“Another Ref Screwup” Julian “J-Rock” Williams vs Carlos Adames Recap
“A Step Up to get Rep Up” Jared Anderson vs Charles Martin Preview
“Shadasia Green is Waiting Ladies” Savannah Marshall vs Franchon Crews-Dezurn Preview
Prograis vs Zorrilla Fight Report
Before I get into talking about the Prograis vs Zorrilla card, I got to talk about New Orleans for a little. I had only been to New Orleans before on a layover, so it was my first time out in the city. King P and I enjoyed all the food and sights it had to offer. The food especially because we were saying to ourselves, if we lived here, we would be obese. Bourbon St, Canal St, Frenchmen St, etc. were great sources of entertainment. The things that we saw and experienced on that street. I only wished we stayed a couple more days more.
Credit: Ed Mulholland/Matchroom
Now onto the boxing experience. This was the first time 2 Ring Gang members were in the house covering the event. The weigh in was an interesting event and we got a glimpse on how many family members and friends that Regis Prograis had. Prograis had the pure patience of a champion to take pictures with anyone. The next day King P and I had to exhibit the same level of patience once we arrived at Smoothie King. The process for getting our credentials and finding the media entrance was a trying process to say the least. The before the bell segment opened with Criztec Bazaldus winning a spirited four round decision over Elroy Fruto. The second fight with Aaron Aponte and Xavier Madrid was a dogfight to say the least. A costly point deduction for Aponte resulted in him losing a split decision. 76-75 x2 for Madrid and 78-73 for Aponte. The third and last fight on the before the bell segment is a special attraction fight between Ginny Fuchs and Indeya Rodriguez. Another hard scrap in which the scrappy Indeya gives Ginny plenty to think about. At the end of eight rounds, Ginny Fuchs won the UD with scores of 80-72 x 2 and 79-73 over Indeya Rodriguez.
Credit: Ed Mulholland/Matchroom
In the opening fight of the main card, Jeremy Hill stopped Mark “Too Sharp” Davis in four rounds. At the weigh in both guys were animated and predicting knockouts. Well one of them got their prediction right. A right hook over the left hand from Hill caught Davis on the temple. A follow up combination deposited him on the canvas. Davis got up on groggy legs and the ref decided to wave it off. The crowd erupted as Hill celebrated and then knelt in prayer. Next fight is the increasingly popular Ramla Ali facing the tough Julissa Guzman. Guzman was landing the heavier shots, but Ali is the one that drew first blood. After a knockdown in round five, Guzman ended things in round eight with a brutal left hook. To her credit, Ali got up before the count but clearly was in no condition to continue. From there the quality of the card took an unexpecting decline in terms of entertainment.
Credit: Bad Left Hook
The co-main between Shakram Giyasov and Harold Calderon started off a chess match. Then it dissolved into a negative affair of posturing and showboating of which neither pleased the crowd. Twelve rounds of non-action with Giyasov getting the unimpressive decision over Calderon among boos in the crowd. The fight was sleep inducing and disappointing because both fighters had the power to make the fight interesting. If it weren’t like such a maze to get to the refreshment stand, I would have gotten a Redbull. King P and I were thinking that that fight was an aberration. We were wrong!!! The main event everybody has been waiting for with Regis Prograis and Danielito Zorrilla. Liam Paro was Prograis In the first round it looked like Prograis got dropped but ref called it a slip. On replay it looked clear that it was. That was a KD, a blown call and Prograis got shook up. In round three, Prograis did return the KD. The only impressive moment of the fight to me. The rest of the fight was characterized by wild swings by Prograis and getting on the bike by Zorrilla. If Zorrilla had a plan, the plan should have been activated. You must take the belt from the champion. Zorrilla did clearly win the final two rounds of the fight. The judges gave the fight to Prograis by a split decision 118-109 and 117-110 for Prograis with 114-113 for Zorrilla. What a wide range of scores!!! King P and I felt like the scores were close. The fight to me was 115-112. It was closer than to 114-113 for sure. Zorrilla though had no right to be pouting in the ring like he did. He came to spoil and will spoil his future chances to be put on TV. Prograis was clearly disgusted and apologetic about the fight and performance. CompuBox announced they set the record for the least number of punches landed in a twelve round fight. 4-5 punches landed less than Casimero vs Rigondeaux, which is one of the worst fights I ever watched. Hopefully Prograis can rebound and make the rest of the fights on his deal worth it. Always Ring Gang Radio will be there to cover it and be in the mix.
