The Los Angeles Memorial Sports Arena hosted an exciting evening of boxing in front of a crowd of 4,672 fight fans, with a card televised live on HBO Latino. The main event of the evening was an West Coast vs. East Coast battle between Southern California’s Mauricio “El Maestro” Herrera (22-5, 7 KOs) and “Hammerin” Hank Lundy (25-5-1, 12 KOs) of Philadelphia.
While Lundy came out strong in the first round initially overwhelming Herrera with a flurry of combos and intense speed, Herrera rebounded to showcase his precision and power through well-placed blows that ultimately quieted Lundy’s attacks. Struggling with an eye injury delivered through head butts in both the first and second round, Herrera’s assault was cut short as the officials called an early stoppage in the fifth round. In the end, Herrera was declared the winner by majority decision.
“He stung me in the first round and I kind of lost focus,” said Mauricio Herrera. “I started finding my momentum as the rounds went on, but the issue with the cut really made the fight lose its rhythm. I can’t see how deep the cut is but I feel physically fine and could have kept going. I am in good condition and was landing good body shots and was wearing him down.”
“You saw it,” said Hank Lundy. “He couldn’t handle my speed, my power or my skills so he was holding and doing a bunch of other dirty stuff. I know I won the fight. And, I was ready to take him out if it kept going.”
In the co-main event of the night, Newark, New Jersey’s Michael “The Artist” Perez (23-1-2, 11 KOs) faced Luis Sanchez (17-4-1 5 KOs) of Cancun, Mexico in a scheduled 10-round vacant NABO lightweight title fight. The bout started out as a chess match, both fighters sizing each other up and testing each other’s strength and endurance.The fight became exciting however when Perez landed a stiff shot to the body in the sixth round which brought Sanchez to his knees and stumbling towards the ropes. Perez earned the win by knockout.
“It started out with my jab,” said Perez. “It is something we have been working on and it is really effective. Some say it is almost as effective as my straight right. I am glad the work I put in showed. I knew I would drop him at some point.”
“I feel like the fight was okay,” said Sanchez. “It wasn’t my best. It is not the weight that I normally fight at but I know that isn’t an excuse. Yes, he dropped me that last time but I was fine. When the referee asked me my name, I answered him. I feel he called it off too early.”
In the first televised bout of the night, South El Monte, California’s Joseph “Jo Jo” Diaz Jr. (17-0, 10 KOs) faced Rene Alvarado (22-5, 15 KOs) of Managua, Nicaragua in scheduled a 10-round featherweight bout. While Alvarado delivered a steady stream of punches and dominated Diaz’s space throughout the bout, Diaz delivered sharp decisive blows with accuracy that ultimately gave him the advantage over Alvarado. A fatigued Diaz fought hard to stay in the fight in round ten as Alvarado knocked him to the ground but undeterred, Diaz bounced back to end strong and win the bout in a unanimous decision.
“I felt great,” said Joseph Diaz Jr. “I knew Alvarado was going to bring it and we fought ten hard rounds. But, I landed the bigger shots, the harder shots, and that made the difference.”
“I think it was an exciting fight, a fight for the people,” commented Alvarado. “I was his first big test and he did a good job. But, I feel that I dominated the fight and the win should have been mine. This fight should have been for Nicaragua.”
The crowd went wild as Los Angeles’ very own Nick Arce (4-0, 4 KOs) took to the ring against Ricardo Alvarado (7-7, 6 KOs) of McAllen, Texas in a scheduled four-round super featherweight fight. Arce came on strong in round one with solid combos and several uppercuts that had the local crowd on their feet. The second round however was cut short as Arce took Alvarado to the ropes with a series of unanswered blows leading the referee to call an early stoppage that earned Arce a technical knockout just 1 minute and 35 seconds into the round, leaving Arce’s undefeated record intact.
“I was ready to fight. I had prepared for this moment but you got to respect the referee’s decision. The guy wasn’t throwing back so the referee decided to stop the fight. He is the third man in the ring and you have to do what he tells you to keep this sport safe.”
Fan favorite Jason Quigley (7-0, 6 KOs) of Donegal, Ireland took on Tom Howard (8-4, 4 KOs) of Trenton, Michigan in a scheduled six-round super middleweight fight. Quigley dominated the quick fight with unforgiving body blows and decisive jabs to the head that left Howard on the ropes early. Quigley wins the bout decisively with a knockout in the second round.
“I always prepare to go to the scorecards at every fight,” said Quigley. “But, once I see a weakness and an opportunity, I have to take him out. Boxing is one of those sports where there are no second chances. No do-overs. You just have to take that chance. And, it’s a good feeling to know that you can change the course of a fight with one shot.”
Ivan Delgado (6-0-1, 2 KOs) of Los Angeles, California faced Manati, Puerto Rico’s Angel Albelo (4-8-3, 1 KOs) in a scheduled six-round lightweight fight. Delgado and Abelo gave the crowd an exciting flight. Neither willing to relent, the two consistently delivered powerful combiations, each answering back the other assaults. Though a brief delay in fight occurred due to a necessary ring repairs, the fighters’ momentum wasn’t lost. Delgado finished out the bout strong continuing to deliver decisive combos that ultimately won the match for him in unanimous decision.
“This fighter was a challenge for me mentally,” said Delgado.” He kept moving around too much and I was preparing for a brawler. I had to focus and not get frustrated. I am happy I got the decision but I wish I would have gotten the knockdown.”
Opening up the night, Zachary Ochoa (12-0, 5 KOs) of Brooklyn, NY went up against David Rodela (17-11, 7KO) of Oxnard, California in an eight-round welterweight fight. Ochoa came out on the offense early delivering consistent face blows to Rodella, even drawing blood in the fifth round. Rodella however fought back hard with well-placed power combos to the body but ultimately wasn’t able to combat against Ochoa’s speed. Ochoa takes home the win in a unanimous decision.