Undefeated Welterweight
Carlos Abregu Takes On Irving Garcia;
Lightweights Marvin Quintero & Wes
Ferguson
To Tangle Friday May 1
Live
on SHOWTIME, 11 p.m. ET/PT
From Chumash Casino Resort, Santa Ynez, Calif.
The knockout is always in
the back of Carlos
Abregu’s mind, and with an 80 percent KO track
record, he knows he is more then capable. Abregu will put
his stellar, unblemished 26-0 record, with 21 knockouts, on
the line Friday, May 1, on
ShoBox: The New Generation
on SHOWTIME (11 p.m. ET/PT, delayed on the west coast).
The Argentine will face
Puerto Rico’s Irving
Garcia (17-3-3, 8 KOs) in the 10-round
welterweight main event at the Chumash Casino Resort at
Santa Ynez, Calif. Garcia, 30, is the World Boxing Council
(WBC) Latin American welterweight champion and is undefeated
in his last five fights.
In the co-feature,
Marvin Quintero
(15-1, 12 KOs) of Tijuana, Mexico, will take on
Wes Ferguson
(20-3-1, 6 KOs) of Las Vegas in an eight-round lightweight
bout. The event which will emanate from the Chumash Casino
Resort in Santa Ynez, Calif., is promoted by
Gary Shaw Productions, LLC.
The 25-year-old Abregu,
nicknamed “El Porto” or “The Young Horse”, is a fast-rising
prospect who has been a pro for just over four years. While
he may be unknown to some, he is certainly not a new name to
boxing fans in Santa Ynez, a small town just 30 miles
northeast of Santa Barbara, located in the beautiful Central
California wine country.
Ranked No. 6 by the WBC at
147 pounds, Abregu scored a career-best win on Dec. 5, 2008,
on ShoBox
with a 10-round split decision over
David Estrada at
Chumash. The victory wasn’t without controversy, but Abregu
feels he earned the win.
Abregu took an early round
lead on all the scorecards before suffering a over his left
eye in the fifth. Estrada rallied in the second half of the
fight and in the 10th round Abregu was staggered
by a powerful right from Estrada. The punch caused Abregu’s
glove to touch the canvas, but the referee did not score a
knockdown and most thought the fight was closer than the
scores indicated.
After his victory, Abregu
said, “This was definitely my toughest fight but I felt I
won, if not by the spread they had me winning by.”
In his last fight on March
20, in Salta, Argentina, Abregu won a 10-round unanimous
decision against Americo Sagania (16-3-1).
Abregu was born in Tucuman,
Argentina, and is one of 11 children. He began boxing at age
16 and had 43 amateur fights (41-2) and won one national
amateur title in Argentina, in 2004. He is managed and
co-trained by Carlos Baldomir, a former WBC welterweight
champion.
Because of his aggressive, knockout style, Abregu’s fights
have been termed “can’t miss” by loyal boxing followers and
should play well against the agile and always-moving Garcia,
who likes to set up his attack with the jab and punches in
combinations making this fight all the more intriguing.
Said Abregu’s head trainer Abel Sanchez: “Irving Garcia,
being Puerto Rican, he’s got a different style that’s going
to help Carlos’ maturation. I think that it’s a good fight.
I’ll tell you as a trainer and a manager, not as a promoter
–
I wouldn’t want him to knock
Garcia out in one round, because that does nothing for him.
I would like to see four, five, six, seven, eight rounds of
work that allows Carlos to extend himself and work his stuff
– throw combinations, test his stamina.
“SHOWTIME is
looking for one thing, the promoter is looking for one
thing, and the trainer is looking for a different thing. He
has to please all of us, but I’m looking at it six months,
eight months from now.”
Garcia – currently ranked
No. 19 at 147 pounds – is a former WBC Caribbean (CABOFE)
welterweight champion and former Puerto Rican junior
middleweight champion.
He is coming off one of
his career best wins in his last fight on Oct. 17, 2008, a
10-round unanimous decision against Chris Smith at Hatillo,
Puerto Rico following two prior technical decisions in 2008.
Performing before his hometown crowd, Irving was relentless
early on, landing sharper punching and building a lead on
all the scorecards. A flurry of right hands in the later
rounds led to Garcia finishing strongly and earning the
impressive win.
Garcia, born in Arecibo,
Puerto Rico, didn’t spend much of his early twenties in the
gym but rather the classroom earning two bachelor degrees
from Inter-American University in Puerto Rico in 2002: in
human resources and business administration.
The two-time Puerto Rican
national amateur title holder at 132 and 140 pounds, Garcia
comes from a family of fisherman and still rises at 4 a.m.
to help fish on occasion.
He used to be a regular
sparring partner for Felix Trinidad. “He was one of the main
guys for Tito,” his manager Harry Padilla said. “Irving put
in a hell of a lot of rounds with him, and that was the
point in his life when he thought he had a chance. Tito
really got close to him and said, ‘You should give it a
shot.’ That gave him so much confidence.”
Said Garcia through an
interpreter: “I’m a technical boxer. Jabs, straight punches,
rolling with punches.”
Garcia isn’t the only one
who’s been training with a big name. Quintero has also been
in the news recently as he has been training with Ricky
Hatton in Las Vegas..
Like Abregu, Quintero
fought in Santa Ynez in December of last year as he knocked
out Alberto Amaro (4-1). It wasn’t much of a contest as
Quintero scored a knockdown with a series of punches in the
second and the referee stopped the fight at 2:04.
In his last fight on Jan.
16, in Tulsa, Okla., Quintero registered a third-round TKO
over Nick Casal (18-3-1).
Quintero’s opponent,
23-year-old Las Vegas resident Wes Ferguson, is promoted by
Floyd Mayweather Jr. Ferguson was the 2002 National Junior
Olympics amateur champion (132 pounds), the 2002 National
Silver Gloves amateur champion (132 pounds) and the 2001 Pan
Am Cadet amateur champion (126 pounds).
A five-year pro, Ferguson
has won three fights in a row.