Waterfront brawls
April 26, 2002 | 12:00am
Two Oriental and Pacific Boxing Federation (OPBF) titles are at stake in promoter Rex (Wakee) Saluds blockbuster card in the Grand Ballroom of the Waterfront Cebu City Hotel tomorrow night.
Two unbeaten Filipino fighters face Korean opponents in scheduled 12-round bouts guaranteed not to last the distance. OPBF welterweight champion Rivero (Bong) Santillan of Jaro, Iloilo, takes on No. 1 contender Yong Hwa Choi while Randy (Komong Bato) Suico of Mandaue battles dangerous Sung Ho Yuh in a pair of humdingers headlining Saluds show called "Brawl at the Waterfront 2."
The card is a sequel to Saluds first "Brawl at the Waterfront," also featuring Santillan and Suico, in Cebu last year. That was when some 3,000 fans packed the posh Ballroom to watch Santillan floor Suk Hyun Yun twice en route to posting a split decision for the OPBF 147-pound crown. In the undercard, Suico stopped Dante Paulino in the eighth round to retain his Philippine superfeatherweight championship.
Santillan, 24, is making the third defense of his OPBF belt. Hes coming off a sixth round disposal of Kenji Go in Yokohama. Santillan boasts an unblemished 14-0-1 record, including 11 KOs. Choi is also unbeaten with an 8-0-1 slate. The winner has been ordered to defend against Hiroshi Watanabe in Nagoya on June 9. Last August, Santillan and Watanabe fought to a split draw. They were set to figure in a rematch last November but a freak accident led to Watanabes withdrawal a few days before the fight.
Suico, 22, is determined to succeed Tiger Ari as OPBF titleholder in the 130-pound class. Ari relinquished the throne to meet Cassius Baloyi for the International Boxing Organization (IBO) junior lightweight diadem in South Africa last week. Ari lost on a sixth round knockout and now hopes to challenge the winner of the Suico-Yuh bout which is for the vacant throne.
Suico is ranked No. 5 by the World Boxing Council (WBC) and a win over Yuh will bring him closer to a mandatory title shot. Yuh, 29, is no patsy. He knocked out Yuji Watanabe for the OPBF lightweight crown two years ago and fought Jose Luis Castillo for the WBC 135-pound title last June. Yuhs record is 13-2-1, with seven KOs. Among his victims were Filipinos Ulysses Puzon, Jun Gorres, and Erwin Gonzales. In 1996, Yuh invaded Manila and scored a shock sixth round knockout over Gorres. So fighting on local shores isnt a new experience for the battle-tested natural lightweight whos stepping down to the superfeatherweight class to fight Suico.
Suicos Japanese manager Joe Koizumi arrived in Cebu the other day. Koizumi is slowly but surely priming Suico for a shot at the world crown.
Suicos record is an impressive 15-0, with 13 knockouts. Only Israel Melendez and Joe Escriber survived the distance with the hard-hitting Cebuano who started his boxing career as an amateur under Pacing Flores. One of 10 children and six boys, Suico fought for businessman Tony Aldeguer before joining Koizumis stable. He has undergone surgery to repair knuckle damage in both fists but hes now as good as new, thanks to Dr. Felix Vicuna.
Suico has knocked out his last five opponents and is itching for stiffer competition. His last two victims Karim Nashar and Jun Longakit surrendered in a round each. Yuh should be an acid test for Suico. He went the full route with rugged Mongolian Lakva Sim, a former world champion, and is unbeaten in three fights in Japan. Yuh has an outstanding record in overseas action. Five of his victims went out in three rounds or less.
Santillan, a long-armed and big-hearted 5-10 1/2 slugger, is the sixth of seven children born to poor farmers. Hell be paid P300,000 for tomorrows workout.
Salud said he plans more title defenses for Santillan until the road opens up for a crack at the world crown. Because of Santillans height, he wont be outsized by the reigning welterweight champions the WBCs Vernon Forrest, Ricardo Mayorga of the World Boxing Association and Michele Piccirillo of the International Boxing Federation (IBF). The division lists a lot of tough contenders like Sugar Shane Mosley, Andrew (Six Heads) Lewis and Golden Johnson but the three titlists especially the light-hitting Piccirillo arent unbeatable.
