The Philippine Star

Tough veteran for Marcial

Sporting ChanCe

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Tokyo Olympic bronze medalist Eumir Marcial battles rugged Argentinia­n Ricardo Ruben (Bebo) Villalba in an eight-round tussle at the Alamodome in San Antonio, Texas, Saturday night (Sunday morning, Manila time) and from the looks of things, the fight could steal the thunder from the main event featuring WBC featherwei­ght champion Rey Vargas against O’Shaquie Foster for the vacant WBO superfeath­erweight title.

MP Promotions head Sean Gibbons described Villalba as a tough and seasoned Argentinia­n whose record speaks for itself. While Marcial has logged only three pro fights, Villalba checks in with a card of 20-7-1, including eight KOs. Villalba, 33, turned pro in 2010, the year when Marcial fought and lost a three-round decision to Jayson Amper in the schoolboys light paperweigh­t (42 kg) division at the Palarong Pambansa in Tarlac. Marcial, 27, made his pro debut two years ago and has compiled a 3-0 mark, including one KO. Against Isiah Hart in Las Vegas last April, he survived three trips to the canvas and stopped the Peruvian in the fourth round of a sixer. And last October, Marcial bucked a nasty cut in the corner of his right eyebrow to pitch a six-round shutout over Steven Pichardo in Carson City. The gash was inflicted by an accidental headbutt and took five stitches to close.

After enduring a harrowing experience in his last two outings, Marcial is ready to step up and fight in his first eight-rounder. Villalba, unbeaten in his first 13 bouts, has fought in four 12-rounders and nine 10-rounders, meaning he’s tread in waters that are unfamiliar to Marcial. He has seen action in Russia, Romania and Las Vegas aside from Argentina so fighting away from home isn’t an issue. Villalba has held the South American welterweig­ht, WBO Latino superwelte­rweight and WBA Asia superwelte­rweight titles. The downside is he has lost his last three assignment­s, one by a TKO and two on points. All the more, Villalba is determined to get back on the winning track at Marcial’s expense.

“Hopefully, Villalba will give Eumir some rounds and we’ll see how Eumir looks with the full camp,” said Gibbons. Marcial leaves his base in Las Vegas for San Antonio today with trainer Jorge Capetillo. It was Capetillo who raved about Marcial’s courage in defeating Pichardo with blood smearing his face from the second round. Capetillo said the cut was too deep and a small vein kept spurting out blood. “This was just the beginning for Eumir,” said Capetillo whom Marcial fondly calls Papa. “He showed a lot of maturity, patience and composure.” Publicist Fred Sternberg noted that the combined record of Marcial’s three opponents so far was 17-5-1, with eight KOs or a total of 23 fights compared to Villalba’s log of 28 bouts.

“Villalba represents a big step up in opposition for Eumir in terms of talent and experience,” said Gibbons. “But we’re confident Eumir will pass this test with flying colors. Eumir had a terrific training camp and after consulting with Senor Capetillo, it was decided that Eumir was ready to move up to the eight-round level.” Villalba’s record reflects the kind of fighter he is – a brawler who lives and dies by the hammer. Whether Marcial can weather this brewing storm remains to be seen.

 ?? ?? By JOAQUIN M. HENSON
By JOAQUIN M. HENSON

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