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Omar Andres Narvaez Makes 11th Successful Title Defense Against Felipe Orucuta

Sep 20, 2014
NEW YORK - OCTOBER 22:  (R-L) Omar Narvaez of Argentina squares up to Nonito Donaire of the Philippines in the WBC, WBO World Bantamweight Titles bout at Madison Square Garden on October 22, 2011 in New York City.  (Photo by Chris Trotman/Getty Images)
NEW YORK - OCTOBER 22: (R-L) Omar Narvaez of Argentina squares up to Nonito Donaire of the Philippines in the WBC, WBO World Bantamweight Titles bout at Madison Square Garden on October 22, 2011 in New York City. (Photo by Chris Trotman/Getty Images)

Thirty-nine-year-old Omar Andres Narvaez made things look easy Friday night.

The WBO super flyweight champion, Narvaez (42-1-2) picked up his second win over the talented Felipe Orucuta (29-3). But incompetent judging was at hand in this one just like their last, producing a dubious majority decision and marring El Huracan’s incredible 11th title defense. 

This victory extends a four-year reign over the 115-pound division, dating back to May 2010 when the Argentine outslugged the gangly Everth Briceno for not only the WBO super flyweight belt but also the right to call himself the best fighter in the weight class. 

Narvaez, a former 112-pound world champion and the Transnational Boxing Rankings Board’s very best junior bantamweight, has suffered just one defeat in his career (to Ring Magazine’s Top Five pound-for-pound, at the time, Nonito Donaire at bantamweight). But he has remained undefeated (and near untouchable) at super flyweight.

Things were no different in his rematch with the TBRB’s No. 6-rated super flyweight Orucuta.

Narvaez, a tank of a fighter, plodded through most of his 5’7” opponent’s punches early on. The 28-year-old Orucuta tried desperately to find his rhythm with long, straight punches. Dubbed “El Gallito,” Orucuta threw rights and lefts, but few had any effect on one of the sport’s more deceptive defensive fighters.

The longtime champion brushed off the young Mexican’s attack with aggressive blocking techniques, repelling punches off his sturdy forearms and then hopping into close quarters to slam punches into his opponent’s chest and let loose his renowned left hand.

The first four rounds all looked the same.

Orucuta was bent on finding his range, firing one-two combinations with regularity—the same lanky striking that gave Narvaez fits in their first bout 15 months ago, resulting in a controversial split decision.

In Round 5, Narvaez’s back began to touch the ropes. El Gallito’s volume began to wear on him. Now mixing in spiraling hooks and uppercuts with his continual jab-straight combos, his punches were touching up the Argentine. This formula worked even better in Round 6. The 39-year-old circled away from the assault the best that he could, but Orucuta deserved the fifth and sixth.

https://twitter.com/cesarbaudino/status/511972198073249792

The Mexican was outboxing his older foe. The narrative would have been nothing new: The young, strapping fighter dethrones the older, gritty champion, and a new generation is introduced. A dramatic change for the super flyweight division seemed imminent, and it made sense. For the most part, boxing is a young man’s game.

That is, of course, for the most part. 

Narvaez’s left hand came to life in Round 7, and it couldn't miss. He is a fighter who operates from maximum distance, a peculiar stylist who counters without moving his feet. Reminiscent of James Toney, the WBO champion planted his feet to the ground and slipped his opponent’s oncoming punches, countering brutally but nonchalantly with overhand lefts and timely right hooks that connected to the head of Orucuta over and over again.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BVAQltk-2hE

This was some of the best counterpunching seen all year, and the challenger had no answer for it.

Rounds 8 and 9 were all Narvaez. And in the championship rounds, a stoppage looked near.

El Huracan was on the horizon, and he gave Orucuta everything he could handle in the final three stanzas, walking his opponent down and untying flurries that severely staggered El Gallito in the 12th. The scorecards read 116-112 to Narvaez, twice, and a silly 114-114 draw from judge Pat Russell. 

