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Richard Schaefer: Good morning,
good afternoon, everyone. We have only a little more than a
week to go to truly an exciting lightweight showdown featuring
some of the most recognized names in the lightweight division.
We have with Jesus Chavez, Carlos Hernandez, and Julio Diaz
three stars of the sport fighting against opponents, who want
to make names for themselves, who want to really move up in
the rankings and stake a claim eventually for a world title
fight. And then, of course, in the main event with Edwin
Valero and Antonio Pitalua. We have a great showdown with a
very, very tough Mexican fighter, Antonio Pitalua, and Edwin
Valero, sort of like a cult fighter who has a tremendous
following within the boxing community. And I think it's going
to be a great night of boxing with these four lightweight
battles. It's going to be April 4 at the Frank Erwin Center in
at the University of Texas in Austin, a great campus, a great
town for those people who are going to go there, to see the
fights live. It's going to be the first time for me, but I
hear it's a tremendous atmosphere there, a great, great - a
beautiful town, Austin. The fight is going to be shown live on
pay-per-view beginning at 9:00 pm ET and 6:00 pm PT. It is
going to be distributed by HBO. Tickets to the event are still
available. Ticket demand has been brisk. We are expecting a
great and large turnout in Austin. The Texas fans loves
boxing, embrace boxing, and create a great atmosphere, live
atmosphere in the venue.
Tickets are priced between $25,
$35, $50, $70, $100, $150, and $200, so really for any and all
budgets, there are seats available. And to be able to see this
kind of card with those four great events, including the WBC
World Lightweight title for $25 is almost like going to a
movie, a great price for a great, great sporting event
sponsored by Cerveza Tecate and Southwest Airlines.
I would like to welcome now the
people we have on the phone - we have Carlos "Famoso"
Hernandez and his trainer, Jesse James Leija, and Vicente
Escobedo and his trainer, Nacho Beristain. I'm going to turn
it first to Vicente to make some opening comments and then to
Carlos and then we are going to open it up to the media who
have any questions to the fighters or their trainers. I just
want to quickly make a note as well, we are looking forward to
see Jesse James Leija again. He is - he was a tremendous
fighter, tremendous champion. He's just a really great guy and
I'm very pleased to see that he is training "Famoso"
Hernandez.
And, of course, my good friend,
Nacho Beristain, a legendary trainer who recently guided Juan
Manuel Marquez to a great victory over Juan Diaz and so it's
great to have Nacho on the phone as well. But now let's move
to Vicente Escobedo. He's a rising lightweight star from
Woodland, California, with a record of 19 and 1, 2004 US
Olympian, and he's coming off the most impressive win of his
professional career, a six-round stoppage of the unbeaten
Dominic Salcido, which was last September 26.
So please, Vicente, if you want
to say a few words, how your camp has been going and any other
comments you have, please go ahead. So it is a pleasure for me
now to turn it over to a former world champion, the greatest
fighter ever to come out of El Salvador who lives now in San
Antonio, Texas. And he is training with Jesse James Leija, as
I mentioned to you already. He has - after a two-year layoff,
he came back with a win and he really has started his
campaign, which hopefully will bring him to another world
championship.
He is determined. He's hungry,
as he was in the beginning of his career because he wants to
show everyone out there that he still has it to become world
champion again in a division where there is a lot of great,
great fights out there. So please, Carlos "Famoso" Hernandez,
why don't you make some opening statements and talk a bit
about your training.
Carlos Hernandez: Thank you very much for
having me here. Thank you, Mr. Schaefer, and all of the media
here and for Golden Boy Promotions for believing in me and
giving me this opportunity with a young rising star like
Vicente Escobedo, who we know - we all know is the future of
boxing. But we have to work to win. This guy is a good, hungry
young fighter, but what I have in my corner is experience. And
that's what we're going to bring to the table.
Richard Schaefer: Great. Thank you. Jesse, do you want to say
a few words, please?
