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Andre Berto-Victor Ortiz to Fight April 16

After weeks of junior welterweight matchup speculation, Victor Ortiz has agreed to fight Andre Berto on April 16 in the U.S. as part of a television doubleheader with Amir Khan-Paul McCloskey (U.K. bout), according to Ortiz’s manager, Roland Arellano.

Ortiz (28-2-2, KOs), the No. 9 junior welterweight (140-pounds), has agreed to a catch weight bout with Berto, the WBC welterweight champion, at 145 pounds plus one, or in effect 146 (one pound below welterweight limit).

“I’m so ready for Berto,” Ortiz said. “Actually, I don’t want to sound cocky, but Berto’s whole career just came to an end. From what I hear, he’s underestimating me because I’m a junior welterweight. I don’t know if he recalls being next to me, but I’m a lot bigger than he is.”

Although Ortiz has never fought heavier than 144 pounds, the Kansas-native appears to have no worries about the jump in weight class.

“No concerns whatsoever in speed, power or anything else,” Ortiz said.  “All I know is that I’m going to take the belt. In my eyes, Berto is overrated. He hasn’t been tested against a fighter such as myself.”

The site for the Berto-Ortiz bout has yet to be determined, Arellano disclosed, adding that the finalization will occur when he receives a contract from DiBella Entertainment, Berto’s promoter.

After his June 27, 2009 lose to Marcos Rene Maidana by technical knockout in the sixth round, Ortiz went on a four fight win streak, defeating Antonio Diaz, Hector Alatorre, Nate Campbell and Vivian Harris. Most recently, “Vicious” fought to draw against Lamont Peterson in Mandalay Bay Resort & Casino in Las Vegas, NV last December.

Berto (27-0, 21 KOs), currently riding a streak of five title defenses, last stopped Freddy Hernandez in the first round on Nov. 27.

—Alex Neely

THE AUXILIARY PRESS

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Haye Happy To Do Things His Way – Former cruiserweight boxer believes it made sense to move up to heavyweight  In the days after David Haye knocked out Enzo Maccarinelli in March to win his third version of the world cruiserweight title the messages and offers started to pile up. Haye was simply too big for the cruiserweight division and there were a lot of people in the business desperate to turn Haye into a heavyweight. He listened and nodded but he had his own plans and was soon back near Girne in Northern Cyprus to begin his big push… Steve Bunce, www.independent.co.uk 

training_02_chrisstifel_234.pngCalzaghe Sr Says Fear Of Boredom May Persuade Joe To Keep Boxing  Joe Calzaghe’s determination to retire following his unanimous points victory over Roy Jones Jr on Saturday appears to be softening after his father and coach, Enzo, yesterday insisted the fighter had not made a final decision on his future and could well continue in an attempt to avoid “boredom”… Sachin Nakrani, www.guardian.co.uk

Oscar De La Hoya Takes On All Comers At Media Day  There was a good omen the other day at Oscar De La Hoya’s training camp. The venerable boxer stayed on his feet for more than two hours. Not that the 35-year-old De La Hoya has spent all that much time on his back in a 16-year career of 44 fights and 39 wins. But the talk has been hot and heavy that De La Hoya’s Dec. 6 opponent, the younger and harder-punching Manny Pacquiao, 29, is thinking knockout more than decision… BILL DWYRE, www.latimes.com

 

THE AUXILIARY PRESS

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>> HAYE HAS EYES ON BOXING’S BIGGEST PRIZE LONDON, England—In the jubilant minutes following his unification of the world cruiserweight division, David Haye saved his sharpest comments and wittiest prose for his interview with American television. —Martin Rogers, Yahoo! Sports

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>> CANCUN, Mexico— When Samuel Peter stepped on to the polished marble in his upscale hotel’s lobby late Saturday night, he looked more like a vacationing millionaire than the heavyweight champion of the world. —The Canadian Press, canadianpress.google.com

 

dd6b1d3738a5f99519220d7fe7c6563c-getty-box-wbc-mex-usa-light.png>> CANCUN, Mexico — The fox turned the gun on the hunter. The funnel cloud finally ran into a building it couldn’t pick up and toss around like a toy. After climbing to the top of the lightweight division, Houstonian Juan Diaz suffered the first loss of his pro career and was dethroned as champion by Nate Campbell on Saturday night. —Fran Blinebury, www.chron.com

 

(Haye Photo by John Gichigi/Getty Images; Campbell/Diaz/Peter photo by LUIS ACOSTA: AFP/GETTY IMAGES) 


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