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Jorge Cota Vows To Destroy Sebastian Fundora’s Confidence, Beat Him

April 9, 2021 by admin

Hard-hitting Mexican contender Jorge “El Demonio” Cota vowed to be the first person to beat rising contender Sebastian “The Towering Inferno” Fundora when they meet in FOX Sports PBC Pay-Per-View action on Saturday, May 1 from Dignity Health Sports Park in Carson, California.

“My style makes a very difficult fight for anyone,” said Cota. “He’s definitely a unique boxer and a good prospect. The only way to beat him will be to use my experience. I will destroy his confidence and take advantage of his youth and inexperience.”

Cota has a tall task literally in Fundora, who stands an astounding six-feet six-inches tall. Cota was originally supposed to face Fundora last December, and has now had another extended period of time to prepare for the undefeated foe.

“I’ve never spent more time preparing for one opponent,” said Cota. “I know him very well. I have followed his career from the beginning. Having this extra time gave me more opportunity to study and get ready to surprise him. I’ve fought fighters who are tall and use their height. They weren’t quite as tall as Fundora, but I’m confident that with the sparring I’ve had I’ll be 100% ready.”

The 33-year-old Cota has faced current unified 154-pound champion Jermell Charlo and former unified champion Jeison Rosario, in addition to most recently stopping Thomas LaManna in January 2020. For this fight, Cota has been training in the altitude in Tucson, Arizona to help give him an edge.

“Me and my whole team are here in Tucson for training and we love it,” said Cota. “I’ve worked very hard every day in the high altitude. The improvement that the altitude has had on my stamina is going to show and be the difference against Fundora.”

On May 1, the Los Mochis, Sinaloa, Mexico native will enter the ring on a card headlined by a battle between Mexican-American heavyweight stars as former unified heavyweight champion Andy Ruiz Jr. battles all-action Chris Arreola. In addition, the entire pay-per-view undercard is filled with Mexican and Mexican-American fighters going toe-to-toe, adding to the motivation to put on a memorable show.

“It’s an honor to be on the undercard of such a great all-Mexican event,” said Cota. “Every fight is going to be a war, because this card is full of proud Mexican warriors.”

For Cota, he believes his preparation and will to win will combine for him to deliver not just a great performance, but steal the show on a night full of exciting style matchups.

“I want to be sure that my head, heart and body will be in perfect condition to provide the fight of the night on May 1,” said Cota. “I’m going to be mentally and physically ready for anything this test throws my way.”

https://summerolympics2020s.com

Jones wins third European taekwondo title

April 9, 2021 by admin

Jade Jones (right) is the 2012 and 2016 Olympic gold medallist in the women’s -57 kg category

Double Olympic taekwondo champion Jade Jones has clinched her third European Championships title.

The 28-year-old defeated Turkey’s Hatice Ilgun 20-5 in the women’s -57kg final in Sofia, Bulgaria.

Jones had victories over Belgium’s Raheleh Asemani, Finland’s Suvi Mikkonen and Romania’s Alexandra Ge Rache on her way to the final.

Great Britain team-mate Bradly Sinden won silver in the men’s -68kg, losing 35-26 to Sarmat Tcakoev of Russia.

Jones is part of a 15-strong GB squad this week that includes reigning European champion Lauren Williams, who will look to show her return to form on Saturday, ahead of this summer’s Tokyo Games, after struggling with injuries over the last two years.

On Sunday, triple world gold medallist and world number one Bianca Walkden will be the favourite for gold in the +73kg division, while male heavyweight Mahama Cho could effectively secure his place at the Olympics by securing a podium finish.

In Tokyo, Jones is aiming to become the first fighter in history to win three Olympic taekwondo gold medals after claiming titles at London 2012 and Rio 2016.

“To win for the third time feels amazing, especially in an Olympic year,” said Jones.

“When I heard the national anthem I just thought I want to be hearing this again in a few months’ time in Tokyo.

“Because of the pandemic there have been lots of things we have had to handle and it feels so weird having absolutely no crowd. But at least now I have had some practice fighting without one.

“I have got some time off now because it has been a long year. So, I will enjoy that and then come back hungry again.

https://summerolympics2020s.com

‘I’m not a little girl anymore’: Simone Biles on world domination, pandemic ennui and staying on for Paris 2024

April 9, 2021 by admin

So much has changed in the five years since Simone Biles lit up the 2016 Olympics in Rio de Janeiro, affirming her presumptive status as the greatest gymnast ever with four gold medals in seven days.