Jesse James Leija: First of all, I
would like to say hello to Richard Schaefer and hello to the
great promoters at Golden Boy. I'm excited about this. I'm so
excited for Carlos Hernandez getting a second opportunity to
get back to the world title. And I know Vicente Escobedo,
who's a young, young, energized fighter. But, I see it that
he's going to be heavily tested in this fight. I almost see it
as when I fought Juan Lazcano, when I fought Hector Camacho,
Jr., when I fought Francisco Bojado where I think these guys
are coming in too quick, too soon, to fight a veteran fighter
as in Carlos. And, I know he has a great trainer and I just
think that right now it's going to be experience that's going
to prevail over Vicente Escobedo. And we're training hard.
We're not taking shortcuts. Carlos is in here, he's been
training for the last six months I think. And he's ready to
go. And we're anxious and we're excited about fighting on this
great card.
Vicente Escobedo: Well, I would
like to thank Golden Boy, thank you guys for this opportunity
to be on this card, it's a dream. I've been dreaming about
this for - since I started boxing. And now the time has come.
Things have been going good. I just - training has been going
really, really good up here in Mexico City. I want to thank
Nacho Beristain, for the preparation and the hard work that
I've been working. And it's an important fight for me because
Carlos Hernandez is a former world champion, a great fighter.
I mean, starting as a professional, I remember watching him
fight and to me, to have this opportunity, it's huge, and, we
definitely have a tough fight in front of us and we're
training hard and we're ready, we're prepared I'm just - I'm
so excited and I'd just like to thank everyone for this
opportunity.
Q: Okay, the first question is
directed to Richard. Originally the card was announced with
four fights. Two of those fights have changed. What is that?
What were the changes due to?
Richard Schaefer: Well, I mean, there still are going to be
four fights. You have the Valero vs. Pitalua main event.
Carlos Famoso Hernandez, who was supposed to fight Barrios,
has been replaced by Vicente Escobedo. And in many ways, this
is really an opportunity for a young and rising star to take
on one of the true stars of the sport with Famoso Hernandez.
And for Famoso Hernandez, it obviously is an opportunity as
well to turn back the tide as we have seen recently, with
Shane Mosley and you saw it with Bernard Hopkins where the
veterans shows the younger fighters, who is the man. And
Carlos Hernandez wants to basically show the same and make a
strong case that he is willing to take on any and everyone.
So, I mean, I really have to thank our matchmaker, Eric Gomez
and Roberto Diaz who have come up with such a great
fight. And then, of course, we have Joel Casamayor, who was
supposed to fight Julio Diaz. He got injured. And, again with
Rolando Reyes, our matchmakers found somebody who deserves the
opportunity to be in the ring with Julio Diaz. And we
anticipate that that will be a great showdown as well. So it
still is four fights. It still is great action. It still is
some of the biggest and best names in the lightweight division
today.
Q: Now the second question is to
Carlos Hernandez. Carlos, 39-years-old, you're facing a much
younger opponent in Vicente Escobedo. You mentioned something
about the car accident. Do you think that's going to affect
you or bother you? Or how is that going to play into this
fight?
Carlos Hernandez: I am fighting a much tougher opponent in
Vicente Escobedo because now I'm fighting a young, hungry
fighter, a younger fighter who has a tremendous corner and all
due respect to the corner and to Escobedo and his team, but
that makes me train harder and to know that I have a younger,
stronger, faster, opponent, but to show who I am, I'll go in
there and be ready for this fight.
Q: Vicente, do you think that the
audience being predominately Mexican, Mexican American, will
have more support for you in Austin, Texas over Carlos
Hernandez, who hails from El Salvador.
Vicente Escobedo: Look, the fans are going to go out
there, enjoy great fights and good fights that night and we're
both going to have our supporters. It's going to be divided.
And, it's not going to make a difference or affect either/or
to who the fans go for or have Mexican Americans in my favor.
.
Q: I had a point of clarification
before I had a question. Actually I don't think Carlos was
born in El Salvador. I think he's of Salvadoran descent. Isn't
that right, Carlos?
Carlos Hernandez: That's correct.
Q: Yeah. I just wanted to point that
out, Richard. I know your media information when you had the
press conference here had him from El Salvador, but he's
actually born in California I think. Anyway, be that as it
may, Carlos, I know you've lived in San Antonio for a while.
And I think I asked you this before, but what happened in the
couple of fights you fought in San Antonio a couple years ago?
