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Brazilian middleweight
prospect now owns WBO "Latino" crown
By Mike Indri
Retired Boxers Foundation
April 5, 2008
Most sports fans would not be able to
tell you the three boxers that hold portions of the
world heavyweight crown these days
that question
might even stump the Schwab!
It takes a real boxing fan to rattle off
Ruslan Chagaev (WBA), Sam Peter (WBC) and Wladimir Klitschko
(WBO & IBF) as the current kings of all the heavyweights.
So you can imagine the relative obscurity
that so many young and talented, yet vastly underexposed
fighters are plagued with, while also battling to survive
in the most physically demanding, viciously dangerous
and financially difficult sport for any aspiring athlete.
This past Thursday night Isaac Rodrigues
took a major step towards achieving his dream of becoming
a world champion when he battled ten long, hard rounds
against a truly formidable opponent, earning a unanimous
decision victory and becoming the World Boxing Organization's
"Latino" middleweight champion.
The result of this fight, which was held
in Brazil, was not broadcast on an ESPN sports program,
or any sports news program. The news didn't even make
it onto any boxing website. I was informed by the proud
trainer of Isaac Rodrigues - Oscar Saurez, one of the
premier trainers and finest people in all of boxing.
(Oscar Saurez - left - with his fighter Acelino Freitas)

Oscar Saurez - left - with his fighter Acelino
Freitas. |
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Best known for his handling of now retired
world champions Prince Naseem Hamed and Acelino Freitas,
as well as Paterson native Omar Sheika (who is slated
to take on Elvir Muriqi next month in Atlantic City),
Saurez has trained the best in boxing and is excited
in what he sees with Rodrigues.
"He (Rodrigues) has got what it takes,
and works real hard," exclaimed Saurez, "it
was a very evenly matched fight, very competitive. Isaac's
boxer/puncher style and his landing many combinations
late in the fight was the difference."
According to Saurez
the bout was even going into the later rounds. Pitted
against the very tough and dangerous Pablo Nieva, who
was 16-2, with 14 knockouts, coming into this fringe
title match, Rodrigues caught his strong foe with a
lethal combination that hurt and dropped Nieva to the
canvas in round eight. Obviously damaged, only the bell
was able to save the gutsy slugger. From that point
on the Belen do Para fighter took control of the ten
round bout and in front of his hometown Brazilian fans
pelted Nieva with both hands. With the impressive win
Rodrigues stays perfect and improved to 13-0 (9 KO's).
The new WBO Latino middleweight champion hopes this
big win, albeit not witnessed by anyone outside of his
native country, along with his new title and championship
belt can muster up some attention to his legitimacy
as a bona fide challenger to any of the world champions.
Building champions is nothing new to Saurez
who boasted about Jose "El Gallo" Reyes, a
stable mate of Rodrigues, who won the WBO Latino lightweight
title last week with a destructive fourth round knockout
win against the usually granite chinned Mexican Ivan
Valle, seen by many on Telemundo. Valle, who had only
been stopped once before in his career, against the
heavy-handed Humberto Soto (08/12/2006 TKO 4), fell
to 26-7-1, while the new champ improved to 22-4. The
big knockout was the Puerto Rican fighter's ninth in
his stellar career.
Extremely proud, but earning that right
by truly caring about his fighters, as well as teaching
them to fight to their highest level, Saurez beamed
"Jose (Reyes) knocked him out. Soto stopped him
(Valle) - but we knocked him out cold!"
Growing up I was able to watch boxing
regularly on national television. We saw talented prospects
develop into great fighters, BEFORE they were champions.
We were treated to the greatness of Ali-Frazier-Foreman
and Holmes, when being the world heavyweight champion
was the biggest honor in all of sport. Any Saturday
afternoon it might be Ron Lyle-Renaldo Snipes-Bob Foster-Duran-Arguello-Sugar
Ray-Mancini or Marvelous Marvin, and it didn't cost
us $54.99.
Boxing is still great, and while the upstart
MMA may now be slightly ahead on the scorecards, by
the twelve and final round boxing will prevail - while
MMA may yet tap out. Let's just try to respect our sport's
two greatest assets: the fighters and the fans. Then
maybe we will get to see the up and coming future, like
an Isaac Rodrigues, and follow him and root for him
on his demanding, difficult and dangerous journey to
greatness.
Mike Indri can be contacted at RBFMIKE@aol.com.
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