Orucuta’s high output must have been what swayed a few too many rounds his way. But his punches were visibly glancing off Narvaez’s shoulders and parries all nightthat is, when they were hitting anything at all. Nevertheless, it was a spirited effort from both men. Orucuta has plenty to be proud of. Only 28, he gave a fine champion like Narvaez his arguably two toughest title defenses and remains near the top of the super flyweight division.

7 MAY 1994: JULIO CESAR CHAVEZ REGAINS HIS WBC SUPER LIGHTWEIGHT TITLE. THE BOUT WAS STOPPED AT 2:57 OF THE 8TH ROUND DUE TO A CUT ABOVE CHAVEZ''S RIGHT EYE FROM A HEAD BUTT BY FRANKIE RANDALL AT THE MGM GRAND HOTEL IN LAS VEGAS. Mandatory Credit: Al Bell
7 MAY 1994: JULIO CESAR CHAVEZ REGAINS HIS WBC SUPER LIGHTWEIGHT TITLE. THE BOUT WAS STOPPED AT 2:57 OF THE 8TH ROUND DUE TO A CUT ABOVE CHAVEZ''S RIGHT EYE FROM A HEAD BUTT BY FRANKIE RANDALL AT THE MGM GRAND HOTEL IN LAS VEGAS. Mandatory Credit: Al Bell

On the same token, Narvaez not only defended his WBO strap for the 11th time but also improved his record in world-title fights to an astonishing 28-1-1—just three wins away from matching Julio Cesar Chavez's record of 31. This includes the Argentine's spell as WBO flyweight champion from 2002 to 2009.

Pushing 40—ancient for this sport—Narvaez doesn’t seem to age. And he doesn’t lose. 

Like all men fighting below 118 pounds, El Huracan is overlooked. And his only glare of publicity seems to be his bantamweight title fight against Donaire, a fight that cannot be held against him because of Donaire's natural size and ability.

Narvaez is a tremendous champion and an even better fighter.

The TBRB's No. 2-rated 115-pounder Carlos Cuadras is scheduled to fight twice to end 2014. He is the WBC super flyweight champion and a high-octane fighter who proved he can also outbox an opponent who brings heavy artillery to the table in his bout with the violent-hitting Srisaket Sor Rungvisai (TBRB's No. 4) this past May. 

If Cuadras, 26, can carry on into 2015 unscathed, a Narvaez-Cuadras unification bout would be a purist's dream.

Omar Narvaez vs. Antonio Garcia: Fight Time, Date, TV Info and More

May 15, 2014
WBO flyweight champion Omar Narvaez of Argentina, left, fights against challenger Ivan Pozo of Spain in Vigo, Spain, on Friday, May 9, 2008. Narvaez won with a technical knockout. (AP Photo/Lalo R. Villar)
WBO flyweight champion Omar Narvaez of Argentina, left, fights against challenger Ivan Pozo of Spain in Vigo, Spain, on Friday, May 9, 2008. Narvaez won with a technical knockout. (AP Photo/Lalo R. Villar)

Legendary Argentine super flyweight and current WBO champion Omar "El Huracan" Narvaez (41-1-2, 22 KO) will defend his title on Saturday, May 17 in his native country.

His opponent will be 20-year-old Mexican "contender," Antonio Garcia (13-1, 6 KO). Despite limited experience and a lack of noteworthy wins, Garcia is getting a crack at a world title before his 21st birthday.

For the 38-year-old Narvaez, this will be his 10th title defense of the WBO crown he's held since 2010.

Boxing fans stateside won't get a chance to watch this one live, but television coverage will be available in Argentina. Here's how you can watch.

When: Saturday, May 17 at 9 p.m ET

Where: Anfiteatro Municipal, Villa Maria in Argentina

TV: TyC Sports

The Book on Narvaez

While El Huracan has been a recognized champion in the WBO for over a decade at flyweight and super flyweight, he won't ever get the respect that other long-standing champions have received.

Narvaez has rarely fought outside of Argentina. Only one of his bouts took place in the United States, and that turned out to be his only official loss.

