Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing
Posted: 21 Sep 2008, 07:28
Southpaw bogeyman Juan Carlos Gomez finally gets it on with Ukrainian tower Vladimir Virchis on the big Hamburg bill next weekend, in a WBC heavyweight title final eliminator.
These two were scheduled to square off back in March for the right to meet Nigerian puncher Samuel Peter, holder of the WBC belt, but wanted more time to prepare, a boxing pseudonym for wanted more money. Clearly, the pair are now happy with terms and, with 67 wins between them, they need to be. Nobody queues up to fight either.
In 45 fights Gomez has lost only to fellow Cuban exile Yanqui Diaz over in the States in 2004. It was a disaster. It was a fight designed to showcase Gomez's skills to an American audience but the unheralded Diaz teed off with right hands from the opening bell and Gomez caved in at the 1:46 mark. Humbled, the loser returned to Germany aftewards, where both he and Virchis are based, and nearly blew it again when he tested positive for cocaine after a unanimous points win over American veteran Oliver McCall in 2005 and was banned for well over a year (426 days). Gomez returned in December 2006 and later clearly outscored McCall a second time to make amends for the first fight, which had been amended to a no-contest.
Virchis has lost only once himself (in 25): on a majority 12-round decision to Ruslan Chagaev in 2006, the former WBA heavyweight champion and a southpaw like Gomez. The hulking Virchis, 35, made life extremely difficult for the talented Chagaev and held the European heavyweight title without ever losing it in the ring - his pedigree is good.
Strong, heavy-handed, awkward but inevitably quite slow, Virchis was losing to much smaller fellow Ukrainian Taras Bidenko until finding the big punches for a last-round stoppage and also got the runaround from little Michael Sprott in 2005 before taking a close 12-round decision, again courtesy of a big finish. Gomez, also 35 and a former cruiserweight star, knows how to outbox and outspeed the giants and his stamina looks every bit as good as his opponent's. He can whack a bit, too. He put the iron-jawed Sinan Samil Sam on the floor on the way to a landslide 10-round decision in 2003. It won't be easy because Virchis will be 'up' for it and keeps rumbling forward, but the classier, cleverer, quicker, more seasoned Gomez should get home by a decision.
These two were scheduled to square off back in March for the right to meet Nigerian puncher Samuel Peter, holder of the WBC belt, but wanted more time to prepare, a boxing pseudonym for wanted more money. Clearly, the pair are now happy with terms and, with 67 wins between them, they need to be. Nobody queues up to fight either.
In 45 fights Gomez has lost only to fellow Cuban exile Yanqui Diaz over in the States in 2004. It was a disaster. It was a fight designed to showcase Gomez's skills to an American audience but the unheralded Diaz teed off with right hands from the opening bell and Gomez caved in at the 1:46 mark. Humbled, the loser returned to Germany aftewards, where both he and Virchis are based, and nearly blew it again when he tested positive for cocaine after a unanimous points win over American veteran Oliver McCall in 2005 and was banned for well over a year (426 days). Gomez returned in December 2006 and later clearly outscored McCall a second time to make amends for the first fight, which had been amended to a no-contest.
Virchis has lost only once himself (in 25): on a majority 12-round decision to Ruslan Chagaev in 2006, the former WBA heavyweight champion and a southpaw like Gomez. The hulking Virchis, 35, made life extremely difficult for the talented Chagaev and held the European heavyweight title without ever losing it in the ring - his pedigree is good.
Strong, heavy-handed, awkward but inevitably quite slow, Virchis was losing to much smaller fellow Ukrainian Taras Bidenko until finding the big punches for a last-round stoppage and also got the runaround from little Michael Sprott in 2005 before taking a close 12-round decision, again courtesy of a big finish. Gomez, also 35 and a former cruiserweight star, knows how to outbox and outspeed the giants and his stamina looks every bit as good as his opponent's. He can whack a bit, too. He put the iron-jawed Sinan Samil Sam on the floor on the way to a landslide 10-round decision in 2003. It won't be easy because Virchis will be 'up' for it and keeps rumbling forward, but the classier, cleverer, quicker, more seasoned Gomez should get home by a decision.