Regis Prograis Post Fight Media Scrum – 6/17/2023
“Pugilistic NyQuil” Regis Prograis vs Danielito Zorrilla Recap and Preview
“On the Road to TBA” Edgar Berlanga vs Jason Quigley Preview
“Another Career’s on the Line” Julian “J-Rock” Williams vs Carlos Adames Preview
Ring Gang Radio Interview – Stephen Espinoza
“No Risks Allowed” Jaime Munguia vs Sergiy Derevyanchenko Preview and Recap
“A Tale of 2 Headcases” Josh Taylor vs Teofimo Lopez Preview and Recap
“A GWOAT stays GWOAT” Claressa Shields vs Maricela Cornejo Recap
Ring Gang Rants – Live Vol. 6 – Wrestling, Clout, Battle Rap, Dares, Ryan Garcia, Shannon & Skip etc
“Early Bird Thoughts For Errol Spence vs Terence Crawford”
“A Showdown in Motown” Claressa Shields vs Maricela Cornejo Preview
“Four Leaf Clover Is Useless vs An Uppercut” Luis Alberto Lopez vs Michael Conlan Recap
“Revenge is the sweetest Joy…” Mauricio Lara vs Leigh Wood 2 Rematch Recap
Forgotten Fades – Kermit Cintron vs David Estrada
The Welterweight division of today is currently in a standstill. Due to a combination of politics, injuries, and bullshit. Truthfully, it is one of the most terrible divisions in boxing. It is sad because there are a lot of talented fighters that operate there. However, the significant fights do not get made in a timely fashion or at all. It is frustrating to see a division like that struggle and be mediocre. So, as I usually do, it was time to look at yesteryear. This fight I picked because it was a sentimental favorite of mine and also Shutterworth the Gawd. We were having discussions on a potential fight for a “Forgotten Fade” article and again this fight came up. Kermit Cintron vs David Estrada was an IBF eliminator. Cintron was trying to right the wrong that happened in his then lone world title shot against then reigning WBO Welterweight Champion Antonio Margarito. Margarito would dominate, break down, and stop an undefeated Cintron in only five rounds. The sight of Kermit Cintron crying after being knocked out was not one lost to boxing fans. David Estrada was a contender who at the time had only lost to the best in the division, Ishe Smith and Shane Mosley. He was looking for the notable victory on his ledger on top of the chance to fight for the title. The stage was set.
The first round started with Estrada being characteristically aggressive, attacking with two hands on a moving Cintron. Cintron is trying to keep distance using a jab with his exceptionally long reach. Estrada, keeping his head off the line, got through with a right hand and left hook that shook up Cintron. Cintron immediately responded with his right hand. Both fighters clearly were not shy of letting their offense go early in the fight. The 2nd and 3rd rounds followed the same way. Estrada getting bolder in asserting his offense. Going forward with reckless aggression throwing his both hands trying to set a pace thinking Cintron would not be able to manage. Cintron, to his credit, remained more disciplined with his boxing. Taking the shots on his gloves and moving backwards trying to maintain the distance to box. Estrada’s offensive surge did pay an early dividend by inflicting a cut over Cintron’s eye after catching him with some winging shots. In the fourth round, Estrada managed to get inside and started cracking Cintron with heavy shots. Cintron knew he had to stand his ground and get his punching respect; else Estrada would not stop coming forward. So, he played the role of the counter puncher making sure that for every shot Estrada landed, he responded with 2-3 punch combinations in kind. The highlight was a mean right uppercut from Cintron that visibly shook-up Estrada. The audibles on some of these shots were crazy. It is a full-on slugfest at this point. On one hand you have Estrada just putting Cintron under crazy pressure landing winging shots then Cintron rocks him with a hook or straight hand and Estrada would wobble and be stunned. It was hard to tell who was going to break first. The crowd is very appreciative of the level of sustained action. In those mid rounds though, you can tell the power of Cintron was getting to Estrada. Cintron was lining up right hands on Estrada, snapping his head back. Estrada would just pound on his chest telling him to bring it on. Estrada would then retaliate with some withering body shots although prior he was starting to spit up some blood himself. What Estrada was not doing was getting out of the wheelhouse of Cintron’s punches. One more long, head snapping right hand after a shot to the body had Estrada doing a silly dance at the end of the sixth round trying to hang on. Estrada was so loopy for that that the ref (and Cintron) had to point him to the right corner.