Probably not your best efforts, and I think you took some
time- you kind of retired after the Kevin Kelley fight,
correct?
Carlos Hernandez: Yeah, that's correct. What I needed was
a fresh start. I needed a change. And that's why we're here. I
came to Jesse James Leija's gym and found inspiration. I found
that I was rejuvenated and I feel great.
It's a beautiful town, like San
Antonio is. Jesse James and I hope San Antonio's going to do
the same to me, they could open their arms to me, after
fighting and beating Escobedo.
Q: Were you just feeling like- you
fought this guy at the Charro Ranch here, it was like in a
bull ring I think. Isn't that right?
Carlos Hernandez: Yes.
Q: And then Kevin Kelley, were you
just, rusty, you just hadn't fought much? What was going on in
those fights?
Carlos Hernandez: It was more like just going through the
motions of boxing, just because I have to do it. It wasn't
something that I wanted to do. It was just something that at
the end I said well, let's do it. It's not like I really
mentally prepared for a fight.And - but I didn't want to back
down or back out of a fight. It was that I just said, let's do
it, let's take it. I am confident in getting a win. And what
happened. But our mindset is different for this fight. Of
course, with the guy having Nacho Beristain in his corner is
something else, Vicente Escobedo alone is - he's a good,
tremendous fighter. But now with Nacho in his corner, it's a
big thing. And we're expecting the best from Escobedo. He's
not just going for a gold medal or a world title. He's going
for it all April 4.
Q: Yeah. Hey, James, what do you see
in the gym with Carlos right now? Does he look like a guy
who's got something left?
Jesse James Leija: Oh, yeah, definitely. What I see in him,
Carlos is a guy who is eager to learn and who's just tenacious
in there. He's just nonstop. We have to - sometimes I have to
slow him down and give him some easy days because he's just
working very hard to get there. And he looks like a young
fighter. And that's what you want to see, a guy with a lot of
drive, a lot of talent, a guy that wants to succeed in the
ring and win in the ring at all costs.
And that's what every trainer
wants in every fighter is to have that drive and the will to
win. And that's what he has. And that makes it - it makes my
job easy when you have that type of fighter.
Q: My question is for both Carlos and
Vicente. And Carlos, you can go first. Do you see this fight
with Escobedo as a crossroads bout? Do either of you believe
that you're at a crossroads in your careers?
Carlos Hernandez: Yeah, for me, of course it is. I mean,
it's not like I'm Escobedo's age. So to me, I'm pretty much
backed into a corner and have to fight my way out of it. But
Escobedo still has a future in boxing. So for me, it's, of
course, it's really, it's to do or die for me. And it kind of
reminds me of when I was up and coming fighting against an old
veteran as Goyo Vargas and beating Goyo Vargas. And that's
what opened the doors for me. So I see a young lion coming,
wanting to fight against the old lion. But, we're just going
to have to wait and see till April 4 and let the bell sound
and fireworks should explode.
Q: Vicente, do you think it's a crossroads
or do you feel that you, even though you're a young guy, do
you feel that maybe this is a must-win fight for you?
Vicente Escobedo: Yeah, definitely, it's a must-win
fight, even though definitely not a crossroads fight for me.
Like you say, I'm a young fighter, and it's really a huge
opportunity for me. This is my moment. This is my moment and I
- and I'm going to go in there and step in that ring and give
it all I got, give it 100%, leave it in the ring. And I know I
got a tough, tough fight against Carlos Hernandez, so we're
prepared. We're ready, hungry. And it's going to be a good,
good fight. And like Carlos said, the bell rings and you're
going to see, two fighters just go at it. And, it's going to
be a great, great fight. So I'm really, really excited.
Q: Would you say that Hernandez is
the most formidable opponent you've faced in your professional
career?
Vicente Escobedo: Definitely, definitely. I
believe so.
Q: What is that your other opponents
haven't brought to the ring?
Vicente Escobedo: I think the last one, I fought against
Dominic Salcido. It was a tough fight, too you know? And he
was a good boxer and everything, but, I just felt, in my heart
the whole time that as long as I had a good punch on him, I
was going to hurt him. I just thought I was much stronger than
him. And now the opportunity with Carlos, I know he's a strong
fighter. He's proved that. And I've seen him in action and
he's a really, really strong fighter. I mean, the guy is,
going to stay in there and fight me? It's going to be a fight.
