Mexico in need of new heroes

Discussion in 'World Boxing Forum' started by Soriano, Mar 11, 2009.


  1. Soriano

    Soriano Boxing Addict Full Member

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    MEXICO IN NEED OF NEW HEROES

    By Mark Staniforth, PA Sport

    For a nation whose boxing heritage bristles with more warriors than arguably any other, Mexico has struggled in recent times to find the next generation capable of carrying their proud tradition forward. From the legendary Julio Cesar Chavez to the featherweight great Salvador Sanchez - who was cut down in his prime - and ferocious-punching bantamweights Ruben Olivares and Carlos Zarate, Mexico has seen them all. But the recent conclusive defeat of Antonio Margarito by Shane Mosley left the country having to rely on a couple of old timers keeping retirement at bay for the moment at least. On Saturday, Marco Antonio Barrera aims to return to the big time by beating Amir Khan in a fight slated for the WBO interim crown at the MEN Arena in Manchester. It is a clever and calculated gamble by the Khan camp, who clearly believe Barrera is past his best, but the 35-year-old insists he is driven not by the desire for more money or fame, but by the goal of a world title at a fourth weight. Since suffering consecutive points defeats to Juan Manuel Marquez and Manny Pacquiao in 2007, Barrera has eased back with two simple wins and knows Khan represents his final chance of getting back to the big time. Meanwhile Erik Morales, a man with whom Barrera's fighting history will be for ever intertwined, has also elected to reverse an earlier retirement decision and resume his career at the age of 32. Morales' decision is much less logical than Barrera's. Since beating Pacquaio in 2005 he has lost four straight fights - first to relative nobody Zahir Raheem, then twice in succession by stoppage to the Filipino. Most tellingly of all, he was outpointed by the limited David Diaz in a WBC lightweight title challenge in August 2007 - his last fight before he elected to embark on a comeback, he claims, to hold a torch for Mexico. "I want to return to boxing soon against a good opponent," Morales announced this week. "We have spoken with Golden Boy about doing a fight with Juan Manuel Marquez but have arrived at nothing concrete. "I believe that I have a lot left and I want to go two years more at the maximum to try to conquer a fourth title at a different weight and be the first Mexican fighter to do it. "We (Mexican boxing) are in a transition at the moment where the last generation is on its way out and the new one is on the way in. We are some years from finding out who is going to take the reins in Mexican boxing. "We thought it was Antonio Margarito but that was for just one fight and then goodbye. Jorge Arce is a mediocre fighter. Really we do not have many except Marquez, who is up there on the first level." The overall picture is far from bleak. Marquez is at the top of his game after knocking out Juan Diaz in exhilarating fashion to claim two world lightweight titles in Houston last month. Israel Vazquez and Rafael Marquez continue to light up the super-bantamweight division with their rivalry while a certain Julio Cesar Chavez Jnr is unbeaten in 39 professional fights and on the cusp of a world title fight. But Morales is right in insisting that none of them quite possess the required mixture of big punching brutality and snarling media persona which made true heroes out of so many of those who came before. Not least the mighty Chavez, who at the height of his powers attracted an astonishing 132,247 fans to the Azteca Stadium to witness his fifth-round destruction of Greg Haugen in February 1993. How modern-day greats Barrera and Morales would love a bit of that. But for now they find themselves fighting only to live on borrowed time, mere stopgaps in a Mexican fighting tradition which will surely, somehow, continue to run and run.

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  2. PIPO23

    PIPO23 Obsessed with Boxing Full Member

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    Why are you obssess about Mexico, jealous? parekoy.
     
  3. Arriba

    Arriba Obsessed with Boxing Full Member

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    We'll lend you guys Kermit Cintron if you'd like.
     
  4. RealBoxing

    RealBoxing Kill The Nonsense Full Member

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    Feb 15, 2009

    Who?...Lol
     
  5. Arriba

    Arriba Obsessed with Boxing Full Member

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    :lol::lol::lol::lol::lol::lol:
     
  6. JM22

    JM22 Obsessed with Boxing Full Member

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    Mexico has ALWAYS had a LOT of great fighter and FOREVER will:deal
     
  7. Soriano

    Soriano Boxing Addict Full Member

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    For one, Mexico and Philippines have rivalry in boxing.
    Btw, I did not write that article. I only quoted it.
     
  8. Soriano

    Soriano Boxing Addict Full Member

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    But currently, it is only Marquez who's taking up the cudgels. Vasquez needs bigger fights to be recognized. The article is about the present not on the past.
     
  9. Arriba

    Arriba Obsessed with Boxing Full Member

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    Vasquez is as recognized as a fighter in his weight class can get.

    He's too small to be a "superstar" but to real boxing fans, He's a tremendous legend.
     
  10. Soriano

    Soriano Boxing Addict Full Member

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    We'll also lend Boom Boom Bautista if you want. LOL!
     
  11. PIPO23

    PIPO23 Obsessed with Boxing Full Member

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    There is no rivalry. Mexico > Philippines check the scoreboard. :oops:
    Philippine needs more than Pacquiao to make it a real rivalry. TBH.
     
  12. Arriba

    Arriba Obsessed with Boxing Full Member

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    There we go. Boom Boom Bautista and Kermit Cintron are up for sale.

    I'll start the bidding on Kermit at about 2 bucks.
     
  13. Soriano

    Soriano Boxing Addict Full Member

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    The scoreboard is : Pac demolished the best of the Mexican fighters. :deal
     
  14. LightningJoe

    LightningJoe The Filipino Flash Full Member

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    He's Sergio Martinez's son. :yep
     
  15. What about jUlio cesear Chavez kid, isn't he doing well?? Antonio Margarito is a mExican from TJ, he will have to finish his career in Mexico because the US won't license him anymore:-(, ...