Alex Dilmaghani vs. Francisco Fonseca - 16 November 2019
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Ruthless-RKO
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Re: Alex Dilmaghani vs. Francisco Fonseca - 28 September 2019
EUBANKS MENTOR RONNIE DAVIES PRAISES ALEX DILMAGHANI
https://www.hennessysports.com/news/eub ... ilmaghani/
Davies, the ex-Southern Area lightweight king from Hove, who has served the Noble Art as fighter and coach for close to 60 years now, is adamant that fellow South Coast native Dilmaghani is destined to duplicate the two Chris’s by reigning at world level.
I’ve known Alex since he was 14 years old,’ says the venerable sage.
‘To fill in time between training the pros, I used to take a class of young kids at Cheetahs Gym in Hove. I remember Alex was incredibly dedicated. He walked miles just to catch the train from Worthing and I later learned he saved up all his pocket money to pay his gym subs. If I’d known, I’d never have taken them.
‘Straight away, I thought his dedication stood him out as special. And he always listened. Everybody in the game knows I’m ‘old school’. I teach the forgotten art of working off the ropes; bobbing, slipping, catching punches. Alex had that off to an art at a very young age. He had great instinctive defence and very fast hands. A natural.’
Simultaneous to studying for a law degree at the University of Southampton, dazzler Dilma launched into a career as a paid prizefighter back in 2009, aged just 17, and with literally just a fistful of amateur bouts on his CV.
‘I certainly didn’t persuade Alex to turn pro as a teenager,’ states Ronnie.
‘He just really wanted to do it. He believed he was good enough and he was. For his debut, they slung him in against Baz Carey, a 50 odd fight hard, hard journeymen who’d taken guys like Rendall Munroe, Michael Gomez, Amir Khan and Tyrone Nurse to points. At 17, Alex just played with him.
‘I’ve gotta say, I absolutely loved him. All the boys at our gym did. Alex was always very respectful but also very strong mentally. I had a quality squad back then and, as a teenager, he had hard spars with lads like Henry Castle, Chill John, Chris (Eubank) Jr. But I never worried cos they just couldn’t catch him. He more than held his own. If anything, Alex used to get on top of them.
‘He was a beautiful boxer who never took a punch and he had tremendous fitness and work rate. I’ve never seen anyone train harder at the gym, and that includes the Eubanks. Alex never lost with me but he had to leave because he wanted 24/7 attention and, at the time, because of other commitments, I couldn’t give it to him.’
Nevertheless, coach Davies continued to monitor the silky southpaw’s development when, post-graduation, he migrated to Mexico City and enrolled at the finishing school of legendary Hall of Fame trainer Ignacio ‘Nacho’ Beristain.
‘Getting off his arse and going to serve his apprenticeship in those rough, tough gyms in Mexico City, when he was only a boy, whatever Alex gets, he deserves,’ states Davies.
Operating on foreign climes between August 2014 and October 2018, the classy Crayford-based contender racked up five wins in Mexico and a further half dozen after relocating to Canada. Presently undefeated in well over eight years, Dilma positively sizzling in an emotional British homecoming at Manchester’s Victoria Warehouse last May, smashing 25-2-1 Slovak strongman Martin Parlagi inside schedule.
‘Alex was only a boy when he left me. Today, since returning from Mexico, he’s a lot, lot stronger,’ remarked Ronnie.
‘I was very impressed with him in that last fight. Alex boxed beautifully, didn’t put a foot wrong. The Slovakian boy was no mug but eventually he looked for the back door (Parlagi quit early in round eight, citing a damaged hand).’
This Friday, at the Bolton White’s Hotel, the lad Davies has known for half Dilma’s life, attempts to storm the world rankings when he gambles against Nicaragua’s ferocious Francisco Fonseca – a feted bomber who has twice contested the IBF world title and has splattered 19 of the 25 victims on his 28 fight CV ahead of schedule – for the Vacant WBA International 130lb Championship. Free-to-air Channel Five screen live on free-to-air TV and whoever prevails can expect to catapult into the world title frame.
‘This fight with Fonseca is ideal for Alex. The Nicaraguan’s proven world class and a genuine dangerman but Alex is 29 and he’s ready. He’s got to do it now,’ assesses Davies.