And then so I definitely (believe) that it is going to be the
toughest fight that I have so far.
Q: Does it mean anything to you --
and this is my last question. Does it add anything to you to
beat someone who has held a world title and somebody who's
fought the best over the last two decades, somebody who
actually has a name for himself?
Vicente Escobedo: Definitely. I mean, Carlos Hernandez,
he had a world title. All those fights, he's fought,
Mayweather, Kevin Kelley everyone, just he has such a big
resume with just fighters that - great fighters that he's
fought, a win over Carlos Hernandez would just, skyrocket my
career, would blossom my career and it's huge to me. And, I
think it's just a huge opportunity to have this opportunity
and fight Carlos Hernandez. And a win over Carlos Hernandez
would just benefit me.
.
Q: Hey Vicente this is the biggest
challenge and it's kind of a make-or-break fight for your
career, but also coming up in the sport, were you ever a fan
of Famoso and kind of what his life story has been like, the
being homeless and fighting his way through and winning a
world title? Were you ever a fan of his?
Vicente Escobedo: I remember, I wont forget this because,
Carlos is a good person. Everyone has nothing but good things
to say about him. I remember the first time I was going to
turn pro, I went to the Wild boxing card and I was watching
Carlos Hernandez spar. And, I was watching him spar and like
man, this guy is just - it looks like I fight. I mean, I'm
serious. And I was just like amazed of, just this is sparring.
It looked like a fight. And I remember him coming down to the
ring and they introduce me and he shook my hand and, told me,
hey, turn pro with a lot of respect. He was just, he just
shook my hand, said good luck, and train hard. He was just
giving me good advice. And like I got to say that I am, I am a
fan of Carlos Hernandez.
Q: And Carlos, what about Vicente as
a young fighter impresses you the most about him and what he's
been able to do?
Carlos Hernandez: He's a really clean, clean kid, seems
like a very dedicated young man who just, not only in, but
outside, a very likeable person. And it's not like we're
buddies or great pals, like that, but I know him. I've seen
him before at Maywood. And I remember the that at wild card.
And the guy's a nice guy and I just want to thank him for
taking the fight and what a compliment to me.
Q: Vicente, I wanted to talk to you about,
a couple weeks ago before you took this fight, you were set
for Kelley. And then that was a non-televised fight. It was in
ARCO Arena, a place that you've fought many times before. What
does it mean to your career to be able to go from that and in
a matter of weeks you're on a pay-per-view fight?
Vicente Escobedo: I means a lot this is what I've been
waiting for, to get on pay-per-view, HBO, have a big, big
fight like this, televised, for the world to see it, all of
the fans, it's huge to me. It means everything to me. I was
supposed to fight Kevin Kelley, but he got sick, and one day,
when Golden Boy announced this fight, I wanted to take it. I
didn't hesitate to take it because I was ready. I was already
prepared, ready to fight Kelley. So - and that was scheduled
to be March 26. And this is scheduled to April 4. It gave me
more time, so I just thought this was an opportunity that I
can not pass and I had to take it. And I felt confident and
ready, so here we are.
Q: Do you feel like, the stars kind
of aligned for you and you have to get a win here so you can
kind of capitalize on this opportunity?
Vicente Escobedo: Definitely. I'm doing everything in my
power to train hard and, to me, a huge win over Carlos
Hernandez would be huge to me and, just great for my career,
so I'm definitely training hard and ready for this fight.
Q: Hey James, I wanted to ask you
about - something else about Carlos. I imagine you guys have
gotten to be pretty good friends because - I see some
similarities there. Not only were you both world champions,
but you're both real strong family men. And I imagine that has
played a part in your friendship. Tell me about that and what
kind of a person you think Carlos is.
Jesse James Leija: No, we're not friends at all. I don't
really like the guy at all. No, we really - and that's a great
thing, too, is to be good friends with, I mean, first of all,
we were friends beforehand, only, through a meeting, but I was
friends with and I knew who he was. And I was a fan of his in
boxing. And then when he moved to San Antonio, I was surprised
that he moved down here. And, I was anxious to train him. And
I seen him train a few times and I said man, you still have
it. You got to put it together and get motivated again. And I
think that's what we've - I have been able to help him get
re-motivated and, and to keep him doing what he wants to do
and that's to fight. I mean, he's a fighter.