In a 10-round appetizer thats a grudge rematch, Saluds latest jewel Jimrex Jaca meets Michael Domingo. Jaca is the countrys bantamweight champion but his title wont be on the line. Domingo is the Philippines No. 1 superbantamweight and brings a 13-5-2 record, with six KOs, to the table. Jaca, 18, has a perfect 14-0 mark, with seven KOs.
Two years ago, Jaca and Domingo slugged it out in Cainta. Jaca stopped Domingo in three. Domingo swears Jacas win was a fluke. Hes got the chance to prove it tomorrow.
Jaca is an exciting bell-to-bell brawler. He took only a round to put Manny Pacquiaos brother Bobby to sleep last August. And in his most recent outing, Jaca disposed of veteran Andy Alagenio in two.
Saluds 64-round bill is sponsored by San Miguel Beer, Waterfront Cebu City Hotel, San A-Cebu, Land Bank, Casino Filipino, Senorita Farms of Davao, Platinum Fitness and Welness Club, Mrs. Fedelina Kobayashi, Robert Yu, Jimmy Sy, John Uytengsu, David Cua, Jumilan Marketing, Park and Go Bakeshop, Makris Tire, Roedils Printing Press, N&L Exports, Roadside Bar-B-Q, and Nilo Javier.
A ringside ticket with a sumptuous dinner goes for P1,000. A balcony seat is P300. First bell rings at 6 p.m.
Salud, who was recently honored as the countrys Best Manager at the second Flash Elorde Boxing Awards Night, promised a night of fireworks. Santillan, who sparred over 60 rounds with the likes of Suico, Dindo Castanares and Tirso Albia, is ready for war. So is Suico.
Salud said the Korean opponents are no tomato cans. Their records speak for themselves. Theyve come to win, not to roll over and die. They flew in from Inchon on a straight Philippine Airlines flight to Cebu at dawn yesterday like commandoes on a mission. It wont be a picnic for Santillan and Suico, thats for sure.
Two unbeaten Filipino fighters face Korean opponents in scheduled 12-round bouts guaranteed not to last the distance. OPBF welterweight champion Rivero (Bong) Santillan of Jaro, Iloilo, takes on No. 1 contender Yong Hwa Choi while Randy (Komong Bato) Suico of Mandaue battles dangerous Sung Ho Yuh in a pair of humdingers headlining Saluds show called "Brawl at the Waterfront 2."
The card is a sequel to Saluds first "Brawl at the Waterfront," also featuring Santillan and Suico, in Cebu last year. That was when some 3,000 fans packed the posh Ballroom to watch Santillan floor Suk Hyun Yun twice en route to posting a split decision for the OPBF 147-pound crown. In the undercard, Suico stopped Dante Paulino in the eighth round to retain his Philippine superfeatherweight championship.
Santillan, 24, is making the third defense of his OPBF belt. Hes coming off a sixth round disposal of Kenji Go in Yokohama. Santillan boasts an unblemished 14-0-1 record, including 11 KOs. Choi is also unbeaten with an 8-0-1 slate. The winner has been ordered to defend against Hiroshi Watanabe in Nagoya on June 9. Last August, Santillan and Watanabe fought to a split draw. They were set to figure in a rematch last November but a freak accident led to Watanabes withdrawal a few days before the fight.
Suico, 22, is determined to succeed Tiger Ari as OPBF titleholder in the 130-pound class. Ari relinquished the throne to meet Cassius Baloyi for the International Boxing Organization (IBO) junior lightweight diadem in South Africa last week. Ari lost on a sixth round knockout and now hopes to challenge the winner of the Suico-Yuh bout which is for the vacant throne.
