SB Nation - Login for mobile commenting

Bad Left Hook

Nonito Donaire Says He's Not Running From Rigondeaux, Would Fight Yuriorkis Gamboa

Nonito Donaire keeps talking about Guillermo Rigondeaux, which is only making people want to see that fight. (Photo by Chris Trotman/Getty Images)

Chris Trotman - Getty Images

Nonito Donaire keeps talking about Guillermo Rigondeaux, which is only making people want to see that fight. (Photo by Chris Trotman/Getty Images)

Nonito Donaire said on The Boxing Lab radio show that he doesn't want to face Guillermo Rigondeaux, since Rigondeaux makes for boring fights, which drew some pretty quick criticism. It seems Donaire has heard those critics and is attempting to clarify his position, speaking with Ryan Maquinana of CSN Bay Area and BoxingScene.com. Here's what he had to say:

"I want a fight that the fans are excited to see. I felt bad for the last fight. I don’t want that because they gave me a lot of support. A lot of people showed up, and I felt bad for the fans because as much as I tried to do whatever I can, the guy never gave it up. I’m afraid that fighting guys like that will destroy boxing. It will just ruin the fans, and just ruin my credibility."

This is perhaps mildly dramatic. First of all, not to be a jerk, there aren't enough people watching Nonito Donaire fights to "destroy boxing" if they're boring. Second of all, he won every round. No one blamed Nonito for the fight against Narvaez being bad, so the concern over his credibility is another over-the-top statement. The only criticism Donaire caught after the Narvaez fight was people noticing his technical flaws and things he could have done but didn't.

Furthermore, if Donaire and his team were looking to make only entertaining fights, why the hell did they sign a fight with Omar Narvaez in the first place?

Star-divide

Did Donaire, his trainer, his manager, or anyone at Top Rank scout Narvaez at all? My impression has been since they made the fight that they did not. It's not like it was a fight someone was aching to see -- Narvaez is a middle-aged guy with no fanbase outside of Argentina who fights in a boring style. What the hell did they expect?

All I'm saying is that the after-the-fact disgust over Narvaez's non-performance could have been avoided by simply not fighting him at all. He'd never even fought at bantamweight before so it's not like he was some top contender to Donaire's throne. And again, seriously: Nobody out there was asking for Donaire vs Narvaez. The last five days have had more demand for Donaire vs Rigondeaux than there ever was for the Narvaez fight.

Anyway, Donaire went on to say that he wants to face only entertaining fighters like Wilfredo Vazquez Jr (his opponent on February 4), Jorge Arce, and Toshiaki Nishioka.

[ Related: Rigondeaux Nightmare Matchup For Donaire ]

The Vazquez fight is happening, and fine, it's a 122 debut. The Nishioka fight is a fine call-out. But I don't know, I think he needs to stop harping on Arce. Everyone and their dog knows that Jorge Arce is tailor made for him and that he's taking basically no risk with that fight. Look, I understand why that fight will happen, and it's a reality I'll accept knowing that what I'm going to see has 0% chance of being boring, but it's a matchmaker's dream, so long as that matchmaker is pro-Donaire.

Donaire also said he'd like to fight Yuriorkis Gamboa, but there's a catch here, too:

"And as much as people say, ‘Oh, you’re running away,’ if I’m running away, [and] if you want a Cuban that wants to fight me, then let’s have [Yuriorkis] Gamboa. I think that’s an interesting fight. Don’t give me something that’s going to be boring for boxing. If you want a good fight, let’s get Gamboa, you know what I’m saying?"

Yes, absolutely, Gamboa vs Donaire is very interesting and we'd all love to see it. But this doesn't jibe with Donaire's claim that he's looking to dominate at 122 pounds, which will take more than two fights against Vazquez and Arce. Plus, Gamboa, who has been at 126 for his pro career, is looking to make a firm move up to 130 or even 135, and is maybe chasing a fight with Brandon Rios.

So this is kind of empty. "Yeah, I want to dominate at 122, but I don't want Rigondeaux, so how about I call out Gamboa, a fight that doesn't fit in with the rest of my plans or his?" Just sayin'.

The funniest thing is, the more Donaire talks about not wanting to fight Rigondeaux, with Rigondeaux having thrown his name into the hat after a one-sided win all of five days ago, the more Donaire is making a fight the public wants to see by appearing to be afraid of the fight, or at least giving some the impression that he is.

