Alexis Arguello vs Wilfredo Gomez @ Featherweight

Discussion in 'Classic Boxing Forum' started by Flo_Raiden, Oct 20, 2025 at 8:43 AM.


  1. apollack

    apollack Boxing Addict Full Member

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    Entertaining and brutal bout that has a lot of fireworks. Bombs away until one or both hit the deck. Probably Arguello has a tougher time than folks think, but he ultimately wins by KO. The thing most folks forget was that Sanchez was a boxer-puncher who hit and moved. Arguello didn't really move. He'd be right there to get hit. So style-wise, it's a bit of a different fight. But yeah, I don't see Gomez lasting the distance with Arguello's relentless nonstop attack. But I do see Gomez nailing him pretty good here and there to make it a fun fight.
     
    Last edited: Oct 23, 2025 at 7:49 PM
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  2. Flo_Raiden

    Flo_Raiden Obsessed with Boxing Full Member

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    Something to consider is the fact that Ruben Olivares did outbox Alexis Arguello for most of the fight before he crumbled. What are the chances that Gomez can also outbox Arguello at a distance and for how many rounds before he eventually succumbs to Arguello's power?
     
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  3. Saintpat

    Saintpat Obsessed with Boxing Full Member

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    I urge you to take a closer look. Valdez wasn’t a terrible challenger by record (but certainly not the cream of the crop at 122) but you have to consider that Wilfredo cleaned that division out, basically, two or three times over. You beat everybody there is to beat and you have a title to defend … gotta defend it against somebody.

    Bazooka beat five other men who held titles at 122 pounds either before or after him — including three who went on to claim a title after he beat them when he had vacated the division. He is, imo, the best ever at super bantam but he also was the best for a stretch that shadows both before he formally won the title and for some years after as his leftovers showed they were good enough to win a title at that weight when he wasn’t around to do something about it.

    On to the Arguello-Gomez topic:

    It’s an interesting fight because 126 is neither man’s best weight. Alexis was at his best imo at 130 and Gomez of course was far better at 122, with only middling success at 126.

    Alexis wasn’t quite as sturdy at feather as he was at 130 and 135, I think, and he wasn’t prolific at 126 either with far more non-title fights (mostly vs lower-tier opponents) than title defenses.

    But I still have to favor the Explosive Thin Man here with the reach and being a naturally bigger guy. Gomez gives him some problems but Wilfredo didn’t carry that numbing power up from 122 so AA shakes it off and probably wins by TKO when he closes one or both of Gomez’s eyes with his surgeon’s precision punching.

    An interesting exercise is to pit them at 122. Alexis only weighed a quarter pound heavier when he lost to Ernesto Marcel, and I think Gomez overwhelms a still-coltish Alexis at this weight. AA is taller here but a bit too thin and less strong/powerful. He lands his share but can’t keep Gomez off him and gets stopped late is how I’d see it at super bantam.

    Frankly I’m not sure anyone at 122 in history beats Gomez at that weight. He was as dominant, as supreme, there as anyone in any single weight class ever.
     
  4. Flo_Raiden

    Flo_Raiden Obsessed with Boxing Full Member

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    Only fighter I would consider 50/50 against Gomez at 122 would be Naoya Inoue. What a fight that would have been.
     
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  5. jabber74

    jabber74 Active Member Full Member

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    Arguello by KO. Gomez was too short, would be at the end of Alexis' shots, and didn't have the chin to take his punch.
     
  6. Mod-Mania

    Mod-Mania Boxing Addict Full Member

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  7. Reinhardt

    Reinhardt Boxing Junkie Full Member

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    Hmm? not a single devil's advocate willing to go with Gomez.,,,,and rightly so.
     
  8. Tin_Ribs

    Tin_Ribs Me Full Member

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    I think Gomez had lost the discipline, patience and self awareness to fight like that anymore at feather, Flo. At least for any significant length of time throughout a fight. There were spells against Nelson before he got pounded down, and he outboxed Laporte I suppose, but it was one of the latter's more bizarre non-efforts in an otherwise winnable fight for him. It was Olivares's awkwardness on the move and ambushing tactics that stymied Arguello as much as anything in that fight, and by the time he was on the verge of moving up, around the time of the Kobayashi fight, he'd sharpened up to more or less his peak imo.
     
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  9. greynotsoold

    greynotsoold Boxing Addict

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    Olivares was better than Gomez.