‘I know what he takes to steer fighters to world titles. Skill wise, Dilmaghani has what it takes and he’s also very clever. Alex can certainly be a world champion, if he’s handled right. It’s entirely up to him. If he wants it, he can do it.
‘And I think he will. His best quality is his dedication. He lives so clean. Too many of today’s fighters don’t but he’s a perfectionist. He has such great self-belief and mental strength, and that’s what I believe will push him through.’
https://www.hennessysports.com/news/eub ... ilmaghani/
Davies, the ex-Southern Area lightweight king from Hove, who has served the Noble Art as fighter and coach for close to 60 years now, is adamant that fellow South Coast native Dilmaghani is destined to duplicate the two Chris’s by reigning at world level.
I’ve known Alex since he was 14 years old,’ says the venerable sage.
‘To fill in time between training the pros, I used to take a class of young kids at Cheetahs Gym in Hove. I remember Alex was incredibly dedicated. He walked miles just to catch the train from Worthing and I later learned he saved up all his pocket money to pay his gym subs. If I’d known, I’d never have taken them.
‘Straight away, I thought his dedication stood him out as special. And he always listened. Everybody in the game knows I’m ‘old school’. I teach the forgotten art of working off the ropes; bobbing, slipping, catching punches. Alex had that off to an art at a very young age. He had great instinctive defence and very fast hands. A natural.’
Simultaneous to studying for a law degree at the University of Southampton, dazzler Dilma launched into a career as a paid prizefighter back in 2009, aged just 17, and with literally just a fistful of amateur bouts on his CV.
‘I certainly didn’t persuade Alex to turn pro as a teenager,’ states Ronnie.
‘He just really wanted to do it. He believed he was good enough and he was. For his debut, they slung him in against Baz Carey, a 50 odd fight hard, hard journeymen who’d taken guys like Rendall Munroe, Michael Gomez, Amir Khan and Tyrone Nurse to points. At 17, Alex just played with him.
‘I’ve gotta say, I absolutely loved him. All the boys at our gym did. Alex was always very respectful but also very strong mentally. I had a quality squad back then and, as a teenager, he had hard spars with lads like Henry Castle, Chill John, Chris (Eubank) Jr. But I never worried cos they just couldn’t catch him. He more than held his own. If anything, Alex used to get on top of them.
‘He was a beautiful boxer who never took a punch and he had tremendous fitness and work rate. I’ve never seen anyone train harder at the gym, and that includes the Eubanks. Alex never lost with me but he had to leave because he wanted 24/7 attention and, at the time, because of other commitments, I couldn’t give it to him.’
Nevertheless, coach Davies continued to monitor the silky southpaw’s development when, post-graduation, he migrated to Mexico City and enrolled at the finishing school of legendary Hall of Fame trainer Ignacio ‘Nacho’ Beristain.
‘Getting off his arse and going to serve his apprenticeship in those rough, tough gyms in Mexico City, when he was only a boy, whatever Alex gets, he deserves,’ states Davies.
Operating on foreign climes between August 2014 and October 2018, the classy Crayford-based contender racked up five wins in Mexico and a further half dozen after relocating to Canada. Presently undefeated in well over eight years, Dilma positively sizzling in an emotional British homecoming at Manchester’s Victoria Warehouse last May, smashing 25-2-1 Slovak strongman Martin Parlagi inside schedule.
‘Alex was only a boy when he left me. Today, since returning from Mexico, he’s a lot, lot stronger,’ remarked Ronnie.
‘I was very impressed with him in that last fight. Alex boxed beautifully, didn’t put a foot wrong. The Slovakian boy was no mug but eventually he looked for the back door (Parlagi quit early in round eight, citing a damaged hand).’
This Friday, at the Bolton White’s Hotel, the lad Davies has known for half Dilma’s life, attempts to storm the world rankings when he gambles against Nicaragua’s ferocious Francisco Fonseca – a feted bomber who has twice contested the IBF world title and has splattered 19 of the 25 victims on his 28 fight CV ahead of schedule – for the Vacant WBA International 130lb Championship. Free-to-air Channel Five screen live on free-to-air TV and whoever prevails can expect to catapult into the world title frame.
‘This fight with Fonseca is ideal for Alex. The Nicaraguan’s proven world class and a genuine dangerman but Alex is 29 and he’s ready. He’s got to do it now,’ assesses Davies.
