Eléider Álvarez Baytar vs. Michael Aaron Seals & Félix Verdejo Sánchez vs. Manuel Rey Rojas RBR

Discussion in 'World Boxing Forum' started by CST80, Jan 18, 2020.


  1. CST80

    CST80 De Omnibus Dubitandum Staff Member

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  2. POTUS

    POTUS Boxing Addict Full Member

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    This should be a barn burner
     
  3. pepsiclassic

    pepsiclassic Well-Known Member Full Member

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    I could see this being a very boring fight honestly.
     
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  4. pepsiclassic

    pepsiclassic Well-Known Member Full Member

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    no offense to seals but he isnt really that good at all. he probably couldnt beat any one in the top 20 at LHW
     
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  5. Serge

    Serge Ginger Dracula Staff Member

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    It was an early morning at the beginning of 2019, and Michael Seals had just completed his customary run. The hard-hitting light heavyweight hadn't fought since September 2018 and had no fights scheduled. Yet he was still dutifully hitting the pavement each day, hoping that a call would come with his next paid assignment inside the ring.

    Seals was starting to feel a bit despondent about his career path. At 36, time was not on his side. Not attached to a major promoter and self-managed, Seals was an island unto himself. It was a lonely place.

    "I couldn't get a fight, and I was still training like I still had a fight, everyday," said Seals, who decided he had to take things into his own hands.

    With nowhere else to turn, Seals took to Facebook Messenger.

    "God just put it on my mind to reach out to Brad [Goodman]," said Seals, referring to Top Rank's matchmaker.

    He didn't know Goodman personally and had never even talked with him.

    "I've been hearing Brad's name since before I turned pro. He's the man -- c'mon, let's not kid ourselves," said Seals, chuckling. "So his name popped into my head and I said, 'Let me reach out to Brad Goodman.'"

    And his message was both a question and a plea for help.

    "Am I blackballed? Why can't I get a fight?" he asked Goodman. "I don't have anything; what's going on?"

    According to Seals, Goodman told him that because of his punching prowess, he was simply too much of a risk for known commodities to face him.

    "That's flattering," Seals said. "But at the same time, that's not going to put food on the table."

    "I'm ready to fight anybody," Seals told Goodman.

    He asked Goodman to keep him in mind if anything should come up.

    "He was looking for fights, and I gave him a shot," Goodman said. "He's just an honest, pure type of guy."

    What impressed Goodman about Seals is that no matter who he offered, there was no hesitation in Seals.

    "Every fight he came to me, I was saying yes," Seals said. "Whoever, whatever -- send the contract. Brad kept working for me."

    Goodman recalled one scenario.

    "He was willing to fight Sullivan Barrera, and then Barrera took the fight with Jesse Hart, and he was devastated," Goodman said of Seals.

    Barrera lost decisively to Hart on the Tyson Fury-Tom Schwarz undercard in Las Vegas in June. That would have been a big stage for Seals to mark his arrival to a worldwide audience.

    "I just felt so bad for him because he really felt that the Barrera fight was going to put him in that situation where he breaks out and people get to really see what he was about," Goodman said. "And I really think the way Barrera looked with Jesse Hart, Seals would have knocked Barrera out that night."

    The struggle continued, even as Seals got to the brink of stepping back into the ring.

    "We tried to [match] him with [Vyacheslav] Shabranskyy, and Shabranskyy pulled out on one week's notice."

    Eventually a fight did come to fruition, as Seals was lined up to face Christopher Brooker on June 8 in Reno, Nevada. Seals scored a highlight-reel, second-round stoppage.


    Then on the Artur Beterbiev-Oleksandr Gvozdyk undercard in Philadelphia on Oct. 18, Seals knocked out Elio Trosch in Round 1.

    Given the opportunity to prove himself in the ring, Seals showed he had something to offer. And it wasn't just the fact that he won, it was the manner in which he did it.

    The two performances landed him a bout slated for Saturday against former WBO light heavyweight titlist Eleider Alvarez in the main event of a Top Rank on ESPN card at Turning Stone Resort Casino in Verona, New York.

    "He's unbelievable," Goodman said of Seals. "I've never seen a guy punch like that and do that kind of damage with one shot."

    Seals started his professional career in 2008, rattling off 19 consecutive victories -- 14 of which came by stoppage. In 2015, Seals faced his biggest opponent to date in former world title contender Edwin Rodriguez in Biloxi, Mississippi. In an unforgettable first round, Seals was decked early on and seemingly was on his way to getting stopped. But Seals was able to knock Rodriguez down later in the first, then he nearly knocked Rodriguez out at the very end of the round.

    But ultimately, the fight turned again. Seals hit the canvas in the second and then again in the third, before the fight was waved off. In Seals' recollection, he went into the bout damaged goods.

