
punches from all angles, looking for the knockout.
Just as Garcia looked to be out on his feet, he managed
to launch a right hand that caught Flynn flush on the jaw,
buckling his knees. The tables turned and it was Garcia
teeing off and fairly close to scoring the KO. Flynn managed
to buy some time as he landed a left hook that sent the
mouth piece of his opponent flying out of his mouth. The
referee momentarily stopped the action to replace it. As the
action resumed both fighters met in the middle of the ring
and engaged in a wild flurry that drew enthusiastic cheers
of support from the crowd.
The third round saw more of the same as both fighters
engaged in another three minutes of frenzied action. Garcia,
with his chin high in the air, pressed the action and almost
tasted the canvass once again as his knees buckled from a
right hand midway through the round. They finished out the
round swapping punches, without much concern for defense. In
the fourth round Flynn came out swinging, looking to end the
bout. He almost succeeded as he caught Garcia with a big
right hand on the chin. But, as was the case throughout this
bout, Garcia immediately retaliated. A hard right hand
stunned the onrushing Flynn. The two fighters stood their
ground and exchanged vicious punches until one fell. Garcia
sank to the canvass from a right hand. After the mandatory
eight-count Garcia looked to be out on his feet. Flynn
rushed his opponent, firing wild looping punches and in the
process leaving himself wide open for a counter punch, which
Garcia landed on the top of the head, buckling the knees of
Flynn. The two fighters finished the bout trading punch for
punch. The crowd finished the bout on their feet, applauding
in appreciation for the brutally exciting fight they had
just witnessed. The judges' scorecards read 39-38, 40-37,
39-36 all for Flynn. As good as this bout was there needs to
be a rematch. Whether these two could stand to see one
another again remains to be seen.
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In the evenings opening bout, Jess Salway (3-9-1 142
½ lbs.) scored his first win in over two years, scoring
a four round majority decision over Caldwell, Idaho native
Rudy Valdez (2-3 1KO 146 ½ lbs.). Salway, who had made
a career of fighting anyone they put in front of him, had
gone eight straight without winning. He spoke of a renewed
dedication to the sport before the bout and it showed in the
ring. Weighing in at the lowest weight of his career, Salway
looked quicker, using his jab and good lateral movement to
control the range and patiently break down his opponent. He
finished out a dominant first round with a jarring left hook
to the chin, dropping his opponent for an eight count.
Salway pressed for the knockout, but, to the credit of
Valdez, the local fighter was resilient. In the third round
Salway lost a point for hitting on the break. Either than
that, the fight was not close as Salway maintained control
for the remainder of the bout. The judges' scored the bout
40-36, 39-37 and 37-37.
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The seven bout card was the second in the area for
R&B Promotions. Their third show is scheduled for
August.
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