In Oct. 2011, Narvaez moved up to take on Nonito Donaire for his WBC and WBO bantamweight titles. Donaire boxed circles around Narvaez and won every round on all three judges' scorecards.

Since then, Narvaez has been fighting young, green and overmatched guys to pad his record...kind of like Garcia. Narvaez's last opponent, David Carmona, came in without a major reputation in the sport and with a modest record of 16-1-4.

Before that, Narvaez fought Hiroyuki Hisataka, a fighter who had lost two of his last three bouts coming in. It appears some of Narvaez's supporters are attempting to create the illusion that Narvaez has been challenged in recent fights.

Specifically noting Narvaez's huge unanimous decision over little-known David Quijano, Sweet Boxing's Ryan Bivins dispels any notion that Narvaez was pushed in that fight. 

Per an interview with The Ring Magazine's Anson Wainwright, Narvaez said: "I would like to unify the titles fighting with the other champions."

Elisinio Castillo of Boxing Scene reported that Narvaez was indeed interested in taking on former champion Daiki Kameda for his IBF title.

However, Kameda lost a split decision to Liborio Solis in Dec. 2013. Because Solis failed to make weight, he couldn't add the IBF title to his WBA belt with the win. That left the IBF title vacant. 

Narvaez has apparently elected to take on another young, unproven fighter. He certainly won't gain any points in the eyes of the boxing community with a win.

Can a champion's legacy be tarnished in victory?

The Book on Garcia

With only 14 professional fights, Garcia seems to be headed for a boxing lesson from the veteran champion. 

In watching his last bout against Jonathan Vidal, the 20-year-old seemed to get a gift of a decision.

It's safe to say he won't get the benefit of the doubt against Narvaez in Argentina. He's likely to need a knockout—or at least a knockdown—to dethrone the champion.

Oddly enough, Garcia's only loss came at the hands of Carmona, the man Narvaez defeated in his last bout.

This bout is becoming more and more difficult to understand.

From what's available to see of the tough, young Mexican fighter on YouTube and Daily Motion, he has an uphill battle ahead of him this weekend.

With so little professional experience, can Garcia shock the world?

Prediction

Narvaez is a crafty, tough boxer who loves to counter. He has excellent stamina, and he often looks to wear down his opponents later in his bouts.

Against Garcia, Narvaez should have a field day. Garcia not only is inexperienced, but he also has very slow hands and feet. Against Vidal, he was beaten to the punch in several instances, and his defense left a lot to be desired.

Narvaez is undoubtedly a harder puncher than Vidal, and that could spell trouble for Garcia.

Though he appears to have a solid chin, Garcia is headed for a sound beating on Saturday. Bank on a lopsided unanimous-decision win for Narvaez.

For whatever that'll be worth.

Follow me. I'm addicted to the sweet science.

@BMaziqueFPBR

Brian Viloria Must Be Impressive vs. Hernan Marquez to Get into HBO TV

Nov 17, 2012

WBO flyweight champion Brian Viloria is frustrated about the media exposure he is getting despite his stellar performances during his last five championship fights. He is particularly talking about HBO and Showtime not covering his recent fights, including his Saturday showdown with Hernan "Tyson" Marquez at the L.A. Sports Arena.

Viloria, who is staking his WBO flyweight title against Marquez, will have to show HBO and Showtime his fights are worth covering when he squares off with his highly-rated Mexican opponent Saturday night.

“It’s really frustrating, but you can’t really do anything. The other networks like GMA and WealthTV and Azteca TV took the initiative to pick up the fight,” said Viloria, 31. “For me, all I can do is put on great fights and later on down the line HBO and Showtime won’t ignore me anymore and put me on. It’s unfortunate, though," Viloria told Ring TV.

The Filipino-American boxing sensation is coming off a TKO victory over Mexican Omar Nino Romero at the Ynares Center in the Philippines last May 13 and is on a five-fight winning streak since losing to Carlos Tamara in 2010.

Viloria, 31, who is defending his WBO flyweight title for the fourth time, has a professional career record of 31 wins with three losses.

