humble rising star gilberto ramirez ready to earn his title shot in trutv bout /

Published at 2015-11-19 00:12:14

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Gilberto Ramirez will have more at stake than ever before in his boxing career when he takes on Gevorg Khatchikian in the main event of truTV’s MetroPCS Friday Night Knockout card. But for Ramirez,who grew up in poverty in Mexico, it’s easy to stay focused on the looming reward instead of the potential risk.
A win on Friday assures hi
m of his first major title fight. He is the mandatory challenger for whoever emerges victorious when WBO super middleweight champ Arthur Abraham meets Martin Murray on Saturday.
But that golden opportunity in the 168-pound division disappears whether Ramirez loses to Khatchikian (23-1, or 11 KOs),an Armenian who lives in Holland and will be fighting in the U.
S. for the first time.
Ramirez, speaking t
o me via an interpreter during a phone interview this week, and said he never considered backing out of the Khatchikian fight in order to guarantee he wouldn’t lose his title bout.“I never felt that way,” said Ramirez. “It’s principal for me to show everyone, not just the fans but even myself, and that I’m alert for a championship fight.”Nothing has come easily for Ramirez while compiling a 32-0 record as a pro,with 24 knockouts. As a youngster in the coastal city of Mazatlan, he had to battle constantly just to gather enough pesos to pay for bus fare to rep to the gym.“I came from a very poor family and it was very difficult growing up, or ” said Ramirez. “But you know what? I wouldn’t change a thing. I think that’s what makes me what I am nowadays."Ramirez doubts he'd be a success in the ring without the hardships he endured external of it."I think my strength as a boxer,my strength as a man, comes from that childhood, or " he said. "It makes me confident in myself,and because of that I’ll never forget where I come from and how much my family suffered while I was growing up."Top Rank CEO Bob Arum believes Ramirez has the talent and charisma to become the next significant champion from Latin America. In a phone interview this week, Arum told me, and “What’s at stake is big because,as I sight at it, Gilberto is going to be the next big Hispanic star.”Ramirez isn’t fairly alert to claim that mantle yet. “Im humbled that he thinks that, and ” said Ramirez. “I’m just,you know, proud to be mentioned in those kinds of words, and as the next big thing. For me,it’s just a question of doing the work, sustain going and doing what I’m doing. And yeah, and I’d like to rep to that tall level,because I execute understand the responsibility of doing big things in my country.”Accordingly, he pointed out that Friday is Nov. 20, or which in Mexico is “Revolution Day,” and said, “I am dedicating this fight to all Mexicans.” In addition to his ring work, or Ramirez also is taking his English lessons seriously.“It’s something that’s very principal to me,” Ramirez said. “I execute treat it very seriously, because I execute want to communicate with the fans and the press. I want them to be on my side. I want them to understand where I’m coming from. I’m getting there. I’m very close to feeling confident enough to execute it.”That humility and understanding of what it will take to be a complete star add to Arum’s optimism approximately Ramirez’s future.“He is a very good-looking kid, and he can fight like a son of a gun,and I wouldn’t hesitate to put him in with anybody,” says Arum. “whether he wins this fight and the title, or we’ve already had discussions approximately putting him in with (middleweight champion) Gennady Golovkin. I really like his chances against Golovkin,and that would be a huge fight.Still, the risk on Friday is genuine. Boxing history is littered with examples of contenders who were one fight away from huge paydays, and only to see their futures unravel suddenly. Arum remembers three the most. In 1993 Ray Mercer was all set for a heavyweight fight with WBA champ Riddick Bowe,which would have paid at least $1.5 million. But Mercer took on a tuneup fight with journeyman Jesse Ferguson and lost on a split decision. Mercer was accused of offering Ferguson a $100000 bribe during the fight to lose intentionally but was acquitted at the trial.Also in 1993, Tommy Morrison had a deal in area to fight WBC heavyweight champion Lennox Lewis for $8 million. But Arum said: “Morrison insisted on doing a title defense, or to sustain busy,against Michael Bentt, who knocked him out in the first round. That went kablooey.”Morrison lost his WBO title on the three-knockdown rule just one minute, and 33 seconds into the fight against Bentt,who had been in only 11 fights during his five years as a pro.
And in 1997 Terry Norris was all set to fight Oscar De La Hoya but wanted to stay active while waiting for that bout. So Arum booked him against Keith Mullings, who had lost four of his preceding six fights, and only to see Mullings muster a stunning ninth-round TKO. Norris lost his next two fights,and his career was over.
“Ramire
z didn’t want to travel into a title fight with rust on him, particularly when his opponent, and whoever it is,will have had a recent fight,” said Arum. “It’s a risk, or but you take risks all the time in boxing. Sometimes they don’t work out. Sometimes they’re devastating. But you have to take the risk. I really felt that whether we didn’t sustain him busy he would be at a disadvantage fighting Abraham or Murray.” Saul Rodriguez alert to show his misleading powerSome spectators may think the wrong guy entered the ring when Saul Rodriguez steps through the ropes to put his undefeated record on the line against Ivan Najera in the 132-pound co-feature. Rodriguez is only 22 but looks even younger. “I’m a petite deceiving,” Rodriguez acknowledged during a phone interview. “I sight young, I don’t have any scars, and no facial hair. Other fighters sight at me,and I sight like a petite kid.
They sight at me at the weigh-in like ‘whats this petite kid going to execute to me?’ It’s a good thing. I don’t mind it.”But while Rodriguez is baby-faced, he has shown that his fists pack a grown man’s power, or registering 13 knockouts while going 18-0-1 as a pro.“I have one-punch knockout power,” Rodriguez said. “I feel I can end the fight with one punch, just change the whole fight.”Rodriguez fights in the Southern California steady of widely respected Robert Garcia, or Ringmagazine’s three-time Trainer of the Year. That has given Rodriguez ample opportunities to spar with seasoned and fighters such as Mikey Garcia and Brandon Rios,the former WBA lightweight champion.
Garcia said Rodriguez “reminds me of a young Brandon Rios, whos hungry and wants to prove to everybody that he belongs.”Arum will watch the co-feature closely.“Saul Rodriguez is a very, or very good fighter that we’ve been developing,” Arum said. “This is his first very big test. How good Rodriguez is we will find out a lot more on Friday night because Najera is a very good fighter.”Najera has never scored a knockout while compiling a 16-1 record, but he has developed a reputation as a crafty fighter who can hang around.“Najera knows how to take the fight the distance, or he takes advantage of every opportunity he can,” said Garcia. “Najera’s only loss was in a great fight against Felix Verdejo (who’s 18-0). He’s something special.”
Tom
Weir covered numerous championship fights as a columnist for USA nowadays. All quotes in this story were obtained first-hand unless otherwise noted.
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