Hits keep coming for unbeaten UBF champ Gray
as he puts perfect record on the line Oct. 17th
UNCASVILLE, Conn. -- Kendrick
Ball always knew his protégé,Khiary
Gray, had the right pedigree to be a star in the junior middleweight
division, but this recent string of first-round knockouts? It's bordering on
the absurd.
"The
situation is a little overwhelming," Ball admitted. "It's not
something we plan, but what we work on is if you happen to give us an opening,
we'll take that opening and hurt you.
"I
always knew how good he was. It was just a matter of showing everyone
else."
Gray
(9-0, 7 KOs), the reigning, undefeated Universal Boxing Federation Northeast
champion from Worcester, Mass., has won his last six fights by first-round
knockout, including his most recent bout Sept. 18th against Kenton Sippio-Cook in what was supposed to be the first
major test of his career. Instead, Gray ripped through his opponent in
impressive fashion, stopping Sippio-Cook at the 2-minute, 2-second mark of the
opening round to capture the vacant UBF strap.
Less
than a month later, Gray is back at it, scheduled to face Denver's Marcus Dawkins (4-2, 1 KO) in a six-round bout Saturday, Oct. 17th, 2015 on the undercard of CES Boxing's "Gold Standard"
event at Mohegan Sun Arena, headlined by the long-awaited return of former
world champion Demetrius
Andrade.
Tickets
are priced at $25.00, $50.00, $125.00 and $200.00 (VIP) and available for
purchase online at www.cesboxing.com or www.mohegansun.com,www.ticketmaster.com, by phone at 401-724-2253/2254, or at the Mohegan Sun Box Office. All fights and fighters are subject
to change.
Will
Gray finally face some opposition and get some much-needed rounds? Ball hopes
so.
"We
train for longer rounds. When we were fighting four-rounders, we were already
training for eight-rounders. Right now, we're doing six-rounders, so we're
training for 12-round fights," Ball said. "I'm not worried about the
rounds. Eventually, I know we'll run into someone that can probably take it a
little longer and we'll get him out later on, but I think people are finally
starting to see more of what he can do."
The
irony of Gray's impressive streak, Ball said, is fight fans really haven't seen
the best of what he has to offer. They've yet to see how he'll respond in a
major test, or how he'll hold up physically and mentally over the course of a
six- or eight-round fight. Time will tell. For now, some of Gray's best
attributes are being overshadowed by the sheer violence and astonishment of his
current knockout streak.
"Everyone
knows he can punch. You can see he throws a good body shot. He's pretty
accurate," Ball said. "What people don't understand is he has really
good defense and his boxing IQ is really high. We're hoping to get some work in
with someone who can give us some rounds so he can display that also."
Dawkins
might be the one. The 5-foot-9 lefty recently boxed 10 rounds in his last
fight, or precisely as many rounds as Gray has boxed in his last seven bouts. A
former football and basketball standout in high school, Dawkins recalls
watchingMike Tyson dismantle Michael Spinks in 91 seconds back in 1988 at the age
of 9. He immediately caught the boxing bug, but admittedly didn't put on a pair
of gloves until 2004. A self-proclaimed "defensive fighter," he's
gone the distance in four of his six professional bouts.
"He's
kind of a loopy fighter. Throws wide, loopy punches. Nothing I haven't seen
before," Gray said. "It plays right into my game plan."
Echoing
the same sentiment as his long-time trainer, Gray thought Sippio-Cook would
give him "at least three, four rounds," but went for the kill when
"the opportunity presented itself." The beginning of the end came
with 1:16 remaining when Gray cracked his opponent with an overhand
right that brought the crowd to its feet.
"That
was the first one the whole fight," Gray said. "After that, he began
to buckle every time I hit him."
Eleven
seconds later, Gray delivered another right to the temple that sent Sippio-Cook
to the canvas for good.
"I
learned a lot in that fight. I learned to put more of my weight on my back leg
and get more power out of my punches. Every fight, I learn something,"
Gray said.
"I
just took it the same way I took my last fight. That's how I approach every
fight. I don't try to put pressure on myself. I just go out and fight. I had a
different mindset. I knew this was what I had been waiting for, a chance to
step up."
Now
he wants a chance to showcase his full arsenal in front of a packed house under
the bright lights of Mohegan Sun. He might get that chance Oct. 17th,
unless those trademark body shots get through.
"We
did that a lot in the amateurs, and some of the fights he lost were due to the
fact they weren't scoring body shots," Ball said. "I always knew he
was a good body puncher and it was going to work out perfect for us when we
turned pro, so even if we fought a guy we knew we'd eventually beat the body
up, wear him down fast enough and beat the body to slow him down.
"There
won't be anybody -- well, I can't say anybody, but it's going to take a really
strong person to be able to take body shots for a certain amount of rounds.
We're definitely going to touch the body a certain amount of times in a round
where eventually three or four rounds later they're either going to shit on
themselves or they'll be pissing blood."
The
10-round main event, promoted in association with Joe DeGuardia's Star Boxing
and Artie Pelullo's Banner Promotions, features Andrade (21-0, 14 KOs) against
Argentinian Dario Fabian
Pucheta (20-2, 11 KOs) for
the vacant World Boxing Organization (WBO) and World Boxing Association (WBA)
International Titles, Andrade's first fight in 16 months.
"Gold
Standard" also includes the return of world-rated lightweight
"Hammerin'"Hank Lundy (25-5-1 , 12 KOs ), No. 15 in the WBC, fighting for the
WBC's vacant Continental Americas Title at 135 pounds. Super middleweight Vladine Biosse (15-7-2 , 7 KOs ) of Providence , R.I. , returns in a
six-round bout against Nathan
Miller(6-0-1, 4 KOs ) of New Brunswick , Canada .
Also
featured on the undercard, New Haven, Conn., featherweight Josh Crespo (4-2-3, 2 KOs) battles Albany, N.Y.,
vet Rigoberto Miranda in a four-round bout; cruiserweight Mike Marshall (1-0, 1 KO) of the Bronx faces
newcomer Hampton Miller of New Haven in a four-rounder and
featherweights Carlos Pena of Worcester and Phil Dudley of Providence make their professional
debuts against one another in a four-round bout.
For
more information on "Gold Standard" visit www.cesboxing.com, follow @CESBOXING on
Twitter and Instagram and "like" the official CES Boxing Facebook fan
page.
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