I'd say that maybe that's the plan, but I don't think it is. Trainer Robert Garcia has already tried to throw cold water on this fight, too. Someone in the comments earlier made the perfect suggestion, saying that Team Donaire should have said, "Sure, totally, we'd love to fight Rigondeaux later." It's not like Top Rank is going to force that issue or anything. Why look bad when you don't have to? They didn't have to avoid Rigondeaux. Top Rank would have gladly done it for them.

0 recs  |  15 comments

Comments

I don’t think we’ll ever see him against Gamboa.
Not just the weight class issue, more so Arum will pull another JuanMa vs Gamboa.
Arum wants another Filipino cash cow, he’s not going to put Donaire in with fighters that have a chance.

Funny how no one thinks he will risk a budding star

But when he does….as he did with Juanma against Mtagwe and then Salido….he gets accused of ruining a potential fight with Gamboa.

The fact is Juanma was an accident waiting to happen and his job was to Win; as in beat whoever he was matched with. He didn’t.

But guess what. There are plenty of other fights and Juanma (and Gamboa) have to win them to get the ones that will make them real stars and big money.

Mtagwa was not a risk on paper. Come on. That it turned out to be one was the first huge red flag on Lopez. I thought the Salido fight was a risk (and went in leaning toward Salido thanks to the Mtagwa mess), but Salido was coming off of a loss to Gamboa, so I’m pretty sure they booked that fight for Lopez to win.

There’s something about Rigo that seems to concern Donaire. And I think it might be the body shot that ended the fight. Donaire has always been huge for his weights. But he’s never had a muscular frame. He’s always been tall and lean. He doesn’t seem to have the frame that can take a substained body attack. I could be wrong but like Scott mentioned the way Donaire is going about this kind of puts him in a bad light.

I’ve read comments about Rigo being boring and unproven. He can be boring. But that’s pretty much by choice. He goes at his own pace. Unproven is pretty much only said by those who don’t know his history and only look at the limited pro fights he’s had. But that’s not an accurate statement. Rigo doesn’t carry himself like a former amateur star. He carries himself like an elite champion carries himself. Cuz in reality he is one. Where he was born is the reason for his late pro start. If not I think he would of won titles in multiple classes by now

donaire messed up by saying he wasn’t interesting in fighting rigondeaux, and worse saying that he prefer gamboa, when they are now in divisions apart, a fight with rigo would be interesting and not necesarily rigo has to kick nonito’s ass, but now there is an impression that nonito is kind a afraid of rigo, well i think that way…

totally agree. I think donaire just made it worse by mentioning gamboa, knowing he is already 1 weight class above & will be on the move possibly 2 more classes north, out of donaire’s range.

also, Scott’s point about the backlash to the after effects of the narvaez fight is right on. they knew what kinda fighter narvaez was yet still made the bout.

I blame Donaire for Manny and Floyd not fighting.

But, I’ll forgive him if he fights a guy I know he can beat in an exciting manner. There, that’s how it’s supposed to work? Right?

top rank wants another mega star and i dont see rigo and donaire going on anytime soon..i think rigo beats him. and i dont think a fight between donaire and rigo will be boring..narvaez showed up for a paycheck and to not get knocked out..i think rigo will come to box and to win.

As I probably said elsewhere, Rigondeaux is a b-side fighter who plays to his opponent and doesn’t expend his energies trying to make the fight, for better or worse.

In the case of Ramos, who did absolutely nothing in there, that can make for something relatively boring. Against Donaire, it could be absolute magic.

Donaire’s assessment is just wrong, and the more he tries to explain this one, the worse it’s gonna look.

well put & I agree

If Donaire faced Nishioka at 122 & Gamboa at 126

I don’t believe there is any reason to complain about Donaire’s competition. Nishioka arguably is the top guy at 122 and Gamboa is the top guy a division higher. Frankly, out of every single fight possible at featherweight and below, Gamboa vs. Donaire may be the one I’m most excited about. If, however, Gamboa moves up in weight to face Rios, Donaire is left with Nishioka, and Rigondeaux is a much better legacy fight than Arce. No questions about it.

Fighting Arce would be a 100% money grab and nothing more. I know Arce is an action fighter and known for fun fights, but I think this would be so lop-sided it wouldn’t be very entertaining (unless you’re a sadist).

Well if Rigo fights Alexander Bakhtin next and wins like Rigo’s manager says the I hope Rigo fights Nishioka. I’d rather see that fight since Donaire wants to fight limited fighters and over the hill fighters.

Donaire can fight

But he makes some dumb ass statements and moves outside of the ring.

You must Login with your SB Nation account and be a member of Bad Left Hook to post a comment.