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Edwin Valero Remains Perfect,
Retains WBC Lightweight Title With One-Sided Ninth-Round TKO
Over Antonio DeMarco;
Carlos Abregu Remains
Undefeated With
Unanimous Decision Over Richard Gutierrez
Saturday, Feb. 6, Live on SHOWTIME®., Arena Monterrey,
Monterrey, Mexico
Photos: Tom Casino - SHOWTIME
In a sterling
performance, Edwin Valero of Venezuela improved to 27-0
with 27 knockouts and retained the World Boxing Council
(WBC) lightweight title with a dominant ninth-round TKO
over WBC interim titleholder Antonio DeMarco (23-2-1, 17
KOs) of Tijuana, Mex., Saturday in the main event on
SHOWTIME CHAMPIONSHIP BOXING on SHOWTIME®.
World-ranked
welterweight Carlos Abregu of Salta, Argentina, upped
his record to 29-0 (23 KOs) with a clear-cut, 10-round
unanimous decision over Miami-based Colombian Richard
Gutierrez (24-4, 14 KOs) in the co-feature at Arena
Monterrey.
The event, promoted by Gary Shaw Productions, LLC, was
the first SHOWTIME CHAMPIONSHIP BOXING telecast to
emanate from Mexico in nearly 12 years and the first in
Monterrey in more than 15.
Valero, who resides in Las Vegas, showed he was anything
but one-dimensional as he outfought and, somewhat
shockingly, outboxed the tentative and outclassed
DeMarco while controlling all the rounds in a one-sided
battle of southpaws.
The talented Valero had
is way despite suffering a cut on the cheek in the first
round and a severe, ugly gash on his forehead above his
right eye from an unintentional elbow in the second.
Blood flowed from his forehead for much of the match,
but Valero remained poised and in total command.
The fight was stopped by the referee after the ninth
round with a beaten, exhausted DeMarco seated on his
stool. At the time of the stoppage, Valero was ahead by
the scores of 89-81 on the three judges’ scorecards.
“This was definitely my
best performance,’’ said the 5-foot-7˝-inch, 28-year-
old Valero after making the second title defense of the
135-pound belt he won in April 2009. “I learned I have
to pace myself and can’t just come out in the beginning
rounds so aggressively.
“I have to save some of that for the later rounds.”
Valero, the busier fighter throughout, connected with
many powerful combinations upstairs and to the body, and
was as strong in the last round as he was in the first.
“I wasn’t surprised the fight lasted nine rounds. I was
expecting it to last the full 12,’’ he said. “I knew I
had to keep doing what I was doing in order to win. They
thought I wasn’t a boxer and that I couldn’t deal with
his reach. They didn’t know that I was a lateral
fighter. I showed them that I had a better defense and
better legs.’’
A heretofore unknown
despite his amazing knockout record – he won his initial
17 starts by first-round knockout -- Valero was ecstatic
after his debut on SHOWTIME.
“A star is born,” he smiled. “In me, the people have a
great boxing champion and with tonight’s performance
they have the proof. The fans now know that they will be
happy to see my fights.’’
DeMarco fought patiently, perhaps too patiently. He
lacked fire and intensity and seemed content to box and
land an occasional single punch. If he was waiting for
fatigue to set in with Valero, he still is.
“It wasn’t my night,”
conceded the 5-foot-10, 24-year-old DeMarco, who entered
the scheduled 12-rounder having won 12 and a row and
going unbeaten in his last 16 (15-0-1) dating to May
2006. “He got the best of me. I went out there tonight
to fight but my body did not respond.”
While dejected, DeMarco did not dispute his corner’s
decision to halt the proceedings. “As a Mexican fighter,
I did not want to quit, but my corner saw throughout the
fight that Valero was the better fighter,’’ he said.’
The five-foot-10-inch,
27-year-old Abregu rallied from a second-round knockdown
and a cut below the left eye to floor the
five-foot-nine-inch, 31 year old Gutierrez in the third
en route to winning decisively by the scores of 98-90
and 97-91 twice.
“I came in knowing that
Gutierrez was tough,” said Abregu, who showed
surprisingly good boxing skills, movement and defense.
“He’s shown it in all his past fights. I knew it wasn’t
going to be easy.
“I hurt both my hands in
this fight, but whatever injury it is, it was worth it.
This was a very hard fight and I am very proud of my
performance. I won like I’d hoped. I wanted to be the
best man tonight and I was.”
The doubleheader will
re-air this week as follows:
Monday, Feb. 8, at 10 p.m. ET/PT SHO 2
Saturday’s doubleheader will be available ON DEMAND
beginning on Tuesday, Feb. 9.
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