Japanese promoter Akihiko Honda and LA-based trainer Joe Hernandez say they are going to take the path that had been successfuly taken by heavyweight Joe Mesi to get Edwin Valero chances to fight in the US. The duo have been behind Valero since the Venezuelan fighter was banned from fighting in the US due to a failed MRI brain scan in New York.
Hernandez says, they will allow Valero's California license to expire at the end of this year, thus, technically and effectively ending Valero's New York state suspension, which, under the "Ali Act", had become the cause of the US-wide suspension. They will then apply for licenses on a state-by-state basis, selecting states that they believe can be sympathetic to Valero's cause. Like Mesi.
Valero stopped his first 18 opponents in the first round, wresting the record long-held by Young Otto (15 consecutive, set in 1905). He won the WBA SuperFeatherweight title a few months ago from Vicente Mosquera with a 10th round stoppage (Mosquera's corner had seen enough).
Hernandez says, they will allow Valero's California license to expire at the end of this year, thus, technically and effectively ending Valero's New York state suspension, which, under the "Ali Act", had become the cause of the US-wide suspension. They will then apply for licenses on a state-by-state basis, selecting states that they believe can be sympathetic to Valero's cause. Like Mesi.
Valero stopped his first 18 opponents in the first round, wresting the record long-held by Young Otto (15 consecutive, set in 1905). He won the WBA SuperFeatherweight title a few months ago from Vicente Mosquera with a 10th round stoppage (Mosquera's corner had seen enough).
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