In the seventh round Cintron is throwing with fire in his eyes. Wicked body-head combinations that had Estrada lowering his hands to protect his body and eating headshots in return. As part of the ebb and flow for this fight, a left hook and a right hand from Estrada found its mark and all of a sudden Cintron was in trouble. Holding on while absorbing a wild barrage of punches from Estrada who had nothing to lose. In the eighth round Estrada picked up where he left off and managed to knock Cintron’s mouthpiece. The ref rightfully had to call a temporary stop to the action much to the crowd’s displeasure. When the fight resumed, it was back to rock ’em, sock’ em action where it looked like Estrada was getting the better of the exchanges. The ninth round resembled some of the first couple rounds where Cintron is going back to sticking and moving while Estrada again is coming forward although a little sloppy by this point. In round ten, the accumulated punishment took hold on Estrada when two right hands from Cintron put him on the canvas for the first knockdown. Estrada looked finished and barely responded to the ref’s commands, but the ref let him continue. Cintron raced across the ring with an uppercut and right hand followed by more head and body combinations. The ref saw Estrada was not picking up the punches, stepped in, and waved it off. A brutal, spectacular win for Kermit Cintron, who becomes the first man to stop David Estrada. The aftermath would see Cintron go to the hospital for stitches while Estrada went for dehydration.
The win from Cintron came with a number 2 ranking. In his next fight he would face Mark Suarez for the vacated IBF Welterweight Title (previous champion Floyd Mayweather Jr) and stop him in five rounds. A couple of successful defenses against Jesse Feliciano and Walter Matthysse (A sickeningly brutal KO) would follow before losing again to Antonio Margarito. From there Cintron would be very up and down. A Brilliant win over the then undefeated Alfredo Angulo to a confusing draw with Sergio Martinez in which he was counted out before but somehow the fight was restarted. Then you have the losses to Paul Williams, Carlos Molina, and Saul Canelo Alvarez. Each fight shows the increasing mental unraveling of Kermit Cintron in tough physical fights. Another draw with Adrian Granados pretty much spelled the end of Cintron as a viable contender. A technical draw, knockout loss, and no contest were the results of his final three career fights of which Cintron would retire in 2018. An update from Ring Magazine https://www.ringtv.com/645110-family-man-kermit-cintron-happier-with-birdies-than-big-kos/ has Cintron happily retired, spending time with family, studying radiography, and playing golf. For David Estrada, unfortunately the pattern of coming up short in big fights would follow. A 3-fight win streak would see him back in another eliminator against Andre Berto. Another brutal back and forth fight which saw him get stopped in eight rounds. Back-to-back losses to Jesus Soto Karass and Luis Abregu looked like the end was near for David Estrada. Estrada would rebound with his best career win to date knocking out then undefeated Orlando Lora in eight rounds. However, promotional issues would kill the momentum of his career even though he won all eight of his fights after the aforementioned loss to Abregu. Estrada fought as recently as 2020 however has transitioned into an assistant trainer role working out of a gym in Miami. Both may have underachieved in their pro careers, but their fight stands out on its own. Strong recommendation to watch.
Written by Patscorpio