The road has been
bumpy at times, but Kevin
Cobbs is living proof that
all roads eventually lead home.
"Sometimes
you've got to go left," Cobbs said, "to find out you should've taken
the right turn."
More than five
years since his professional debut, the Willimantic, Conn. , native may have finally found the path
worth traveling.
With a new team
behind him and a fresh outlook on his career, the 6-foot-2 Cobbs (10-2, 4 KOs)
returns to the ring Friday, July 15th, 2016 to challenge undefeated Angel Camacho
Jr. (15-0, 5 KOs) of
Providence for Camacho's Universal Boxing Federation (UBF) International and
New England Light Heavyweight Titles in the 10-round main event of CES Boxing's
stacked summer fight card at Twin River Casino.
Coming off a loss
in January on national television, Cobbs, 32, is wasting no time jumping back
into the mix. Training out of George Foreman III's Everybody Fights fitness gym
in Boston (formerly known as The Club), where he also works as a personal
trainer, Cobbs has surrounded himself with a new team that includes Foreman,
trainer Chris Daveiga,
strength coach Kirby Espinal and at least one familiar face in
trainer / advisor Israel
Santiago, who has been with him since Day 1.
"He's
family," Cobbs said of Santiago . "He always will be."
Rather than work
his way back into contention slowly, Cobbs instead decided to end his two-year
absence from Twin River against arguably the toughest light
heavyweight in the region in Camacho, who has beaten everyone in his path since
returning to prominence late in 2014. It's a fight Cobbs has lobbied for since
Camacho knocked out Rich
Gingras last September.
"In this area
I really, really think I'm one of the top light heavyweights, period,"
Cobbs said. "Some of the guys that have the belt or had an opportunity to
fight for the belt and were called the best light heavyweights in the area,
they never fought me. Technically, I strongly believe if you are the best you
have to fight everyone to be the best."
Cobbs faced one of
the best in January in red-hot prospect David
Benavidez on a night when he
admittedly wasn't at his best. Problems with his training camp, coupled with a
difficult weight cut to 170 pounds, a weight he hadn't fought at since 2011,
reached a boiling point on fight night when a mentally and physically drained
Cobbs absorbed a second-round knockout loss on FOX Sports 1, the biggest fight
of his career to date.
"I honestly
feel like I was talked into that one really bad," Cobbs said. "A lot
of things didn't play into my favor, like coming into my dressing room and
telling me I've got 15 minutes before I'm on, but beforehand being told I'm the
second to last fight when it takes 15 minutes just to wrap your hands alone.
"I walked out
to that fight cold and I walked out to that fight under weight because I had
never been there. I walked out to that fight weak. It just wasn't me."
Mired in a
tug-of-war between remaining loyal to his camp and doing what was best for
himself, Cobbs eventually decided it was time to reboot and invest in those
who'd invest as much time into him.
"Deep down
inside, I felt like something just doesn't feel right, you know? It really eats
at you mentally, but the thing you're taught and you always grow up with is
loyalty," he said. "Family first. Just sticking by people instead of
sometimes you have to think about you. It really does eat at you because
sometimes I'll stay somewhere and not leave because of my loyalty. Then it'll
run me into the ground instead of stepping up and doing what I've got to do for
myself.
"This time
around, I literally shut everyone and everything and did things myself."
Cobbs' new boxing
family at Everybody Fights has helped restore the feeling he first felt more
than a decade ago when he stepped into the ring as an amateur fighting out of
Burlington, Vt., one of many stops along the way on his wild journey.
"There's so
much knowledge coming through this building," Cobbs said. "Now I've
got my own personal trainer, conditioning and strength, nutrition -- everything
is right here at home. It feels good. I don't have to search for help anymore.
You know me. I was always searching for help and trying to find where I'm
supposed to be. Even with a great trainer, one thing I've learned is that even
if they're a great trainer, they still might not be for you."
Now he's less than
three weeks away from the opportunity of a lifetime, a chance to reestablish
his footing as one of the top fighters in the region after more than two years
away from his second home at Twin River .
"That's why we
really wanted to figure out how to get back inside that arena and really start
being with the fans, with the people that love me most. It just feels good to
be back over there," he said.
"You've got to
imagine I've been wanting this fight for so long, so there are no real nerves
mentally. The only nerves that might come are from stepping in that arena where
my career started, which I can break once I get out there and see some familiar
faces.
"This is my
way of proving that when things are done right you can really come out on top.
I know Angel is a great fighter, but I really do believe that when my training
is consistent we really have a great opportunity to bring back that belt. No matter
what happens, I'm bringing my best that day. I can tell you that much."
The Camacho-Cobbs
main event is one of three title fights July 15th; Cranston, R.I.,
super lightweight Nick DeLomba (9-1, 2 KOs) makes the first defense
of his New England Title in a six-round bout against Oscar Bonilla (3-1-2) of Bridgeport, Conn.; and Thomas Falowo (14-3, 8 KOs) of Pawtucket, R.I., the
reigning New England Middleweight Champion, returns to Twin River for the first
time in more than two years and puts his belt on the line in an eight-round
rematch against Jersey City, N.J., slugger Chris
Chatman (13-5-1, 5 KOs), who
beat Falowo at Twin River in 2013.
Tickets for the event are priced at $42.00, $67.00, $102.00 and
$152.00 (VIP) and can be purchased online at www.cesboxing.com, www.twinriver.com orwww.ticketmaster.com, by phone at 401-724-2253/2254
or at the Twin River Casino Players Club. All
fights and fighters are subject to change.
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