(The Philippine Star) | Updated April 6, 2013 - 12:00am
MACAU – Welcome to the Zou Shiming Show.
On Saturday, at the 15,000 seat Cotai Arena of The Venetial Hotel
here, China’s boxing superstar makes his pro debut in a four-round
flyweight match against Mexico’s Eleazar Valenzuela.
It’s a four-rounder, and yes, it’s the main bout of the evening.
“How can you have a four-rounder for the main event?” asked Top Rank
chief Bob Arum, who’s putting up the “Fists of Gold” card, the biggest
so far in Asia’s gambling capital.
“Well, you can when you have Zou Shiming and his incredible amateur record,” added Arum.
And it’s not impossible when you’re talking about a boxer who won the
World Championships three times in 2005, 2007 and 2011, and two Olympic
gold medals in 2008 in Beijing and 2012 in London.
Everybody knows how difficult it is to win a gold medal in the Olympics, and this 31-year-old Chinese has two.
Shiming, with a smiling face, is all over Macau, his face seen on
television, in the streets, in the hotel lobbies and the casinos.
“Last night I was having dinner and his face was on the place mat,”
said Freddie Roach, who trained Shiming for two months at the Wild Card
Gym just for this fight.
“He’s everywhere. I think he’s the most famous Chinese athlete
today,” added Roach, who believes that Shiming can become a world
champion in one year.
Shiming is a fast learner, according to the celebrated trainer, and
it wasn’t that hard to teach and show him the ropes as a professional
fighter.
“In the amateurs you score points and protect the lead. In the pros,
you don’t sell tickets without knocking people out. He’s not here to
score points anymore,” said Roach.
Everything remains to be seen.
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