Suico is ranked No. 5 by the World Boxing Council (WBC) and a win over Yuh will bring him closer to a mandatory title shot. Yuh, 29, is no patsy. He knocked out Yuji Watanabe for the OPBF lightweight crown two years ago and fought Jose Luis Castillo for the WBC 135-pound title last June. Yuhs record is 13-2-1, with seven KOs. Among his victims were Filipinos Ulysses Puzon, Jun Gorres, and Erwin Gonzales. In 1996, Yuh invaded Manila and scored a shock sixth round knockout over Gorres. So fighting on local shores isnt a new experience for the battle-tested natural lightweight whos stepping down to the superfeatherweight class to fight Suico.
Suicos Japanese manager Joe Koizumi arrived in Cebu the other day. Koizumi is slowly but surely priming Suico for a shot at the world crown.
Suicos record is an impressive 15-0, with 13 knockouts. Only Israel Melendez and Joe Escriber survived the distance with the hard-hitting Cebuano who started his boxing career as an amateur under Pacing Flores. One of 10 children and six boys, Suico fought for businessman Tony Aldeguer before joining Koizumis stable. He has undergone surgery to repair knuckle damage in both fists but hes now as good as new, thanks to Dr. Felix Vicuna.
Suico has knocked out his last five opponents and is itching for stiffer competition. His last two victims Karim Nashar and Jun Longakit surrendered in a round each. Yuh should be an acid test for Suico. He went the full route with rugged Mongolian Lakva Sim, a former world champion, and is unbeaten in three fights in Japan. Yuh has an outstanding record in overseas action. Five of his victims went out in three rounds or less.
Santillan, a long-armed and big-hearted 5-10 1/2 slugger, is the sixth of seven children born to poor farmers. Hell be paid P300,000 for tomorrows workout.
Salud said he plans more title defenses for Santillan until the road opens up for a crack at the world crown. Because of Santillans height, he wont be outsized by the reigning welterweight champions the WBCs Vernon Forrest, Ricardo Mayorga of the World Boxing Association and Michele Piccirillo of the International Boxing Federation (IBF). The division lists a lot of tough contenders like Sugar Shane Mosley, Andrew (Six Heads) Lewis and Golden Johnson but the three titlists especially the light-hitting Piccirillo arent unbeatable.
In a 10-round appetizer thats a grudge rematch, Saluds latest jewel Jimrex Jaca meets Michael Domingo. Jaca is the countrys bantamweight champion but his title wont be on the line. Domingo is the Philippines No. 1 superbantamweight and brings a 13-5-2 record, with six KOs, to the table. Jaca, 18, has a perfect 14-0 mark, with seven KOs.
Two years ago, Jaca and Domingo slugged it out in Cainta. Jaca stopped Domingo in three. Domingo swears Jacas win was a fluke. Hes got the chance to prove it tomorrow.
Jaca is an exciting bell-to-bell brawler. He took only a round to put Manny Pacquiaos brother Bobby to sleep last August. And in his most recent outing, Jaca disposed of veteran Andy Alagenio in two.
Saluds 64-round bill is sponsored by San Miguel Beer, Waterfront Cebu City Hotel, San A-Cebu, Land Bank, Casino Filipino, Senorita Farms of Davao, Platinum Fitness and Welness Club, Mrs. Fedelina Kobayashi, Robert Yu, Jimmy Sy, John Uytengsu, David Cua, Jumilan Marketing, Park and Go Bakeshop, Makris Tire, Roedils Printing Press, N&L Exports, Roadside Bar-B-Q, and Nilo Javier.
A ringside ticket with a sumptuous dinner goes for P1,000. A balcony seat is P300. First bell rings at 6 p.m.
Salud, who was recently honored as the countrys Best Manager at the second Flash Elorde Boxing Awards Night, promised a night of fireworks. Santillan, who sparred over 60 rounds with the likes of Suico, Dindo Castanares and Tirso Albia, is ready for war. So is Suico.
Salud said the Korean opponents are no tomato cans. Their records speak for themselves. Theyve come to win, not to roll over and die. They flew in from Inchon on a straight Philippine Airlines flight to Cebu at dawn yesterday like commandoes on a mission. It wont be a picnic for Santillan and Suico, thats for sure.
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