And you can see it. You can see
it all over him when he comes into the gym and when he wants
to get into it and spar. And that he's a fighter. And to be
able to work with him and to be friends with him, be friends
with his wife, and then our families are all friends, that's
incredible. And that's when you really go out and you really
want to do your best to help him achieve his goal and that's
to become a world champion again.
Q: The question is for Vicente. Your
only loss came to Daniel Jimenez. And I'm just curious as to
whether you would like to get a rematch with him to avenge
that loss? And is that something that you think about? Like do
you think much about that loss and what happened in that
fight?
Vicente Escobedo: I don't think about that any more
actually. My loss did come to him. And it's something that I
would love to get a rematch in the future. We are talking
about to get a rematch in the future, which - to gain that win
back over Jimenez, and that's something, maybe in the future.
I mean, I'm not sure.
I'm going to leave that up to my
promotion because right now, I mean, the only thing I'm
concentrating is April 4 and that's Carlos Hernandez because
that's what I got in front of me. So as far as Jimenez, I have
no thoughts or anything about that fight. That's behind me and
it's the past.
Q: And then have you sparred much
with the Marquez brothers? And if so, could you describe how
those sessions went and what's the most important thing that
you learned from them?
Vicente Escobedo: I had the opportunity to spar with Juan
Manuel Marquez for his fight with Diaz. I helped him a couple
times, and I got to say, it's amazing, you go in a sparring
session with the world champion, you definitely notice the
difference, the way he's - his style, the way he is - his
rhythm and everything just on point. And, I learned a lot from
him, and so everything went well. I learned and got to know,
what it's like to be in there with the world champion.
And, I think it just benefited
me and helped me more because, I'm - here I am, April 4, going
to face another ex-world champion. So I got to say it went
very well and I'm just thankful to have to have the
opportunity to spar with Juan Manual Marquez.
Q: Oh, okay. Carlos, are you disappointed
Barrios got hurt, especially after all of that months
trashing talk you did at the LA press conference.
Carlos Hernandez: Of course, of course, a little
disappointed, but at the same time, concerned, hopefully he's
okay and he'll be able to recover and come back to fight
because the sport would miss him. He's just a character. But,
we have Vicente Escobedo and so we have to focus on this guy.
I can't think about Barrios anymore. And Escobedo's the one
who we're targeting.
Q: Oh, Vicente. You are fighting an
experienced boxer. How prepared are you for Carlos?
Vicente Escobedo: I'm really prepared. I've been
training very hard, with here at Nacho and sparring with top
sparring partners. I've been ready. I've been feeling good and
ready and I'm just - this is my moment. It's what I've been
waiting for. This is after a win and after a great win with
Dominic Salcido and now I feel like I'm ready, to step up and
fight one of these top lightweight fighters like Carlos
Hernandez. So I'm definitely ready. And, April 4, we'll be
ready and prepared.
Q: Okay, the question is to both the
trainers, Jesse James Leija and to Nacho Beristain, what do
you guys foresee in your fighters - in front of your fighters
and what do you expect from your opponents and also after the
fight what do you see for your fighters' immediate future. So
I guess we could start with Nacho?
Nacho Beristain: Well, to answer that question ,
without the years of experience and - that I've been in this
sport, I can say that we - we respect Carlos Hernandez. It's a
very, very strong, tough fight. I don't like to look past. And
what we have here is a very attractive fight. And as far as
future plans, nothing's on our mind except Carlos Hernandez.
Q: And the question, same question
for you, Jesse, regarding Carlos Famoso Hernandez.
Jesse James Leija: Well, first of all and I know we're
going to have a tough fight on our hands. Being, I've been in
there several times where I'm fighting a younger guy that I
think we have seen lately with the experience, we've seen
Shane Mosley, Bernard Hopkins, all with experience. You can
never, never beat experience. And I think that's one thing
that we have over Escobedo, we have experience. I take it for
granted, yeah, he has a great trainer in his corner who's
going to minimize some of that experience. But no matter what
you have, no matter what you do, once you get in the ring, it
all changes. And you can count on the experience when you're
in the ring. And I think that's what we have. We have
experience. And I think it's going to be a tough fight. I see
Carlos winning the fight, in a tough fight, but I see Carlos
winning the fight.
