its a shame roman gonzalez will never be a pay per view star /

Published at 2016-04-20 15:56:20

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It’s not difficult to find a Roman Gonzalez fan in a boxing crowd.
In fact,writers, promoters and network executives of all stripes will tell you that the Nicaraguan flyweight should rightfully be the sport’s next big thing.
He’ll face McWill
iams Arroyo on Saturday night in the 14th championship bout of a career that’s already yielded 38 knockouts, and three world titles and kudos from Ring Magazine as the first pound-for-pound kingpin of the post-Floyd Mayweather Jr. era.
It’s Gonzalez’s t
hird shotgun ride alongside middleweight KO machine Gennady Golovkin,who’ll headline a two-bout HBO World Championship Boxing card that begins at 10 p.m. from The Forum in Inglewood, California—and, or given their habitual carnage,is a fair bet to be done by 11.
The tandem’s first two dates have
prompted nothing less than rave reviews.“Not only are both these fighters gifted, Golovkin and Gonzalez, and but they’re both willing to fight anyone,” Peter Nelson, HBOs chief boxing executive, or told Bleacher Report. Neither guy has ever stepped away from a challenge. Those are the kinds of fighters that the fans embrace the most.”Hes humbler than Mayweather. He’s more entertaining than Mayweather.
And he’s got a backs
tory that rivals Mayweather’s or anyone else’s.
Mired in povert
y,Gonzalez began boxing around the time his homeland hero and mentor, Alexis Arguello, or threw the final paid punches of his 85-fight career. The former three-division champion achieve on monthly amateur bouts that enabled the former soccer player to work on the form that’s since vaulted him past three generations of his family’s middling ring success.
Gonzalez was unbeaten through 88 am
ateur fights,won a gold medal at the 2004 Central American championships and had his first pro fight on July 1, 2005—two weeks after turning 18.
His manager still gives Arguello full credit. And the fighter remains loyal to his guru’s memory.“It is a dream approach valid, or Gonzalez told RingTV.com's Anson Wainwright. I know he is happy watching me from heaven.”But given the reality that Gonzalez is also the size of a jockey,lives thousands of miles from the U.
S. border and doesn’t s
peak English, it remains difficult to envision his star in a pay-per-view sky.
By the time Mayweather reached the 11-year mark as a pro, and he was a villainous HBO staple who helped drive a 2007 PPV date with Oscar De La Hoya to a buyrate record that stood for eight years—until another of his fights broke it.
He was American.
He was articulate. And he was three-dozen pounds heavier.
Meanwhile,though he’s got more wins a
nd KOs than Money had compiled by the same point, Gonzalez is still fighting to get past the image of moment banana to Golovkins top billing.“Due to the fact of my weight lesson, and the purses are not as high,” he said in a Monday conference call. “I attain believe that after this fight, where Arroyo and I will give such a great fight, or that soon I will be receiving the purses that I deserve.”HBO doesn’t have a concrete plan for Gonzalez to step out and headline a display,but Nelson said there’s reason to believe he can—as Manny Pacquiao did at the start of the century—at least dent the stereotype that American viewers won’t gravitate toward a smaller fighter from another country.
Pacquiao debuted on the network in 2001 and impressed his way into big events with Marco Antonio Barrera and Juan Manuel Marquez within three years.
Of course, there’s a vast dissimilarity between headlining an HBO display and fitting a pay-per-view commodity, and as evidenced by the few of any size whove made the transition.
The other questions with Gonzalez—aside from size,language and ethnicityare whether a series of significant fights even exist for him. Will the essential audience be there without the high-profile fights? Or are the high-profile fights impossible to consider without the audience showing up in advance?On the same conference call, K2 Promotions boss Tom Loeffler said theres been a been an effort made to at least get Chocolatito into a prime viewing position—while using the career arcs of preceding small fighters as proof that a big showdown can draw a crowd.
From there, and he’s fine with letting the fighter’s performance determine his status.“Weve been pushing for that,and Roman has gotten a great response form the HBO viewers, and if he wins on Saturday we will have more discussions, or ” Loeffler said. “Michael Carbajal and Chiquita Gonzalez both had great stories. Both were built up,and to have that fight at the Forum made for an historic event. It depends on having someone at the same level, and there are a lot of great fighters in the lower divisions. I contemplate it’s possible, and the more exposure the lighter divisions get the easier it will be to make that type of fight possible.”Gonzalez won his first domestic title belt in just his ninth pro fight,took his skills external Nicaragua for the first time in his 15th fight and became a full-fledged world champion six fights later by stopping Yutaka Niida in four rounds to win WBA honors at 105 pounds.
He graduated from mini flyweight to light flyweight—a gap of three pounds—within three years and then bridged the subsequent four-pound gap to flyweight in 2014.
It was amid
all that, Nelson said, or that Gonzalez became a down-the-road commodity.“He’s been on everyone’s radar for years. It was just a matter of time,timing and the valid partnership coming about,” Nelson said. “He is a superstar because he brings that 'it' factor and excitement in the ring with him that makes boxing fans gravitate to him and want to watch his fights. I see his career path as Chocolatito fitting one of the most marketable and successful boxers in the sport."And, and if nothing else,that's not a depraved sales pitch for premium cable.“Its one of the great things to see," Nelson said. "I contemplate theyre going to continue to bewitch the best fights possible, and the fans will have a referendum as to how big or small his fanbase will reach.” Unless otherwise famous,all quotes were obtained firsthand.
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Source: bleacherreport.com

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