Chavez Jr sets up Golovkin showdown with a convincing win over Vera. Salido overcomes Lomachenko

6 Submitted by on Sun, 02 March 2014, 02:05

In the co-main event from San Antonio, Texas, Vasyl Lomachenko entered the professional ranks amid worldwide acclaim. A stellar amateur career that came to close following his 397th fight, which amounted to a record of 396-1, three world titles and two Olympic gold medals. Having dispatched of Jose Ramirez in four rounds, Lomachenko announced he would attempt to win a world title in a record setting second pro fight. WBO Featherweight champion Orlando Salido, a seasoned grizzled veteran of 56 fights, was a formidable challenge for an inexperienced pro fighter. Amateur and professional boxing are two different sports.

The opening rounds were relatively quiet, with short spurts of action. Salido, a notoriously slow starter, had little to worry about as Lomachenko seemed content to probe with little intent. Through the mid rounds Salido played the experience card very effectively, depositing shots on the belt line, hoping they would cash in late in the fight. With his back to the referee and in the clinches, Salido proceeded to add some low shots on the referee’s blind side for good measure.

Lomachenko declined an invitation to engage in a dirty scrap. Vasyl failed to make use of a jab of any kind, and for the most part was uncreative. Lomachenko’s first genuine breakthrough came in the final round, when he hurt Salido and looked for a finish. As the final bell rang it was apparent to all in attendance, including the three judges, that it was too little too late as they handed in scorecards of 115-113, 116-112, 115-113 in favor of Salido.

In a fight that promised much but delivered little, Lomachenko did little to justify the hype he was carrying. He did however prove he is competitive at this level, which in itself speaks volumes of what is still largely untapped potential as a professional. It was a case of too much too soon.

In a polar opposite contest, the main event delivered a brutal all action encounter between Julio Chavez Jr. and Bryan Vera. A rematch of their largely disputed first clash, they picked up where they left off in round 13. Chavez began the bout on the back foot, working Vera over with his jab. Round 3 saw some back and forth action as both men exchanged solid right hands. A Chavez lead left hook found a home on Vera’s chin, and a powerful right straight followed suit.

In rounds 4 and 5 Chavez pressed forward while Vera happily obliged to meet him head on. In close, Vera dropping his head an inch to the side and splitting Chavez guard with well placed uppercuts that rocked Chavez’ head back. In Round 8 Chavez landed a hurtful flurry on Vera against the ropes, after which Vera leaned heavily on Chavez, pressing his head towards the canvas. The referee took a point from Vera.

Rounds 9 through 10 saw Vera work his way back into the fight with some flurries, it was Chavez however who was landing the more damaging shots. Round 11 Vera had to dig deep after absorbing a brutal right hand from Chavez and some follow up shots. After a bruising 11 rounds, the final round went out with little action as Chavez proceeded to taunt Vera. He even found time for an ‘Ali shuffle’.

The judges scorecards read: 114-113, 117-110, 117-110 for Julio Cesar Chavez. As in many fights, Chavez’ pressure and size wore Vera down as the rounds went by. Few could argue with the scorecards. Even in defeat, Vera’s stock will not fall dramatically after a courageous performance. In the post fight interview Chavez dropped Gennady Golovkin’s name as a potential future opponent. With few other viable options, Chavez is certainly a credible option for Golovkin. With the Vera situation resolved, Chavez now looks to plough forward in typical Chavez fashion.

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6 Responses to "Chavez Jr sets up Golovkin showdown with a convincing win over Vera. Salido overcomes Lomachenko"
  1. John Ortiz says:

    chavez must have a death wish if he thinks he can beat ggg. you cant even stop vera in 22 rounds

    • BunDaddy says:

      Your a moron chavez is fighting at 168 and Golovkin is just 160 all the hype around golovkin makes me sick to my stomach, he hasnt fought anyone good, hes the biggest hype job since adrien broner

  2. Matt Ferris says:

    Rather see Froch fight Chavez that would be a terrific bout back and forth.

    Good to see Salido get a win, I agree that it was too soon to step him up, it was a big gamble and they lost. Sadly for Lomachenko there’s not much you can do with a 1-1 fighter who is clearly not suited for the big leagues quite yet.

  3. friends army says:

    another sick statement come out again in the mouth ass of this ape man gayweather sr. Tell your son not to quit boxing till the age of 60 yrs. as long as there is more cherry fruit boxers to pick this he can cemented his legacy forever…PUTO….

  4. Glen says:

    GGG got what it takes but was starting to cherry pick his opponents lately. Chavez Sr. will protect his son and will avoid GGG for sure. I don’t see fight is going to happen….ever….

  5. Spectator says:

    If lomachenko fought like he did in the 12th round from the beginning, that cheater salido wouldn’t have lasted five rounds…