Q: The question to Mr. Schaefer, what
criteria is taken when the judges are selected and if the
judges have already been named for these fights.
Richard Schaefer: Well, we really have nothing to do with the
selection of the judges. These fights are taking place in the
jurisdiction of the Texas Athletic Commission and it is only
up to the Texas commission to come up to select the judges.
And so we all place our faith in
the capabilities of the Texas commission. I think they are
very experienced. They have done many big fights. So we really
have no worries about that. I think they will put together a
fine panel of judges.
Q: Okay, Nacho, do you see a bright
future ahead, possibly a world champion ahead for your
fighter, Vicente Escobedo?
Nacho Beristain: Of course, definitely. A fighter,
first of all, to make the Olympic team, the US Olympic team,
not just an average fighter makes that. He has tremendous
talent. He has tremendous faculties. He's looking better and
better each time out, the more we work together. And it's just
a matter of time and bringing that out of him.
Q: Question for both of you guys real
quick, just if you guys could talk about Marquez, kind of the
champ of the division right now. Do either of you feel you
guys are ready? Do you feel you need a couple more fights to
take on Marquez? If you could just comment on where you guys
are at as far as thinking about Marquez.
Carlos Hernandez: As for me, I think first things first.
And the first thing is getting past Vicente Escobedo, who I
think who is working with as Marquez's trainer, so he's going
to bring I'm sure his style to the ring. So it'll be - beating
him was like beating Marquez in a way because of them having
the same trainer. But first things first, we would have to get
past Vicente Escobedo before we can talk about Marquez, for
sure.
Q: Okay. Vicente?
Vicente Escobedo: To me, I don't think so. To me,
I'm focused here on Carlos as well. Carlos Hernandez is who I
am fighting next and it's kind of hard to say that, I mean,
because, I mean, we're both trained by Nacho Beristain. I
mean, to me, I just feel like, first things first, we've got
to take care, what we've got in front of us and that's Carlos
Hernandez and, we've got a fun fight April 4 and - but to me
right now as far as fighting Juan Marquez anytime soon, I
don't think so.
Richard Schaefer: Well, thank you very much.
Again, top to bottom, the best lightweight card ever, four
great fights, four very meaningful fights, and you absolutely
right, Colby, one of those guys might make a case for a
showdown with Juan Manuel Marquez. Juan Manual Marquez is
planning on coming back on the Mexican holiday in September.
And who knows, maybe one of these guys on this card might be
his next opponent. What I want to say as well, it's on
pay-per-view. And it's not like the regular $50 or $55. It's
priced at $39.95, so great fights, great price from a great
city in Austin, distributed by HBO pay-per-view, so make sure
you tell all of your readers, listeners, and so on, to watch
this great Lightweight Lightning on April 4.
~~ END OF CALL ~~
"Lightweight Lightning," which is presented by Golden Boy
Promotions and sponsored by Cerveza Tecate and Southwest
Airlines on April 4th at the Frank Erwin Center in Austin, TX,
will air live on pay-per-view beginning at 9pm ET / 6pm PT
with a suggested retail price of $39.95. The unprecedented
four-bout pay-per-view card features Edwin Valero vs. Antonio
Pitalua in a 12 round bout for the vacant WBC World
Lightweight Crown, Jesus Chavez vs. Michael Katsidis in a 10
round lightweight bout, Carlos Hernandez vs. Vicente Escobedo
in a 10 round lightweight bout and Julio Diaz vs. Rolando
Reyes in a 10 round lightweight bout.
Tickets priced at $200, $100, $75, $50, $35 and $25, go on
sale on Friday, February 27th, and may be purchased at the
Frank Erwin Center box office, by phone at (512) 477-6060 or
1-800-982-2386 or online at TexasBoxOffice.com. Tickets are
also available at Texas Box Office Outlets including select
H-E-B stores located in Austin and surrounding areas.
3-27-2009 |