THE HAWAIIAN PUNCH SPEAKS OUT: AN
INTERVIEW WITH BRIAN VILORIA
By Tom Dickey
Brian Viloria was one of the most talked about
fighters coming out of the 2000 Olympics. His exciting
hard punching style drew comparisons to Michael
Carbajal. At only 24 years of age Viloria is looking solid right now in the
flyweight division, undefeated in 16 appearances and ranked #2 by the World
Boxing Council (WBC), #3 by the World Boxing Association (WBA), #10 by the
International Boxing Federation (IBF) and #6 by the World Boxing Organization
(WBO).
He is coming off an impressive 7th round KO victory, his 10th
early night,
over Angel Priolo, (30-1, 20 KOs) in Los Angeles, a fight he took on three days notice,
because it was a shot to fight on HBO Latino. Viloria was nice enough to talk to me after
a recent training session
in Hollywood, California. Here's what he had to say....
BRC: Who are you looking to fight next?
VILORIA: I'm looking at fighting one of the world champions
in the 108 pound division. I'm dropping down in weight
from 112 to 108, and I'm feeling really good at this
weight.
BRC: In your last fight you defeated Angel Priolo on
three days notice, what were the circumstances behind
that fight?
VILORIA: He was a very tough guy. I had a fight scheduled
on Showtime that got cancelled. I then took a week
off, because I didn't think I was going to fight again
until next year or this year. Then two or three days
before the fight in Los Angeles started, one of the
fighters pulled out, and I got a call and they said we
want you to fight, and it will be on HBO Latino. I
couldn't turn that down. I got the call on a Monday
and the fight was scheduled for Thursday night.
BRC: Would you like to fight Vic Darchinyan, who just
upset Irene Pacheco for the IBF Flyweight title?
VILORIA: Yes, he keeps calling me out, he thinks he has the
edge over me right now. He came here and sparred with
me a while back, and afterwards he claimed he kicked
my butt, but I don't remember him being able to even
hit me. I think that a world champion calling a
challenger out is kind of unheard of, usually it's the
other way around. I'm looking forward to that
potential fight, especially since Arce moved up to
112. I was hoping to get a title at 108, and move it up
to 112 and fight Vic and any one of the world
champions.
BRC: What were your main goals when you got into Boxing?
VILORIA: My main goal is to leave a mark in the lighter
weight divisions. That was one and still is one of my
main goals. A lot of the attention gets drawn to the
larger weight divisions, not since Michael Carbajal
has the 108 pound division or other light divisions
been really recognized. I'm trying to bring that back,
I'm trying to say that these lighter divisions warrant
the same type of recognition as the heavier weights. A
world championship was another big goal of mine when I
got started also.
BRC: You being a 2000 Olympian, and having gone through
the transition from amateur Olympian to professional,
what advice would you give some of the guys like
Andre Ward, Andre Dirrell or Vicente Escobedo from the
2004 class as they start that same transition?
VILORIA: A lot of guys are trying to jump in and get
contracts as quickly as possible. I would tell them to
just take their time, and feel these people out, it's
the pro business now. Amateur times are over, and the
pro game is more business than actual fighting. A lot
of things take place in court rooms, and you have
things like breach of contracts, it's a whole new
thing. I would tell them just take their time.
Actually Vicente Escobedo is my roommate now, and I
tell him to just take his time. Don't just jump into a
contract because it sounds good; do your homework,
find out what accomplishments these people have and
what credentials these people have. It was like this
for us in 2000, there was a cesspool of managers and
promoters trying to get guys to sign up, and a lot of
the fighters just jumped on without knowing what the
contracts really meant. For a lot of these guys, I would
tell them just take your time, find the right
trainers, find the right promoters, and find the right
managers that's going to help you and show the right
road to take, and who will benefit you. Because a lot
of promoters are scum and sharks, and they will try to
milk the fighters as much as they can, and when
they're done they will just throw the fighter to the
side. That's the sad truth.
BRC: How has it been working with Freddie Roach?
VILORIA: Freddie's been great, I've been working with
Freddie since the beginning of my career. He tells me
the right things at the right time. He's not one of
those trainers that's just going to scream at your
face, he's not one of those guys. He's going to tell
you what to do at exactly the right time, the right
place, and how to do it, and what will happen if you
do accomplish it. He keeps me focused, and he's one of
the guys that I highly respect in the game. You can't
have two opponents in the ring, you can't have your
trainer fighting with you too. Freddie is a man, there
is no other way I can say it, he's trained a lot of
world champions. He's been there and experienced a lot
of things and he brings a lot of experience to my
corner. He knows exactly what to say, because he has
been in the ring and was a fighter himself. So he is
able to relate to his fighters as a trainer and as a
fighter. So, I highly respect Freddie.
BRC: You kind of touched on this already, but who are
some guys that you see and say I want to fight him?
VILORIA: My plans right now are fighting at 108, and
fighting world champions there. Then I would like to
go back to 112, and fight any of the four world
sanctioning body champions. Whether it be with Vic, or Arce, or even
Pongsaklek (Pongsaklek Wonjongkam: WBC
Flyweight champ). Just trying to find the right match,
then you got to go through the business aspect of it.
Right now I'm just trying to get myself in shape and
get the right match. So, those are in my plans for the
future.
BRC: After you turned pro following the 2000 Olympics, you
drew comparisons to Michael Carbajal. How did
you feel about these comparisons?
VILORIA: To tell you the truth, I was flattered. But, at
the same time I know that those are big shoes to fill.
Because, Michael Carbajal came back with a medal, and
he proved himself. I came back with a 2 point loss to
the guy who won the gold medal. Having people say that,
actually motivated me to become a great pro. It helped
me in staying focused, and going into the ring and
doing what I have to do. It motivated me in thinking
if Michael Carbajal could do it, then I could do it,
nobody else could stop me but myself. When people make
that comparison, I feel flattered, but I realize it's
a daunting task, and I wanted to go in there and prove
that I would be a great professional. I feel I proved
that I was a great amateur, and now in the
professional game I felt I had to re learn the whole
sport, and prove again that I am one of the best
fighters out there in the division.
BRC: If there was one thing that you could change about
Boxing, inside or outside of the ring, what would it
be?
VILORIA: I would get rid of the dirtiest promoters and
managers out there that have taken advantage of some
of the great fighters. If there was one thing that I
could change, it would be that. I would change the
humanity of the sport. Being in the sport and watching
people do what they do, like robbing fighters, and
taking more of their cut than they should have... It's a
really, really nasty sport, at least that side of it.
That's something I would really like to see changed. I
know it's probably like asking for world peace, but if
I had to pick one thing, that would be it. You can't
feed all the children, you can't help all the sick,
you can't stop all the wars and at the same time you
can't take out all the bad promoters and managers out
there. Unfortunately, they will always be there. But,
if there was one thing I could change that would be
it.