Hernan '"Tyson" Marquez, who hails from Sonora, Mexico, is the current WBA flyweight champion and is on his seven-fight winning streak since losing to Nonito Donaire via TKO in 2010.

Marquez, 24, is putting his WBA flyweight title on the line. A southpaw, Marquez has a career record of 32 wins with two losses.

During the weigh-in held at the Baltimore Hotel in Los Angeles, Viloria weighed 111.8 lbs, while WBA flyweight champion Hernan 'Tyson' Marquez scaled at 110.8 lbs.

Filipino boxing superstar Manny Pacquiao, who is deep in his training at the Wild Card Gym in Hollywood for his fourth fight with Mexican counterpuncher Juan Manuel Marquez, will be at the ringside to act as commentator for the fight.

Pacquiao will work with veteran sportswriter Chino Trinidad, who is covering the fight for GMA 7 television. They will provide TV viewers in the Philippines with round-by-round commentaries of the fight.

The weekend event will take place at the Los Angeles Sports Arena, with Filipino Drian Francisco going up against Mexican Javier Gallo in the undercard. 

Nonito Donaire Wins Over Fernando Montiel Via Second-Round Knockout

Feb 20, 2011

Filipino boxer Nonito "The Filipino Flash" Donaire scored a second-round knockout win over highly-rated Mexican champion Fernando Montiel at the Mandalay Bay Arena in Las Vegas, Nev. on Saturday night.

Donaire and Montiel showed mutual respect in the first round by having a feel of each other, but Donaire was seen clearly as the aggressor and found his target in the middle of the round.

By the second round, both fighters loosened up a little. The end came when Donaire landed a left hook that sent Montiel to the canvas. He struggled to get up as the referee gave him another chance to keep fighting. However, Donaire was not to be denied his defining moment as he continued pummeling Montiel to force stoppage of the fight.

Donaire, who is ranked No. 5 in Ring's pound-for-pound list, snatched Montiel's WBC and WBO bantamweight crowns with his second-round win over the Mexican champion.

The win gave Donaire his third world title in three weight classes. The Filipino Flash has earlier expressed his desire to move up to featherweight and hopefully to lightweight. Earlier in his fight preparations, he said his fight with Montiel will be his last in the bantamweight level.

Donaire's knockout win over Montiel could be a potential candidate for 2011 "Fight of the Year" and "Fighter of the Year" titles.

Nonito Donaire is a Filipino-American boxer who is a known switch-hitter with the ability to fight either southpaw or orthodox.

Donaire is the former WBA Super Flyweight Interim World Champion, IBF World Flyweight Champion and IBO World Flyweight Champion.

Monday Meet and Greet: Tomas Rojas Defends His WBC Super Flyweight Title

Feb 7, 2011

Tomas Rojas defended his WBC super flyweight title for the first time this past weekend against Ring rated No. 2 Nobou Nashiro. Rojas controlled the fight with his superior reach and height advantage and cruised to a unanimous decision over 12 frames.

He is much better than his record indicates and could have a lengthy reign at the top (fight video).

Record: 35-12-1 (23 KO)

Ring Ranking: No. 3

Age: 30

Height: 5’8”

Stance: Southpaw

Best Wins: Kohei Kono (UD 12 won vacant WBC super flyweight title), Nobou Nashiro (UD 12 defended WBC super flyweight title)

Losses: Cristian Mijares (UD 12 for Mexico super flyweight title), Luis Maldonado (SD 10), Gerry Penalosa (UD 10), Anselmo Moreno (UD 10 for WBA Fedecaribe bantamweight title), Jorge Arce (TKO six for WBC Latino bantamweight title) and Vic Darchinyan (KO two for WBC/WBA super flyweight title)

Titles Won: Mexico super flyweight title, WBA Fedecentro super bantamweight title, WBC international super flyweight title, interim WBC super flyweight title, WBC USNBC super flyweight title, WBC super flyweight title (current)

Rounds Boxed: 332

KO Percentage: 46.94 percent

Fight I Want To See

A fight with Hugo Fidel Cazares or a rematch with Cristian Mijares. They would both be all-Mexican showdowns and would provide fireworks. The fight with Mijares would also represent a chance for him to avenge his loss against him. On the flip side Cazares is the only name he hasn’t fought yet in this division and Cazares owns a win over Nashiro as well.

