Ardreal Holmes vs. Ismael Villarreal | Showtime - February 17, 2023

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Who wins?

Poll ended at 17 Feb 2023, 10:44

Holmes - Decision
1
50%
Holmes - T/KO
0
No votes
DRAW
0
No votes
Villarreal - T/KO
0
No votes
Villarreal - Decision
1
50%
 
Total votes: 2

Ruthless-RKO
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Ardreal Holmes vs. Ismael Villarreal | Showtime - February 17, 2023

Post by Ruthless-RKO »

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Press Release

A main event matchup of undefeated fighters highlights the second SHOBOX: The New Generation of 2023 as SHOBOX returnee Ardreal “Bossman” Holmes (12-0, 5 KOs) takes on upset artist Ismael “Maelo” Villarreal (12-0, 8 KOs) in a 10-round super welterweight contest Friday, February 17 at 9 p.m. ET/PT live on SHOWTIME from Stormont Vail Events Center in Topeka, Kan.

The SHOBOX tripleheader pits six fighters with a combined record of 68-2-1 and 33 knockouts.

In the co-main event, Misael Lopez (14-1, 5 KOs) of Denver, Colo., looks to win his fourth straight bout after suffering his first pro loss on SHOBOX when he takes on Edward “Kid” Vazquez (13-1, 3 KOs) of Fort Worth, Texas, in a 10-round featherweight bout. The telecast opener pits two unbeaten knockout artists in former NCAA Division I college football player Kurt Scoby (10-0, 8 KOs) facing Australia’s John “The Beast” Mannu (7-0-1, 4 KOs) with both fighters putting their unbeaten streaks to the test in an eight-round super lightweight bout.

The card is promoted by Lou DiBella’s DiBella Entertainment.

“This is a really good card coming off last month’s SHOBOX, which was one of the most exciting we’ve had in years,” said Gordon Hall, executive producer for SHOBOX: The New Generation. “Ardreal Holmes put on an impressive performance on SHOBOX a year ago and is one of the top prospects in the super welterweight division. Now he faces his toughest test to date in Villarreal, who is coming off his best win against an undefeated fighter. This is a high stakes fight for both Holmes and Villarreal at this stage of their careers.”

Here is more on each of the three bouts:

Holmes vs. Villarreal – 10-Round Super Welterweight Main Event

In his SHOBOX debut last March against Vernon Brown, Holmes overcame a 28-month layoff scoring a unanimous decision fighting past the eighth round for the first time in his career. As an amateur, Holmes won the 2015 U.S. Nationals and was a silver medalist at the 2013 National Golden Gloves. That same year, he also won a bronze medal at the World Golden Gloves in the 152-pound division. Holmes is the oldest of 11 children and suffered a family tragedy in 2016 when his 20-year-old brother was killed in a drive-by shooting in Flint, Mich.

“I can’t wait for February 17 to headline once again on SHOBOX,” Holmes said. “l am thankful and very excited to be back on the series. I’m looking forward to showing the world I’m ready for all comers and soon to contend for a world title.”

An aggressive and explosive fighter, the 25-year-old Villarreal from the Bronx, N.Y., fights under the Main Events banner. He is a two-time New York Golden Gloves winner with an amateur record of 66-7. In his last fight in July, he upset then-unbeaten LeShawn Rodriguez scoring a sixth-round TKO on the Danny Garcia vs. Jose Benavidez Jr. undercard for his best win to date. He managed to stay active during the pandemic by going back to Dominican Republic to fight on three separate occasions. He recently received his Bachelor of Arts degree in Physical Education from Lehman College.

"My goal is to someday be world champion at 154 and 160 pounds,” Villarreal said. “To achieve that, I will defeat whoever tries to get in my way, including Ardreal Holmes. I’m grateful for this great opportunity to headline in front of a large national audience. I know that this is just the beginning of many great things for my career."

Lopez vs. Vazquez – 10-Round Featherweight Bout

Lopez, 26, will be making his third appearance on SHOBOX and was born in Mexico but now lives in Denver, Colo. In his SHOBOX debut in 2018, Lopez got the better of James Wilkins in a battle of young, previously undefeated super featherweight prospects, tallying a unanimous decision victory. Lopez suffered his first career setback in his last SHOBOX appearance in 2021, when Jordan White scored an impressive sixth-round TKO. Lopez compiled an amateur record of 50-5, winning gold medals at the 2008 Ringside World Championships, the 2010 Colorado State Silver Gloves Tournament, and the Colorado State Golden Gloves Tournament in 2009 and 2015.

“I am looking forward to returning to SHOBOX,” Lopez said. “Vazquez is a talented fighter, but I am determined to impress on February 17. I truly believe this is the year I put a title belt around my waist. There is nothing or no one that is getting in the way of that. It’s strap season.”

