The Philippine Star

Casimero won’t leave Vegas

- By JOAQUIN HENSON

WBO bantamweig­ht champion John Riel Casimero has been in the US for three months, moving from Miami to Las Vegas, and is staying put until there is clarity on when he battles super WBA/IBF titlist Naoya Inoue or anyone else in the ring.

Casimero’s trainer Nonoy Neri flew in to join the fighter in Miami last March and is now in Las Vegas, too. Casimero, his brother Jason, Neri and cutman Ting (Sugar) Ariosa live in a four-bedroom rented home provided by MP Promotions head Sean Gibbons. Neri will leave for Manila on Saturday to attend to family matters but plans to return to Las Vegas in the first week of June. While Neri is away, Mexican strength/conditioni­ng coach Memo Heredia will fly in from Miami and work with Casimero to keep him in shape for whatever eventualit­y.

At the moment, Gibbons said Inoue remains Casimero’s next opponent, nobody else. “Casimero is still presently fighting Inoue who’s working on getting into the US,” said Gibbons. “The fight has not been cancelled. I spoke to Mr. (Akihiko) Honda (Inoue’s manager) and he’s planning to bring Inoue to the US around May 10. We’re hoping to set the fight sometime in late July if things normalize.” The blockbuste­r triple championsh­ip unificatio­n showdown was originally scheduled at the Mandalay Bay Events Center in Las Vegas last Saturday.

Gibbons said Neri couldn’t book an earlier flight. “There are a few special flights leaving for Manila,” he said. “Memo’s coming over when Nonoy leaves. With Nonoy gone, Jason will hold the pads while Sugar will stay with the team. It’s great that Jason is with Casimero. Those brothers are inseparabl­e. If things don’t normalize and the fight is pushed forward to maybe in October, it will be nine months that Casimero is in the US without going home.”

Gibbons said Casimero is adjusting to the situation and realizes the best option is to stay in the US. “The uncertaint­y of a new date is making things difficult because you don’t want to burn out over-training,” he said. “But it’s a short time in a long life to sacrifice. To go home now isn’t a good idea because of the lockdown. It’ll disrupt Casimero’s training. This is Casimero’s big opportunit­y. When he beats Inoue, he’s looking at paydays of over $1 million in the future. He’ll be earning three or four times more than he’s ever earned. If for some reason Inoue can’t get to the US, maybe we can do a non-title fight to keep Casimero from getting rusty. But for now, the fight with Inoue is a go and the Monster is coming to Las Vegas.”

Top Rank CEO Bob Arum, who signed Inoue to a multiyear promotiona­l contract last November, said he can’t confirm if the fighter can go to the US. “The problem we have is the travel ban,” said Arum. “Right now, what we’re concentrat­ing on is American fighters or foreign fighters who are in the US. That way, we don’t have to worry about bringing them in from abroad.” Arum said if Inoue isn’t available, Casimero could fight WBO No. 1 contender Joshua Greer instead. Last year, Greer came off the canvas to halt Filipino Giovanni Escaner in Minnesota. Greer, 25, is unbeaten in his last 19 outings since 2015 and has a 22-1-1 record, with 12 KOs. Gibbons said Casimero is focused on bringing down Inoue, not Greer.

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