‘I know what he takes to steer fighters to world titles. Skill wise, Dilmaghani has what it takes and he’s also very clever. Alex can certainly be a world champion, if he’s handled right. It’s entirely up to him. If he wants it, he can do it.
‘And I think he will. His best quality is his dedication. He lives so clean. Too many of today’s fighters don’t but he’s a perfectionist. He has such great self-belief and mental strength, and that’s what I believe will push him through.’
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Boxingcutsman
- Light Heavyweight
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Re: Alex Dilmaghani vs. Francisco Fonseca - 28 September 2019
Alex is a good friend of mine, like family I would say, and all my years in boxing I don’t think I’ve ever met anyone more dedicated and disciplined than Alex, he is genuinely a really nice fella aswell, studies the sport and always has done, I’ve done bits with Alex many times over the past 10/12 yrs but the distance we live apart is only reason we don’t work together, I’ve been singing his praises for years, nice to see him finally getting some attention he thoroughly deserves it
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Ruthless-RKO
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Ruthless-RKO
- Welterweight
- Posts: 100726
- Joined: 24 Apr 2016, 11:59
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Ruthless-RKO
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margaret thatcher
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Re: Alex Dilmaghani vs. Francisco Fonseca - 28 September 2019
Fonseca looks like he's been dieting at Aushwitz
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Re: Alex Dilmaghani vs. Francisco Fonseca - 28 September 2019

Live from Bolton Whites Hotel in Bolton, UK
Hennessy Sports, Channel 5 and Infinitum presents: Alex Dilmaghani vs. Francisco Fonseca
******************************************************************************

******************************************************************************
Live on 5 Spike: 7pm
Live on Channel 5: 9pm
******************************************************************************
Main Event
Vacant WBA International Super-Featherweight Championship
Alex Dilmaghani vs. Francisco Fonseca
Undercard
BBBofC English Super-Welterweight Championship
Jack Flatley vs. Harry Scarff
10 Round Super-Middleweight Contest
Mickey Ellison vs. Charlie Schofield
Remainder of card
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Ruthless-RKO
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Re: Alex Dilmaghani vs. Francisco Fonseca - 28 September 2019
Got the boxing on. Not drinking beer. What's up with that?
Re: Alex Dilmaghani vs. Francisco Fonseca - 28 September 2019
Nobody said Just Eat.
Re: Alex Dilmaghani vs. Francisco Fonseca - 28 September 2019
Who is going to be the first to complain that females have the audacity of being present?
Re: Alex Dilmaghani vs. Francisco Fonseca - 28 September 2019
Top punch in round one.
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Ruthless-RKO
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Re: Alex Dilmaghani vs. Francisco Fonseca - 28 September 2019
She seems a nice lass.
Re: Alex Dilmaghani vs. Francisco Fonseca - 28 September 2019
This is the sort of thing Channel 5 should be showing. Competitive small hall shows. They don't have the budget for proper big fights, so when they get name fighters it's just them laying the smack down on lesser people.
Like the recent Amir Khan fight, for example.
Like the recent Amir Khan fight, for example.
Re: Alex Dilmaghani vs. Francisco Fonseca - 28 September 2019
Ellison starting throwing a few bodyshots after that... spooky 
Re: Alex Dilmaghani vs. Francisco Fonseca - 28 September 2019
Anyone got C5 showing some prison documentary instead of the boxing ?
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handsofstone
- Cruiserweight
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Re: Alex Dilmaghani vs. Francisco Fonseca - 28 September 2019
Aye what in gods names going on
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handsofstone
- Cruiserweight
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Re: Alex Dilmaghani vs. Francisco Fonseca - 28 September 2019
Channel 5 hopeless pudenda
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ShadrachSimmo
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Re: Alex Dilmaghani vs. Francisco Fonseca - 28 September 2019
No idea what's going on !!!
The Spike show went ahead fine.
The Spike show went ahead fine.
Re: Alex Dilmaghani vs. Francisco Fonseca - 28 September 2019
Saw on twitter that it was reported Fonseca collapsed backstage, the fight is off and C5 chose to pull their coverage rather than show Jack Flatley as the headliner
Re: Alex Dilmaghani vs. Francisco Fonseca - 28 September 2019
Is this official ?
It's off ?
Fonseca DID look like he'd been dieting @ Auschwitz, so let's hope he's ok.
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Ruthless-RKO
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