Vazquez, 27, fights out of his native Fort Worth, Texas. The lone blemish on his record came one year ago when he lost a controversial split-decision to undefeated former National Golden Gloves champion Raymond Ford. He has rebounded with wins in his last two fights via decision. Vazquez was a standout amateur with an 82-8 record. In the pros, he has noted wins against fighters such as Adan Ochoa (11-1), Irvin Gonzalez (14-2), Jose Argel (8-3) and, in his last fight in October, scored a split-decision win over Viktor Slavinskyi (13-1-1).

"I love this matchup with Lopez, and I accepted it as soon as it was brought to the table because this can be a breakout fight for the both of us,” Vazquez said. “We’re both young, talented, and backed with a lot of momentum right now. The respect is mutual between both of our camps, and I know we're both hungry for the win. You can expect us to steal the show come February 17."

Scoby vs. Mannu – Eight-Round Super Lightweight Bout

Kurt Scoby, 27, is a former high school and NCAA Division I football star who rushed for 2,206 yards and 35 touchdowns in his senior year for Monrovia High School in Duarte, Calif. He signed to play at Fresno State University as a criminal justice major and red-shirted his freshman season. He transferred to Azusa Pacific University in the San Gabriel Valley southeast of Los Angeles where he rushed for 2,703 yards and 16 touchdowns from 2015-2017. When he failed to hook on with an NFL team, Scoby turned to his first love – boxing. After winning the 2019 California Golden Gloves title in the 152-pound novice division, Scoby turned pro in June of 2020 and signed with manager Daniel Gonzalez, fighting three times in Mexico and three more times in the Dominican Republic before notching wins in Atlantic City and Newark, N.J. In June of 2021, Scoby decided to dedicate himself full-time to boxing and at the height of the pandemic bought an $11 one-way economy airline ticket to New York City where he soon walked into the famed Gleason’s Gym and announced his arrival.

"It is truly an honor to be fighting on a SHOBOX card, a legendary platform for young fighters in the sport of boxing,” said Scoby, who was scouted by NFL teams the Pittsburgh Steelers and Los Angeles Chargers. “I look forward to sharing the ring with another up-and-coming prospect in John Mannu. Unfortunately for him, he is standing in the way on my path to becoming a real force in the junior welterweight division and a future world champion. May the best man win come February 17."

The southpaw, fourth-year pro Mannu, 26, will be fighting for the first time in the United States with his last two wins coming by decision against undefeated fighters in power-punching Jake Daoust in August, and slick Adrian Sosa on the undercard of Haney-Kambosos II in his hometown of Melbourne, Australia in October. Sosa had been Kambosos’ main sparring partner and came in as the heavy favorite. Scoby will be Mannu’s fifth undefeated opponent in just nine fights.

“I am excited to have the opportunity to fight in the U.S. against Kurt Scoby,” Mannu said. “I don’t know a lot about my opponent, except that he is undefeated like me. My record shows that I am not afraid to fight an undefeated fighter abroad. I can also tell you that I am not traveling halfway around the world to lose, so I can promise an epic battle.”
Last edited by Ruthless-RKO on 17 Feb 2023, 19:01, edited 4 times in total.
Ruthless-RKO
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Re: Ardreal Holmes vs. Ismael Villarreal | Showtime - February 17, 2024

Post by Ruthless-RKO »

margaret thatcher wrote: 08 Feb 2023, 15:10 shobox :bag:
DiBella putting it on.
Ruthless-RKO
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Re: Ardreal Holmes vs. Ismael Villarreal | Showtime - February 17, 2023

Post by Ruthless-RKO »

Fight Week !! :box:
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Re: Ardreal Holmes vs. Ismael Villarreal | Showtime - February 17, 2023

Post by Ruthless-RKO »

Fight Night!! :box:
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Re: Ardreal Holmes vs. Ismael Villarreal | Showtime - February 17, 2023

Post by Ruthless-RKO »

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Main Card (SHO, 9:00 pm ET)

10 Round Super Welterweight Bout
Ardreal Holmes Jr (12-0, 5 KOs) vs Ismael Villarreal (12-0, 8 KOs)

10 Round Featherweight Bout
Misael Lopez (14-1, 5 KOs) vs Edward Vazquez (13-1, 3 KOs)

8 Round Super Lightweight Bout
Kurt Scoby (10-0, 8 KOs) vs John Mannu (7-0-1, 4 KOs)
Ruthless-RKO
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Re: Ardreal Holmes vs. Ismael Villarreal | Showtime - February 17, 2023

Post by Ruthless-RKO »

On now
margaret thatcher
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Re: Ardreal Holmes vs. Ismael Villarreal | Showtime - February 17, 2023

Post by margaret thatcher »

good undercard ffight between vasquez and lopez, flash kd the difference as vasquez edges a split
Ruthless-RKO
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Re: Ardreal Holmes vs. Ismael Villarreal | Showtime - February 17, 2023

Post by Ruthless-RKO »

Ardreal Holmes Jr wins split decision over Ismael Villarreal, Kurt Scoby steals the show, more

Ardreal Holmes Jr stayed unbeaten tonight in the main event of ShoBox from Topeka, Kan., but he probably impressed the TV commentators more than anyone with his win over Ismael Villarreal.

