October 31, 2024

Joel Diaz: Francisco Vargas has to break Miguel Berchelt down in rematch

By Michael Woods

Badlefthook.com

The kid is 34 years old, is what I started to type for this story, and I stopped myself.

Francisco Vargas is 34 and yeah, not a kid.

The Mexican hitter maybe be younger than me, and yeah, the older you get, that can be the case, everyone younger looks like a “kid.”

But the 25-1-2 (18 KO) boxer trained by Joel Diaz is an ultra-seasoned pugilist and thus, how he’s handled, and expectations for him going into his May 11 rematch with Miguel Berchelt (35-1 with 31 KOs), must be adjusted. A pro since 2010, Vargas lost via stoppage in round 11 against Berchelt in Cali in Jan. 2017.

He has since scored Ws over Stephen Smith and Rod Salka, that latter his most recent outing in April 2018. So, it’ll be a lengthy time away from active scrapping when Vargas seeks to prove that seasoning can edge relative youth versus the 27-year-old fellow Mexican.

“To get the win Francisco knows he has to work extra hard, harder than the first one,” Joel Diaz told BLH. “He lost his title, for this one he needs to be very, very focused, needs to be solid, break down Berchelt with his experience. Berchelt is the younger fighter, physically, has strong, good conditioning, so we have to be very smart, break him down early, take it to the later rounds.”

Vargas popped on more radars when he beat Juan Manuel Lopez in 2014; in 2015, he battled Takashii Miura with the WBC super feather crown up for grabs, and he won via TKO-9. He drew with ultra-ultra vet Orlando Salido and then dropped the strap to Berchelt.

In that tango, Berchelt had the edge in strength and power, and he looked a bit fresher, like the younger lion. In a rematch, Vargas will want to be shoring up the D, fight smarter, not harder, and not allow Berchelt free looks at his head and torso.

I was curious, did trainer Diaz like how Vargas responded mentally to the loss to Berchelt?

“He is a Mexican warrior, it’s a pleasure working with him. After the loss he told me exactly what went wrong in fight and camp. He tried a new strength and conditioning coach. Conditioning coaches are very different in training for baseball or soccer, you train a boxer completetly different. Instead of helping them it’s not benefiting them at all. Young strength and conditioning coaches get the opportunity to train boxers and sometimes they try too hard to impress you, they overdo it, overtain your fighter.

“You have to have certain limits. A fighter needs proper training and rest. They can be over-trained, tight, be drained, having done too much work. The last two fights I’ve been with Vargas, it’s gone very, very well. I do my own conditioning. I do the wrapping, the cuts, and strength and conditioning. I do everything. My guys never have problems with their hands, never an issue with cuts, I’m the whole package for my fighters!”

Joel also handles Diego De La Hoya, who is back in action April 13, on the Jaime Munguia undercard. He is quite enthused by prospect Israil Madrimov, and enjoys working with Russian and Eastern Euro fighters, because of their work ethic and humility.

Of Madrimov, Joel told me, “He’s going to be a superstar very quickly. Don’t blink on this kid. He’s the next superstar in the sport, I guarantee. Monday two days after his last win (on March 9), he was back in the gym. The kids from there, they train on a daily basis, their nutrition is very consistent, they don’t walk around more than 7-8 pounds over. Madrimov, he does nothing but train hard, never complains. He loves the hard work.”

For the record, Joel’s gym is the Indio Boys and Girls Club. Another client is 11-0 Russian Radhzab Butaev, a welter/junior middleweight. He says to keep an eye on his 4-0 heavyweight from Russia, Bakhodir Jalolov, as well. Same goes for 5-0 Uzbek Murodjon Akhmadliev, ranked No. 1 by the WBA at 122, behind champ Danny Roman. And his client lists doesn’t stop there. Clearly, he has an affinity for these athletes from that region and they for him.

You probably want to have Joel Diaz on your trainer watch list, come to think of it, because in a year’s time, a bunch of his guys will probably hold belts, and his profile will get a bump because of it. And a win by Vargas, an underdog versus Berchelt, would accelerate that process.

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