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Gabriel Flores Jr. vs. Jose Arellano | ProBox TV - February 19, 2025

Posted: 06 Jan 2025, 13:27
by Ruthless-RKO
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Gabriel Flores Jnr vs. Jose Arellano headlines ProBox card on February 19

Lightweight Gabriel Flores Jnr will return on February 19 against Jose Arellano at the Chicken Ranch Casino Resort in Jamestown, California.

The 10-round main event will headline a telecast on ProBox TV.

Flores, 24, is from nearby Stockton, California, but has moved his training camps to Las Vegas since 2020. Flores has remained connected to his community as his last four fights have all been in Stockton – three at the Adventist Health Arena and one at the Banner Island Ballpark. Flores enters the bout on a four-fight win streak.

Flores fought three times in 2024, all in Stockton with his father Gabe Flores Snr, who also trains him, promoting the shows. Those fights were promoted under the G-Squad Entertainment promotional banner. Flores enters the contest with a record of 25-2 (8 KOs).

Arellano, 29, is coming off a majority decision loss to Jaycob Gomez in April. Arellano is training with Javiel Centeno, known for training Xander Zayas. Arellano is originally from Aurora, Colorado, but is training in Florida for this fight. Arellano enters with a record of 11-2 (6 KOs). Arellano is 1-2 in his last three fights, but holds an upset win over Oscar Alvarez.

The co-feature, which was reported by Ryan Songalia earlier this week, will see welterweight Emiliano Moreno face Cesar Francis in a 10-round fight.

Re: Gabriel Flores Jr. vs. Jose Arellano | ProBox TV - February 19, 2025

Posted: 10 Jan 2025, 04:23
by Ruthless-RKO
Emiliano Moreno-Cesar Francis crossroads fight to co-headline February 19 ProBox card

A crossroads showdown between an unbeaten welterweight on the rise and a former prospect looking to regain his standing in the sport will co-headline the February 19, 2025 edition of ProBox.

Emiliano Moreno, 11-0 (6 KOs), will step up to the 10-round level for the first time when he meets New Yorker Cesar Francis, 13-2 (8 KOs), at Chicken Ranch Casino Resort in Jamestown, California. The welterweight bout will be the chief supporting contest to the main event, which features local favorite Gabriel Flores Jnr, 25-2 (8 KOs), against Jose Arellano, 11-2 (6 KOs).

The 19-year-old Moreno, who grew up in Long Beach, California but now lives and trains in Las Vegas, has stepped up significantly since his first fight with ProBox TV in November of 2023, when he stopped the previously unbeaten Daniel Lim in two rounds. Now he will take another big step-up in competition against Francis, who had followed a similar path with ProBox TV before suffering back to back defeats in 2023.

“The fight means a lot. I take every fight seriously. I want to look my best in every fight. I’m working on a lot of things so I think in this fight you’ll see a bunch of new things that I’m working on in this camp,” said Moreno, who is trained by his father, Jaime Moreno.

“He’s a good opponent but I’ve studied his mistakes and what he does, his habits. I feel I will outclass him in everything he does.”

Rather than looking at this fight as being used as a stepping stone, Francis says the tough matchup came at his request. At age 34, Francis says he didn’t want to tread water with an easy match-up, and wanted a fight against someone he could make a statement against.

“One thing that I did tell ProBox…I don’t need any easy fights. That’s not where I am in my career. They brought me this kid. I don’t really know him so well, I’ve seen him once on ProBox. He’s exciting and comes forward, which I like. It’s gonna be a perfect fight for my style,” said Francis, who hasn’t fought since December of 2023, when he stopped the once-beaten Windry Amadis Martinez in two rounds.

Francis adds that he feels he is a much different fighter at 147 than he was a division below, citing his difficulties making 140lbs for his listless performances in losses to Jesus Saracho and Rohan Polanco.

ProBox TV matchmaker Chris Glover believes Francis will be a different fighter at 147, adding that this fight will demonstrate where Moreno fits in among the rising welterweights in the sport.

“Cesar is the ideal opponent to show what level he’s at. It’s a really intriguing fight. It’s a fight that is attempting to show that Emiliano Moreno is already on a world level at 19-20 years old,” said Glover.

“[Moreno] has all the attributes to become a very young world champion.”

Moreno’s manager Ray Frye agrees. Frye, who turned Moreno professional at age 15 in Mexico, says the idea is to have Moreno continue to face stiffer competition in each fight to prepare him for when he eventually meets championship level boxers in the division.Though Francis has a significant edge in experience, having beaten former WBO lightweight champion Ray Beltran and gone the 10-round distance three times, Moreno has gained valuable experience in the gym sparring with former world champions like Erislandy Lara and Tim Tszyu.

