Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

Garcia talented but has more work to do

The rising young star stops Campbell in the seventh but shows his footwork is lacking.

- DYLAN HERNÁNDEZ

Before he displayed his resilience by recovering from an early knockdown, before he demonstrat­ed the extent of his power by stopping a world-class opponent with a punch to the midsection, Ryan Garcia proved he was willing.

The evidence was in his choice of opponent on Saturday night, a crafty southpaw named Luke Campbell.

Or his previously scheduled opponent, former champion Jorge Linares.

Or the fellow prospect he knocked out last year, Romero Duno.

Much of the conversati­on around the 22-year-old lightweigh­t from Victorvill­e has centered on his boyband looks, and rightfully so.

His massive social media following separates him from other fighters. But his boldness in the ring is what has forced the industry to view him as a serious prospect.

There will be a temptation on the part of the sport’s power brokers to continue moving along Garcia at this pace.

And this is where the people around him have to step in.

His promoter, Oscar de la Hoya, has to tell him to slow down.

His trainer, Eddy Reynoso, has to remind him of how much he has to learn.

His mentor, Canelo Alvarez, has to implore him to be patient.

Because as exhilarati­ng as Garcia’s seventh-round

knockout of Campbell was, the fight also confirmed suspicions about his shortcomin­gs.

Garcia has one of the quickest set of hands in the sport, but the feet of a European heavyweigh­t.

He appears comfortabl­e throwing punches only when standing flat-footed, which presents a number of problems. He doesn’t throw combinatio­ns as often as a

fighter with his hand speed should. He can’t fire when retreating and frequently tries to avoid punches by pulling his head straight back with his chin exposed. He has virtually no lateral movement.

His plodding style allowed the left-handed Campbell to keep his lead foot outside of his, putting his head directly in the line for Campbell’s left hand, which produced the secondroun­d knockdown.

Being dropped afforded Garcia an opportunit­y to showcase a valuable trait: His resilience.

“I think I showed a lot of people who I really am,” Garcia told DAZN in a postfight interview.

The kid is a fighter.

He is also a puncher. Like an Aroldis Chapman fastball, the kind of left hook Garcia delivered to stop Campbell in the seventh round isn’t something that can be taught. The solitary blow dropped Campbell to all fours and ended the fight.

The question now is whether the fighter and puncher can become a boxer.

In Reynoso, Garcia has a trainer who has helped another fighter undergo such a transforma­tion. The fighter was Alvarez. Now the 168-pound champion of the world, Alvarez moves relatively well for a fighter his size. That wasn’t always the case.

Early in his career, he too stood flat-footed.

Under Reynoso’s tutelage, he started fighting on the ball of his front foot, which helped him move better not only in and out, but also side to side.

The change helped Alvarez engage in two even fights with Gennady Golovkin and score a decisive win over Daniel Jacobs.

Garcia and his team aren’t the only parties who are counting on him to make a similar transition. The entire sport is too.

This is about more than Garcia’s looks and talent. This is about his list of potential opponents.

He fights at the 135pound weight limit, which is also where three of the sport’s other top young boxers compete: Teofimo Lopez, Gervonta Davis and Devin Haney.

Shakur Stevenson is a weight class below.

There are major fights to be made. Garcia could have a similar effect on the likes of Lopez and Davis as De La Hoya did on his contempora­ries. Previously unknown fighters became pay-perview attraction­s after fighting De La Hoya.

The landscape provides for plenty of opportunit­ies, but that also means there are also plenty of more opportunit­ies for failure.

Immediatel­y after Garcia’s hand was raised in victory, he called out the hard-punching Davis. He also raised the possibilit­y of a fight against Haney.

He’s not ready for either challenge.

But he doesn’t have to be.

Boxing isn’t a place of instant gratificat­ion, now more so than ever.

Fighters are more averse to risk than ever and the sport’s audience has been conditione­d to wait for the fights it wants to see.

The climate should permit Garcia to take his time. Making a fight prematurel­y makes as a little sense as making a fight past its expiration date.

 ?? RYAN GARCIA Tim Warner Getty Images ?? celebrates with his cornermen after defeating Luke Campbell with a seventh-round knockout to win a WBC lightweigh­t title.
RYAN GARCIA Tim Warner Getty Images celebrates with his cornermen after defeating Luke Campbell with a seventh-round knockout to win a WBC lightweigh­t title.
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