
Abner Mares vs. Joseph Agbeko II
By David A. Avila
Another crazy and crowded boxing week is upon us with
competing fight cards throughout Southern California and culminating with a
bantamweight world title bout on Saturday in
IBF bantamweight world titleholder Abner Mares (22-0-1, 13
KOs) reloads for a rematch against Joseph “King Kong” Agbeko (28-3, 22 KOs) on
Saturday Dec. 3, at the Honda Center in
It was a mere four months ago that
Point deductions were taken from Mares who was not entirely to blame for all of the low blows because of Agbeko’s defensive tactic of pushing his attacker’s head down. It’s a useful defensive measure against a body attack but forces blows to hit lower than targeted.
The television announcers focused on the low blows and though Mares was judged the winner, the victory was tainted by the below-the-belt issue. A rematch was called for and granted.
Mares and Agbeko were both willing and happy to oblige each other and promise more of the same type of action from their first clash.
“I'm a perfectionist and I'm definitely going to go to the body. I'm going to throw a lot of body punches. If I see that the ref is saying my punches are too low then I'm going to stop doing it,” said Mares who trains in Santa Fe Springs, Ca.
Former champion Agbeko showed class and sportsmanship in previous conversations and called Mares a good fighter. Both are known for abilities to use their strength, punching power and boxing skills to change directions in a fight if necessary.
“I think Agbeko is a more complete fighter than the last two fighters I fought (Yonnhy Perez and Vic Darchinyan),” Mares said. “The way he kind of pulls down and the way he hides his head is pretty good.”
Darchinyan
The Armenian born Darchinyan (37-3-1, 27 KOs) returns to the
ring in the co-main event at the Honda Center and faces WBA bantamweight
titleholder Anselmo Moreno (31-1-1, 11 KOs) a boxing cutie from
Can
“I've had eight title defenses, but I needed a name like Vic
Darchinyan to put my name out there on the map,” says the confident
Confidence in opponents seems to amuse Darchinyan who’s no bashful shrinking violet either.
“I know
WBA junior middleweight titleholder Miguel Cotto (36-2, 29
KOs) looks to avenge his loss to
The last time they met Margarito bludgeoned Cotto to a
bloody surrender and became
“He’s just a cry baby,” said Margarito of Cotto’s constant reminder.
Cotto feels he lost because Margarito fought with loaded gloves though no one could prove that occurred back in 2008. They will fight again but this time Margarito enters with a damaged eye that almost derailed the rematch.
Fights on television
Thurs. Fox, 11 p.m., Hugo Centeno (11-0) vs. David Lopez (3-6-3).
Fri. Showtime, 11 p.m., Anthony Dirrell (23-0) vs.
Fri. Telefutura, 11:30 p.m., Randy Caballero (12-0) vs. Arturo Santiago (7-3-1).
Sat. HBO pay-per-view, 6 p.m., Miguel Cotto (36-2) vs. Antonio Margarito (37-7); Brandon Rios (28-0-1) vs. John Murray (31-1); Pawel Wolak (29-1-1) vs. Delvin Rodriguez (25-5-3).
Sat. Spike TV, 6 p.m., Michael Bisping (22-3) vs. Jason Miller (24-7).
Sat. Showtime, 9 p.m., Abner Mares (22-0-1) vs. Joseph Agbeko (28-3).