    "I went into that fight with a torn left rotator cuff," Seals recalled. "I hurt it about a week before the fight. I was like, 'I can beat Edwin. He's aggressive; I can get him with just my right hand."

    After suffering the first loss of his career, Seals underwent surgery for his injury. Rehabilitation sidelined Seals for all of 2016, and then he fought just once in 2017. In May 2018, he suffered a disqualification loss in Tuscaloosa, Alabama, for striking Michael Gbenga while he was down.

    Seals ended that year with two fights in the Dominican Republic, first defeating Carlos Cruz in a four-round fight, then scoring a first-round stoppage of Andy Perez. For those fights, the money wasn't just miniscule, it was nonexistent.

    "Those were out of pocket; I had to do that myself," said Seals, who paid for his travel expenses and basically got paid nothing to stick a couple of wins on his ledger. "That was my attempt at keeping my career alive and trying to stay relevant."

    As his career had stalled, Seals did what he had to to make ends meet.

    "I drove Uber and Lyft -- 12, 13 hours a day," Seals said. "It was such an embarrassing thing, because you had people who would get in the car, and say, 'Oh, I saw you fight on TV. Why are you driving Uber or Lyft?' My response was like, 'Oh, I'm just using this to try to gain followers and meet people and stuff like that.'"

    Still, there is no bitterness with Seals as he talks about his experience. When asked if he had at least a four-star rating as a driver, he says with a laugh, "Bro, they loved me. I was the man!"

    Now, just a year later, Seals finds himself facing Alvarez, who is ranked among the top 10 light heavyweights by both the WBO and WBC, in a big main event.

    "I credit it to just the fact that I was persistent. I never gave up," Seals said. "I stayed true to the sport. I didn't start drinking. I didn't start partying. I haven't had a drink in 10 years. I haven't been to a club or a bar in seven years. When everything had gone wrong in my career and it looked like my career was over, I still stayed true to the sport."

    A victory doesn't figure to come easily against Alvarez, who is solid and durable and also has a much deeper track record at the world-class level. In addition to splitting two bouts with Sergey Kovalev, Alvarez has defeated Jean Pascal, Lucian Bute and Isaac Chilemba.

    "It will definitely be a hard-fought fight, full of guts; both of us have that," Seals said. "It's going to be tough; it's going to be a good fight."

    A victory will put Seals in a prime position to get a title shot in the near future.

    All thanks to one Facebook message.

    What a fight!

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    https://www.espn.co.uk/boxing/story...le-kos-breathed-new-life-michael-seals-career
     
  6. Serge

    Serge Ginger Dracula Staff Member

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    His power is very much legit though.

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  7. pepsiclassic

    pepsiclassic Well-Known Member Full Member

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    I dont think he's ever won a fight with someone ranked in the top 100 on boxrec this would be a massive massive upset if he beats alvarez I'd say upset of the year
     
  8. JMotrain

    JMotrain Boxing Junkie Full Member

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    I didn't realize how slow Seals is. I watched his fight with Rodriguez and he seemed to have normal handspeed to my eyes. Still, I agree he has power. He can clip Alvarez early on, probably his only chance.
     
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  9. Serge

    Serge Ginger Dracula Staff Member

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    He was a whisker away from sparking out E-Rod in a round and it was only the bell coming to E-Rod's recuse that prevented him from achieving that because the second KD was from a hellacious shot.

    It sure will be a massive upset should he pull it off and FTR I think Alvarez will KO him. But I know real power when I see it and Seals can definitely punch very hard.
     
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  10. JMotrain

    JMotrain Boxing Junkie Full Member

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    True but he did almost K La Bomba TFO. Rodriguez was lucky to make it out of the 1st round, his legs were completely gone. And I don't know what his ranking was but he did fight Andre Ward so he must have been at least top 15 at the time.
     
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  11. Serge

    Serge Ginger Dracula Staff Member

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    To be fair, he claims he was fighting with a torn rotator cuff against E-Rod.

    Like I said in my previous post, I expect Alvarez to win via stoppage but Seals definitely has a puncher's chance with that power of his.
     
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  12. JMotrain

    JMotrain Boxing Junkie Full Member

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    I think Alvarez is going to win a decision but it won't surprise me if he stops Seal either. I just don't think Alvarez is a hunter or reckless like Rodriguez, he'll be content to box Seals and take a decision (and I don't think Alvarez is a big puncher anyways).
     
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  13. Serge

    Serge Ginger Dracula Staff Member

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    That's a good point. Alvarez isn't a big puncher but Seals looks the chinny banger type to me. Huge power, glassy chin.
     
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  14. JMotrain

    JMotrain Boxing Junkie Full Member

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    Glass cannon.
     
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