Notebook: After father's death, Russell carries on against Barthelemy
Pacheco re-signs with Matchroom Boxing, lands slot on Canelo-GGG III card; Benn-Eubank rivalry rekindled?; Quick hits; Show and tell
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Junior welterweight Gary Antuanne Russell, making the transition from elite prospect to contender, believes the victory he scored in his last fight will be of big assistance headed into his next bout.
Russell dominated and knocked out former world titleholder Viktor Postal in the 10th round on Feb. 26 for by far his biggest victory. Postol had not been stopped in two previous defeats, including by Terence Crawford.
Now, Russell is taking on another formidable opponent in former junior lightweight and lightweight titlist Rances Barthelemy in the 10-round opening bout of a Showtime-televised tripleheader on July 30 (9 p.m. ET) at Barclays Center in Brooklyn, New York.
“I’m up against a fighting style that I believe is similar to Viktor Postol’s,” Russell said at his media workout on Monday at The Enigma Boxing Gym in his hometown of Capitol Heights, Maryland. “Postol is a little more defensive, but they’re both long and rangy opponents.
“It’s, of course, a plus that I was able to be the first person to stop Postol. But at our gym and with our family, we don’t magnify fights like these. We pay attention to our credentials, and don’t really worry about what our opponents bring. The way we train, we’re not going to run into styles that we’re not accustomed to.”
Russell (15-0, 15 KOs), 26, a 2016 U.S. Olympian, will be fighting for the first time since the death of his father and trainer Gary Russell Sr., who had been ill for some time and died in May at age 63 due to complications related to Type 2 diabetes.
Gary Sr. trained his sons to box, including Gary Russell Jr., who lost his featherweight world title in January and has taken over his younger brother’s head training duties as their family continues to mourn the patriarch’s death.
“My brothers have always been in my corner,” Gary Antuanne said. “We all now are so tunnel visioned on what's important. Our motto in the gym is that the ultimate revenge is success.”
Gary Jr. said he and his brothers learned all they know about the ring from their dad and now it’s up to him to carry that on.
“Our father was not just a magnificent father, but a teacher and a mentor,” Russell Jr. said. “He molded not just men, but soldiers. He gave us the tools, the skills and the wit to properly maneuver through this jungle that we’re in.
“The biggest thing that our father taught us was versatility. That’s the biggest key with anything you do in life. I’m a great fighter because I’m versatile. A lot of these fighters are just really good at one thing. I don’t want to see someone who’s only good at fighting one style. I was always side-by-side working with my father when it came to working with my younger brothers. Even before I was going to fight, if they were on my undercard, I would work their corners as well. I think my father was somewhat always preparing me for this.”
Since a draw with former lightweight titlist Robert Easter Jr. in 2019, Barthelemy (29-1-1, 15 KOs), 37, a Cuba native fighting out of Las Vegas, has won both of his fights, a unanimous decision over All Rivera in January 2021 before stopping Gustavo David Vittori in the second round in November.
Gary Antuanne said the key for him is to make whatever adjustments are necessary once the fight begins like his father always drilled into him and his brothers.
“With this sport, you have to have diversity in your style,” Gary Antuanne said. “Because you never really know what kind of opponent you’re going to be facing. They might change up their fighting style based on yours. We just strive for excellence and execution.
“We train for perfection every day. We know that execution is what wins fights. If our opponent can’t make the necessary adjustments to keep us off them, then that’s on them. This sport is a battle of wits. My will versus your will and my intelligence versus yours.”
A win over Barthelemy would go nicely with the win over Postol and push Russell up the ranks in a deep division.
“If we come out unscathed from July 30, we’ll start working on the next opponent and get another fighter with great credentials in there,” he said. “We’ll be looking at fighting for the titles. Our goal was to clean out the division. That’s the first goal. Then we’ll start moving up to other weight classes eventually.”
Said Russell Jr.: “Rances is a great opponent. Whoever wins this fight is getting a big leg up in their career. My brother is looking to take over the division. I don’t think there’s any fighter in the division who he couldn’t beat. He can run through these guys. All he has to do is listen, that’s it.”
In the main event, former junior welterweight and welterweight titlist Danny Garcia (36-3, 21 KOs), 34, of Philadelphia, will end a 19-month layoff and make the move up to junior middleweight to take on Jose Benavidez Jr. (27-1-1, 18 KOs), 30, of Phoenix, in a 12-rounder. In the co-feature, popular Polish heavyweight Adam Kownacki (20-2, 15 KOs), 33, of Brooklyn, will face Ali Eren Demirezen (16-1, 12 KOs), 32, a 2016 Turkish Olympian.
