Edwin Valero stopped veteran Hector Velazquez after
six rounds Saturday night to keep his WBC lightweight title in a town on
Venezuela’s Caribbean coast.
The 28-year-old Valero (26-0, 26 KOs) was bleeding from an eyebrow and his
nose after a pair of accidental head-butts early in the fight. But the feisty
Venezuelan kept attacking, giving Velazquez (51-14-2) his third loss in four
fights.
It was Valero’s first defense since winning the belt in April with a
second-round knockout of Antonio Pitalua in Austin, Texas. Valero is already
planning to defend the title in early 2010 against Antonio DeMarco, who holds
the interim WBC belt.
The fight Saturday night was held just outside Caracas—Valero’s first
fight since problems renewing his U.S. visa prevented him from defending his
title in Las Vegas last month against junior lightweight champion Humberto Soto.
Valero at the time accused the U.S. government of discrimination, saying he
had completed all the necessary paperwork and that his application wasn’t
approved in time because of his sympathy for Venezuela President Hugo Chavez—a
fierce critic of the U.S. government. Valero has an image of Chavez tattooed on
his chest along with a Venezuelan flag.
Authorities say that Valero has a pending drunken driving charge in Texas,
which is the primary reason he was denied a visa.
The charismatic lightweight turned professional in 2002 and fought without
any problems until he failed a prefight MRI exam two years later in New York,
when it was revealed that he suffered a cerebral hemorrhage in a motorcycle
accident in 2001.
Valero was place on indefinite suspension and wound up fighting mainly in
Japan and Latin America. He finally received a license to fight in Texas, where
he won his 135-pound title in the kind of dazzling performance that has become
his hallmark.