Israel Vazquez tells Victor Ortiz to get back in the saddle
by radimmortal18 - If there's a fighter in the sport
today that knows about punishment -- giving and receiving -- it's Israel
Vazquez. If there's one name fighter under fire for lacking guts and drive,
it's Victor Ortiz. Vazquez, unlike many fighters, commentators, fans and others
in and around boxing, is telling Ortiz that all he can do is get back in the
ring and fight.
Speaking with Robert Morales, Vazquez recalled
his legendary first fight with Rafael Marquez, in which Vazquez stopped the
fight after six rounds because of a broken nose. Vazquez, of course, came back
from that loss to beat Marquez in two even more sensational fights in 2007 and
2008, firmly establishing his legacy as one of Mexico's greatest warriors.
Says Vazquez:
"A lot of people questioned me
coming back. A lot of people didn't think I should come back in five months.
But I wanted to go out and prove to everybody that I had a bad night in March.
I had a great night in August."
Like everyone -- including Ortiz --
he feels that "Vicious" Victor just didn't fight the correct battle
against Marcos Maidana, a hard-punching, nothing-to-lose warrior that refused
to bend to Ortiz's will the way so many other fighters had done already. He
also calls Ortiz's chin "suspect," but it's not like we've never seen
Vazquez in serious peril, and it hasn't come only against Marquez, a powerful
sharpshooter.
The Ortiz situation will work itself
out how it's going to work itself out. At this point, we've said it all, we've
heard it all, and he's definitely heard it all. Hopefully he can find some
inspiration in Vazquez's words and follow that sort of example, because as much
as the fashion is to bash Ortiz (and I've done my share of it, no doubt), I
like watching him fight. He's really talented, really exciting, and still very
young.
In the same article, Morales says he spoke with Manny
Steward, who would prefer that Wladimir Klitschko fight Chris
Arreola next, and then Nikolai Valuev, which would require
side-stepping two mandatories (Alexander Povetkin and Eddie
Chambers). Steward feels that people simply want to see
Klitschko-Arreola more than those other fights, and that Arreola would
have no fear of his fighter. Kind of an admirable stance, but not
surprising given Manny's occasional brow-beatings of Klitschko during
fights. I think he wants to see his man tested in the most interesting and
perhaps most lucrative fight out there.