What Is in His Future

I haven’t heard of anything so I have no idea.

There's a New Filipino Boxing Sensation: Meet Marvin Sonsona

Sep 6, 2009

ESPN didn't report on it. The sports talk radio stations I listen to didn't mention it. It wasn't in the sports section of my local newspaper. Most sports sites didn't report it. On Friday night, a world boxing championship changed hands, and it went mostly unnoticed. That's a shame.

There is a new Filipino boxing sensation named Marvin Sonsona (14-0, 12 KOs). The 19-year-old, undefeated Sonsona won the WBO super flyweight title Friday night by getting a unanimous decision over former champion Jose Lopez (39-8-2, 32 KOs).

Did he say 19 years old?

Yes, he did.

Did say 14-0 with 12 knockouts?

Yes, he did.

Did he say it was hardly reported on?

Unfortunately, he did.

This is why boxing is fading in many people's eyes. Sensational young undefeated fighters who have KO'd just about everyone they have faced are not reported on. 

Why wasn't this fight on one of the 3,000 ESPN channels? 

It should have been.

Sonsona has a fight scheduled for Nov. 21 against a TBA opponent. Hopefully that WBO super flyweight championship fight gets televised. "Marvelous" Marvin deserves it.

Mijares Vs Darchinyan : BIG FIGHT, SMALL MEN!

Oct 30, 2008

This weekend the little men will be making the loudest noise in boxing.

In a historic super flyweight bout, WBC and WBA World Champion Christian Mijares will face off against IBF Champ Vic Darchinyan. The winner of this fight will be the first in this weight class to unify these belts.

Hopefully, the winner will fight Fernando Montiel next. Lets talk about the fighters and the fight. I'm not worried about what's said at a press conference. Talk is cheap and with that...

Loud mouth, big attitude, and backed up by big power, is the way Vic Darchinyan often takes care of business. While Mijares, a smooth fighter with super intelligence, has not been beat since 2002. Now a world champion, Mijares seems to have a few things up his sleeve for the hard hitting Armenian fighter.  

His silent demeanor is kinda scary, where Darchinyan is loud and fighters see him coming from far away, much like his punches. I'm a little biased towards Mijares, I will admit, so I will be as fair as I can

We all love big punchers, but for some reason, people have not taken a liking toward Darchinyan like they have toward other big punchers like Manny Pacquiao and Israel Vazquez, who are well-loved and have big fan bases. 

Vic Darchinyan is brash, loud, and very outspoken. I for one, think he believes everything he says. His record speaks for itself. With so many knockouts it's easy to see this guy can punch, but against a higher level of fighters, can he put some skill behind it?

Fight after fight he talks the talk, then walks the walk. That's until the Nonito Donaire fight. Vic brings relentless pressure, a bad attitude, and true grit. Yes, I will give him credit. The southpaw style he brings is rangy with his long straight left hand.

He does not use his jab as much, but with his approach maybe that's good. I think the jab almost hinders him, placing him in harms way, making it easier for the opponent to land counter punches. but its not that easy. Vic has power and that's the great equalizer.

Darchinyan has more than a puncher's chance in this fight, but the KO is what he will need to win this fight. I do not see him outscoring Mijares. I see the fight going Mijares's way from the start.

Mijares will frustrate the relentless Darchinyan by sticking and moving. At times, he'll place himself in range for the hard punching Darchinyan, but will use his slickness to make Vic miss at close range.

Christian will make his opponent look silly at times. I do worry about Mijares's maybe mixing it up more then normal, but I have this feeling that Mijares is stronger than what Darchinyan is expecting. 

Mijares might not have the one punch knockout power, but I do think he hits hard enough to get his respect early. In the end it's simple, Mijares will knock out Darchinyan out around round 10.