“Cesar Francis is tall and long, and so is Emiliano. Emiliano is more on the offensive side; Cesar Francis will try to be offensive but I think he’ll be more on the defensive side. They’re both boxer-punchers, on paper it definitely looks like a good fight. But I do look for Emiliano to make a statement at this next level,” said Frye.

Other boxers slated for action on the card include unbeaten heavyweight Antonio Mireles, 8-0-1 (7 KOs) and featherweight David Navarro, 7-1 (3 KOs).

Re: Gabriel Flores Jr. vs. Jose Arellano | ProBox TV - February 19, 2025

Posted: 18 Feb 2025, 17:07
by Ruthless-RKO
Boxers have made weight

Re: Gabriel Flores Jr. vs. Jose Arellano | ProBox TV - February 19, 2025

Posted: 19 Feb 2025, 04:26
by Ruthless-RKO
Press Release

In the main event of the latest edition of ProBox TV’s prospects series, Gabe Flores Jnr will fight Jose Arellano at the Chicken Ranch Casino Resort in Jamestown, California, on February 19.

Scheduled for 10 rounds at lightweight, Flores Jnr is 25-2 (8 KOs) and 24 years old, and Arellano, who hails from Ciudad Juarez, Chihuahua in Mexico is 11-2 (6 KOs) and aged 30.

By then, on the same promotion, the eight-round heavyweight contest between the 8-0-1 (7 KOs) Antonio “El Gigante” Mireles, from Des Moines, Iowa, and Panorama City, California’s Josue Vargas, 5-9 (2 KOs), will have concluded.

There is also a lightweight fight between the 12-0-1 (11 KOs) DeMichael “Triggaman” Harris, against the skilled Anthony “2 Quick” Cuba, who is 8-1-2 (4 KOs) and whose only defeat came against the widely admired Curmel Moton.

In the co-main event Emiliano “El Revolucion” Moreno – from Long Beach, California – fights Brooklyn’s Cesar “Rainman” Francis over 10 rounds at welterweight.

Moreno, 11-0 (6 KOs), is 19 years old and turned professional in May 2021. He recorded three wins in 2024, including stopping the experienced Sergio Gill in four rounds in November. Francis is 13-2 (8 KOs), and the Panama-born New Jersey resident enters his first fight since December 2023.

Finally, the 2-0 Californian Jennah Creason boxes Samantha Ginithan, 1-0 (1 KO) over four rounds at junior welterweight, and the 5-0 (1 KO) super flyweight Andrew Rodriguez, from Salinas in California, boxes Kevin Soltero, who is 3-0 (2 KOs) and travelling from Kansas.

Re: Gabriel Flores Jr. vs. Jose Arellano | ProBox TV - February 19, 2025

Posted: 19 Feb 2025, 04:38
by Ruthless-RKO
Report: Floyd Schofield off Riyadh card; Shakur Stevenson’s side issues warning on poisoning claim

Lightweight title challenger Floyd Schofield is reportedly off Saturday’s card against WBC titleholder Shakur Stevenson, with initial plans to summon a replacement opponent.

Schofield’s apparent withdrawal, first reported by Ring Magazine, follows his absence from Tuesday’s grand arrivals in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, and a bizarre claim by his father-trainer that set off an immediate response from Stevenson’s co-manager.

The 22-year-old Schofield, considered a heavy underdog to three-division titlist Stevenson in the “The Last Crescendo” card at Kingdom Arena, was the lone boxer on the main portion of the card who skipped the festivities, leading to speculation about his health and weight heading into the biggest fight of his young career.

On Schofield’s “X” page, believed to be run by his father and trainer, Floyd Schofield Snr, a since-deleted post released shortly before noon ET on Tuesday read: “They poisoned my son” and claimed that a masseuse associated with Stevenson’s team had “wiped a cream on my son.”

That was met swiftly by Stevenson’s co-manager, Josh Dubin.

“This fighter [Schofield] should get advised on the defamation laws in our country,” Dubin told Boxing Scene on Tuesday. “Saying these things that slander Shakur does not come without legal consequences. Saying that his food was poisoned will not go unrecognized. [Schofield] is being put on notice right now.

“People might think there’s a kernel of truth in these lies [regarding the poisoning] by his father, when it seems to be a way for him to make an excuse he’s not going to fight.”

