Herrera Wants Fights with Rios, Alvarado, Broner, and Garcia After Kim

0
1012

This Thursday, May 2nd, Thompson Boxing Promotions and Banner Promotions will present a special night of boxing that will emanate from Corona, California and be televised on ESPN “Friday Night Fights”.  The special edition of boxing will feature Riverside’s Mauricio “El Maestro” Herrera (18-3, 7KOs) versus South Korea’s Ji-Hoon “The Volcano” Kim (24-8, 18KOs) in a 10-round junior welterweight bout.
 
Herrera, whose record recently suffered two losses in a row, looks to set the record straight as it relates to his boxing abilities.


 
Read below to see what Mauricio Herrera had to say about his upcoming match against Ji-Hoon Kim.
 
 
Q:            How has training been going?

A:            Training has been going well.  Before this fight was offered to me I was in decent shape.  I
                had been staying in the gym and sparring with Omar Figueroa and Timothy Bradley, so I
                was really well conditioned to start training for a fight.

Q:            How has camp been going for this particular fight? 

A:             I am doing really good in my training camp.   I have been sparring a lot with different
               fighters and mixing it up with all of them. A couple of my sparring partners have 
               been Hector Serrano and Freddy Hernandez.

Q:            What have you done differently in training to prepare for Kim? 

A:            I have been using my basic style in training that has been working for me.  In my last two
               fights I was listening to too many people in the gym.  Everyone pushed me to be more
               aggressive and hit harder.  But it wasn’t me.  I gave it a try and it didn’t work.  The one
               thing I am doing different from my last two training camps is that I am fighting the way I
               know how, using my boxing ability, using my jab a lot more and making sure that I
               don’t get hit as much.

Q:            You are coming off two losses.  Where do you see your career at this point? What 
                does
this fight mean to you?

A:            This fight means a lot to me.  I have a lot on the line.  I have to win impressively against
               Kim, who is a solid opponent, in order to remain on the networks.

Q:            If you do well against Kim who would you like to fight next in your division?

A:            I never look ahead of my opponents but if all turns out well I would love to fight against
               Brandon Rios, Mike Alvarado (again) , Adrien Broner or Danny Garcia.  They may choose
               me as a tune up fight but I would take that as my opportunity and be ready.

Q:           You went professional at the age of 27.  Why begin your career so late in the game?

A:           My original trainer, Rudy Garavito, was like a father figure to me and my brother, we were  
               very close.  He took care of us very well but was so attached to us that he didn’t want
               to see us get hurt so he would hold us back from us going pro.  Although I felt bad about
               it, I finally had to turn away from him,  it was either that or turn old and don’t go pro.

               A while back ago, I ran into an acquaintance who also trained with Garavito. He was
               watching a boxing match and happily commenting about how he had fought some of
               those fighters that went on to be professionals.  At that moment I knew that I wouldn’t be
               content with just the experience of being an amateur and that no matter how much I
               respected Garavito, if I remained with him I knew that would be my fate.

SHARE
Previous articleCBS’s ‘May Day’ Fight Week’s Schedule
Next article17,000 Plus Tickets Already Sold for Bute-Pascal
The team at Thaboxingvoice.com set out with a mission to create an online environment focused on boxing that voiced the opinions, concerns, and attitudes of you, the people. Doing our best to bring you the answers you want to know, and getting the exclusives that those other guys cant. We are always working hard to get the inside scoop inside and outside of the ring. If it’s happening in Boxing, we will tell you about it! You can find us at the fights all over the place with our nationwide team of correspondents, and wide reach around the globe we have the tools and the team to bring you coverage from all the fights. Whether it is in a gym in Jersey or on the floor at MGM Grand. No fight to big or small for Tha Boxing Voice. Our experienced team combined has over 50+ years of boxing experience to bring to the table. Some of us growing up ringside, some of us growing up in the ring, no matter the situation we are all true boxing fans first and reporters second. This can be found evident on our twice-weekly podcast. We work hard to bring you interviews that answer your questions and guest who will spark your interest from all areas of the boxing world. Writers, Trainers, Promoters and the most relevant fighters before and after some of their biggest fights. We are working 24/7 to get the information to you, the listeners. We work to form a personal relationship with our listeners and our guests making our show more intimate and giving a raw, uncut and real aspect that you will be hard pressed to find elsewhere. We are Tha Boxing Voice, The Voice of you, The People. Follow @boxingvoiceshow