Holmes (13-0, 5 KO) pecked and poked his way to getting scores of 96-94 and 97-93 from two judges, with one judge scoring it 96-94 for Villarreal (12-1, 8 KO) in the 10-round junior middleweight bout.

The 28-year-old Holmes, nicknamed “Bossman,” mostly did as he should have, using his height and reach to frustrate Villarreal and keep his opponent at bay, but it consistently felt like he really could have been doing more to impress and more to show a wider range of skills, instead relying heavily on single jabs and a lot of clinching when Villarreal would get in close.

To be entirely fair, Villarreal, 25, also didn’t do much of real note here, and I scored the fight 98-92 for Holmes, wider than either of the official judges who gave him the W. It was a fight where I didn’t think either guy showcased much serious potential to climb the ladder any further than this level, in all honesty.

While the Showtime crew seemed to feel Holmes had pretty much dominated the fight, the punch stats don’t really tell that tale, not that punch stats alone are always the most reliable thing.

CompuBox saw Holmes out-landing Villarreal, 116 to 98 overall, but Villarreal landed 90 power punches to Holmes’ 66. Holmes did land 50 jabs to just eight from Villarreal, and it’s also hard to say that Villarreal’s power punches really affected much; he did seem to clearly get Holmes’ attention a couple times, but nothing followed, and he never developed anything resembling rhythm in the bout.

But it’s a win for Holmes and a loss for Villarreal. Holmes will have these sort of advantages over pretty much any fighter at this level at 154 lbs, but when the opposition skill level gets higher, it looks hard right now to see what he does that is going to keep better fighters from bringing the heat to him. We’ll see, though, that’s why they fight the fights, and every fight is different.



Edward Vazquez SD-10 Misael Lopez
Turned out to be a very fun fight, not just well-matched, and the difference on the cards in the end was a second round knockdown in Vazquez’s favor, which took the vital extra point off of Lopez’s tally on one judge’s card.

Scores were 95-94 and 96-93 for Vazquez, and one 95-94 card for Lopez. Without that knockdown swinging a 10-8 to Vazquez in round two, this winds up a split draw, as that 95-94 Vazquez card would have been 95-95 — if he had won that round on that judge’s card without the knockdown.

For what it’s worth, Bad Left Hook’s unofficial card was 96-93 for Vazquez, and Showtime’s Steve Farhood had it 95-94 for Lopez. I also believe every one of these scores is fully reasonable, it was a good fight with a few momentum swings and both guys doing good work.

Lopez (14-2, 5 KO) will be absolutely kicking himself after this loss, but he’s a guy I’d expect to see back on ShoBox, too, because a loss to Vazquez (14-1, 3 KO) is really no shame, especially one this competitive, and I sort of got the sense that Lopez could have something more that he can get to with more development between fights, while Vazquez seems like he may be topping out at exactly this, but that’s just my opinion.





Kurt Scoby KO-2 John Mannu
A terrific ShoBox debut for Scoby (pronounced “Scooby”), a 27-year-old prospect, a former college football guy who played football around 215 lbs and is fighting at 140, but you’d never guess he used to be that much heavier, this is a real athlete with an athlete’s build.

Let’s put it this way: Scoby (11-0, 9 KO) should be on your radar. We’ll see how his skills hold as he moves up the ladder, but the way he fought here was impressive

It’s not just that he’s powerful and explosive, which he is, but he established a stiff, strong jab in round one, then just came out and demolished Australia’s Mannu (7-1-1, 4 KO) in the second round, dropping him on a right hand pretty much immediately, and then scoring three more knockdowns before referee Jacob Villa rightly stopped it at 1:40 of round two. Villa gave Mannu chances, and every knockdown was one that took more out of him until it would have been foolish to let it continue. Scoby couldn’t miss and was just totally dominant.

This was genuinely impressive. If he’s not back on ShoBox for his next fight it’s because someone else snapped him up. He’s going to be fighting on your TV, and while 27 isn’t young for a prospect, he does have time to develop. One to watch.





goose 5
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Re: Ardreal Holmes vs. Ismael Villarreal | Showtime - February 17, 2023

Post by goose 5 »

I can't believe the Holmes bout was a split decision. To me, Holmes won at least 7 rounds and I wouldn't argue with 98-92, at at all.
margaret thatcher
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Re: Ardreal Holmes vs. Ismael Villarreal | Showtime - February 17, 2023

Post by margaret thatcher »

the holmes fight was dreadful, i cant wait to not see holmes again
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Re: Ardreal Holmes vs. Ismael Villarreal | Showtime - February 17, 2023

Post by KiwiRider »

margaret thatcher wrote: 18 Feb 2023, 21:32 the holmes fight was dreadful, i cant wait to not see holmes again
:lol: just be patient, you can not see Holmes at any time.
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