Dubin spoke minutes before the report of Schofield’s withdrawal went live.

“We’re not going to tolerate these lies and either [the Schofields] or someone on their behalf needs to publicly apologize now,” Dubin said.

Officials in Saudi Arabia have not confirmed if a replacement fighter will be retained to fight Stevenson on the stacked card that also includes heavyweight, light heavyweight and middleweight title fights.

Schofield appeared in good spirits Monday while doing interviews with assembled media. In an interview with FightHub, he called Stevenson a “diva” and said that his four-month-old “son is more of a man than him.”

There was not an immediate response to calls and text messages left for representatives of Golden Boy Promotions, which promotes Schofield.

Eddie Hearn, whose Matchroom Boxing company promotes Stevenson, had a less sinister hypothesis for why Schofield was absent: a mandatory weight check from the British Boxing Board of Control, which is overseeing the boxing action for this event.

The early weight checks have caught other American fighters by surprise.

“All of a sudden, you have a fighter like Floyd Schofield who has to make a check weight tomorrow, he might want to train tonight,” Hearn told IFL.TV. “He really doesn’t want to come to the grand arrivals going, ‘Hello, everybody!’ He’s getting ready for the check weight tomorrow. That’s why I believe he’s not here tonight.”

This wasn’t the first time Schofield, 18-0 (12 KOs), of Austin, Texas, has missed a public event ahead of his challenge of fellow New Jersey native Stevenson, 22-0 (10 KOs).

Schofield was not present for last month’s press conference in London, leading Stevenson to suggest that Schofield would pull out of the fight.

Stevenson made no mention of Schofield’s absence at the grand arrival, as he talked up his own excitement about fighting for the first time outside of the U.S. as a professional.

“I'm ready to show the world that I’m a superstar,” Stevenson said. “I think I’m one of the best fighters in the sport of boxing. The world will know February 22.”

Re: Gabriel Flores Jr. vs. Jose Arellano | ProBox TV - February 19, 2025

Posted: 19 Feb 2025, 06:33
by Ruthless-RKO
Full Card


Re: Gabriel Flores Jr. vs. Jose Arellano | ProBox TV - February 19, 2025

Posted: 20 Feb 2025, 04:39
by Ruthless-RKO
Gabriel Flores Jnr scores late knockdowns, outpoints Jose Arellano

Lightweight Gabriel Flores Jnr’s ProBox TV debut showcased his flash and toughness.

Flores defeated Jose Arellano by way of unanimous decision via scores of 95-93, 99-89 and 98-90 in the main event on "Wednesday Night Fights" here at the Chicken Ranch Casino Resort.

Flores, 24, dazzled early with his hand speed and counterpunching, sending Arellano to the ropes with a left hook in the first 10 seconds. Referee Michael Margado ruled that the ropes had held up the 30-year-old Arellano – although Flores admitted afterward that his early success ruined his game plan for the rest of the fight.

“I feel like the first round kind of messed me up,” Flores told BS after the fight. “I drop him and almost had him out of there in the first round. But after that, I kept inching when I should have been moving more and circling him. That is what I wasn’t doing until the later rounds.”

The theme of the fight was distance as Arellano was overextending at times, which led to head clashes – including one that opened a cut over Flores' right eye.

Flores’ volume slowed in the middle rounds as Arellano began to turn the fight into a brawl, finding success in exchanges with Flores, who spent momentum on the ropes. A very pro-Flores crowd cheered loudly for their fighter, who had blood flowing from his eye. Flores’ movement proved elusive for Arellano, who nevertheless was the busier of the two.

The final rounds saw Arellano get more aggressive. As Arellano pressed the action, Flores’ punch volume began to dip. Javiel Centeno, Arellano’s coach, urged his fighter to go for a knockout. Flores responded by landing another check left hook that dropped Arellano, who continued to go for broke. Flores, not known as a big puncher, dropped Arellano against, and despite turning in his best round of the fight also made his work harder than it needed to be.

Flores, originally from Stockton, California, and now training and residing in Las Vegas, is on a five-fight winning streak. He is currently ranked No. 10 by the WBO and No. 12 by the WBA.

Flores is now 26-2 (8 KOs), while Arellano, of Aurora, Colorado, dropped to 11-3 (6 KOs). Arellano is now on a two-fight losing streak.

Re: Gabriel Flores Jr. vs. Jose Arellano | ProBox TV - February 19, 2025

Posted: 21 Feb 2025, 12:10
by goose 5
I had Arellano winning 7 rounds to 3.