Pacheco added to Canelo-GGG III card
Super middleweight prospect Diego Pacheco has signed an extension of his promotional deal with Matchroom Boxing’s Eddie Hearn and will next fight on the undercard of Canelo Alvarez-Gennadiy Golovkin III on Sept. 17 (DAZN PPV) at T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas, Hearn announced.
Pacheco will fight for a regional belt when he faces Enrique Collazo in a 10-rounder.
“I am delighted that Diego has committed his future to Matchroom,” Hearn said. “Diego has taken to the pro game so well and on Sept. 17, he takes the next step with his first title fight.
“Enrique will provide a stiff examination, but I believe Diego will show what we see in him – a future world champion and a young man that will begin climbing the rankings in the second half of the year and be hot on the heels of the contenders at 168 pounds.”
Pacheco (15-0, 12 KOs), 21, of Los Angeles, has been with Matchroom Boxing since his 2018 pro debut. Collazo (16-2-1, 11 KOs), 33, a 2012 Puerto Rican Olympian, is coming off a fourth-round disqualification loss to Jose Miguel Torres in November.
“I am very excited to be extending my promotional deal with Matchroom because they’ve done a great job working with me as a prospect and now it’s time to get into the contender’s conversation,” Pacheco said. “On Sept. 17, I will be showing everyone once again that I am here to stay.”
Quick hits
The deal isn’t done yet but the sides are working towards a huge all-British fight between rising welterweight Conor Benn (21-0, 14 KOs), 25, and middleweight contender Chris Eubank Jr. (32-2, 23 KOs), 32, at a catch weight. If they can agree on the weight and make a deal the fight is penciled in for Oct. 8 (DAZN) at The O2 in London, according to Benn promoter Eddie Hearn of Matchroom Boxing. The fight, which would be Benn’s biggest by far, would continue an epic family rivalry. Their legendary fathers, Nigel Benn and Chris Eubank Sr., fought twice in huge events. Eubank knocked Benn out in the ninth round of a WBO middleweight title fight in 1990 and they fought to a disputed split draw before some 47,000 in a WBC/WBO super middleweight unification fight in 1993.
Per the California State Athletic Commission, here are the official contract purses from Saturday’s Golden Boy card on DAZN: Ryan Garcia $2 million, Javier Fortuna $100,000 (though he probably was guaranteed much more); Alexis Rocha $100,000, Luis Veron $15,000; Lamont Roach Jr. $100,000, Angel Rodriguez $30,000; Ricardo Sandoval $50,000, David Jimenez $12,500; Oscar Collazo $25,000, Victorio Saludar $15,000; Diego De La Hoya $20,000, Enrique Bernache $12,000; Miguel Gaona $2,100, Abdiel Padilla $1,700.
Per the CSAC, here are the official contract purses from Friday’s Top Rank card on ESPN: Arnold Barboza Jr. $250,000, Danielito Zorrilla $100,000; Raymond Muratalla $50,000, Jair Valtierra $6,000; Richard Torrez Jr. $10,000, Roberto Zavala Jr. $5,000; Austin Brooks $2,500, Victor Sarabia $2,500; Stephan Shaw $35,000, Bernardo Marquez $15,000; Floyd Diaz $6,000, Pedro Salome $3,000; Jorge Marron Jr. $15,000, Adrian Yung $3,000.
Show and tell
After Vernon Forrest dropped and beat up then-pound-for-pound king and amateur rival Shane Mosley to take his welterweight world title by lopsided decision in a shocker, Mosley invoked his contractual right to an immediate rematch hoping to avenge his first career defeat and regain his P4P status and title. Almost six months later to the day they met again at Conseco Fieldhouse in Indianapolis, where I was ringside to cover the fight, which was one of the featured events of the annual Indiana Black Expo.
Forrest didn’t beat up Mosley this time but he once again soundly outboxed him, using his long jab to negate Mosley’s speed advantage to retain the title via scores of 117-111, 116-112 and 115-113 before 15,775, the largest crowd for a boxing event in Indiana history. Forrest moved to 3-0 against Mosley with two huge pro wins and a victory in their much discussed amateur bout in the semifinals of the 1992 U.S. Olympic Trials. The pro rematch was on July 20, 2002 — 20 years ago on Wednesday. Here is a site poster in my collection.
Russell photo: Amanda Westcott/Showtime; Pacheco photo: Ed Mulholland/Matchroom Boxing
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Thanks for purse info D$