The 24-year-old from suburban Houston moved out of her parents’ house into her own digs, adopted two French Bulldog puppies (Lilo and Rambo) and went public with boyfriend Jonathan Owens, a safety for the NFL’s Houston Texans. She enlisted the husband-and-wife coaching team of Laurent Landi and Cecile Canqueteau-Landi following an amicable split with longtime personal coach Aimee Boorman. The sport she’s come to define was rocked by the worst sexual abuse scandal in American sports history. And her bid for a historic second straight Olympic all-around title was waylaid by a global pandemic that turned the sports world on its ear.

But as America’s greatest athlete enters the final stages of preparations for the rescheduled Tokyo Games this summer, one familiar constant endures: her only competition is herself.

“I’m not a little girl anymore,” Biles said this week. “I feel like I’ve really found my voice and kind of used that for good in the world and on social media platforms, so that’s been a big plus. I live on my own now, I have a house, I have a dog. I feel like I’ve just grown so much these past few years into the young woman I am today. I’m really excited about life and what’s to come and how I’ve changed and evolved as a person.”

The 4ft 8in, 105lb dynamo, who was born three months short of the age cutoff for the 2012 London Games, was already hailed as the best gymnast in history before she’d even competed at an Olympics. Now she’s the runaway favorite to become the oldest woman in more than five decades to win the Olympic all-around title, the sport’s most coveted prize, and the first repeat champion since Vera Caslavska did it for the former Czechoslovakia in 1968.

“We’re four months out. I’m feeling pretty good, pretty confident. All of our training has geared us for this moment, so I’m just super excited for the journey,” Biles said. “It’s been tough, but during our time off, we still did Zoom workouts with our coaches, so we were still engaged. And as soon as we got back in the gym, it was kind of just like full speed again, to try to get ready and gear up for this year’s Games. It’s been tough, but it’s definitely been worth it.”

For Biles, who has won every major team and individual all-around competition she’s entered since her senior debut in 2013, Tokyo was long expected to be the capstone of an incandescent career. But she threw the sport a curveball this week by leaving the door open for a third Olympic appearance at the Paris Games in 2024, when she would be 28.

Simone Biles
Simone Biles vaulted to crossover stardom after winning four golds and a bronze at the 2016 Olympics. Photograph: Tim Warner

“Honestly, right now my main focus is the Olympic Games, and then after I have the tour that we’ve put together,” Biles said. “Then afterwards I’m not so sure, because Cecile and Laurent are from Paris and they’ve kind of guilted me into at least being a specialist and coming back [for 2024]. But the main goal is 2021 Olympics, tour, and then we’ll have to see.”

After her star-making coronation in Rio, Biles returned home to the whirlwind, peripatetic existence of a mainstream celebrity, slingshotting around the US for red-carpet walks, glossy photo shoots and Dancing With the Stars. Then came a hard-earned series of vacations with the family and friends she’d sacrificed so much of her teenage years for.

It seemed there was no room to go but down. But when she returned to competition after a year-and-a-half hiatus, Biles continued to rewrite the record books while somehow raising her level on the biggest stages, eclipsing Vitaly Scherbo’s record as the most decorated gymnast in world championships history with 25 career medals. To the resignation of her rivals, she’s proven untouchable even when below her best: Her margin of victory at 2018 worlds was the largest ever despite two falls and a kidney stone that sent her to a Doha emergency room less than 24 hours before she was scheduled to compete.

In 2019, Simone Biles became only the third woman to win five golds at a single world championships, joining Larisa Latynina in 1958 and Vlasta Dĕkanová in 1938.

Then came the pandemic, followed by the inevitable postponement of her much-anticipated Olympic encore.

“The main thing was just like trying to stay healthy another year, trying to have your mental game up another year,” Biles said. “It’s another year on the body. It’s just a lot to think about, but then at the end of the day, it’s like we worked so hard. We’re not going to give up. We’re going to keep striving for this goal that all the athletes have kind of put in their head is the 2020 Olympics. And once it was postponed, it’s like I’ve gone too far to give up now. So, we’re going to take a little bit of a break.

“And we did. We quarantined for seven weeks before we got to ease back into the gym. And once we did that, we still were doing one workout a day before we could go back to two workouts and that honesty kind of helped keep my spirit up and think that it was going to be OK. Now, obviously, I’m still a year older, but it’s been my goal for a while and I wasn’t ready to hang that up just because of the quarantine and the postponement.”

We’re not just athletes but people, too. And we have a right to speak up for what we believe in.

Biles found silver linings in the disappointment, including the opportunity to take leave from her grueling six-hour-a-day, six-day-a-week training sessions and spent more time with her loved ones.

“I was able just to kind of gather my thoughts and protect and take care of my body, my mind, my spirit,” Biles said. “But what’s been really exciting is being able to experience life with my family, my friends, getting to go to my boyfriend’s games. I told him I’ve never been so many games in a season in my life because usually I’m just so busy all over the place.

“But in the beginning of the quarantine, it was really, really hard because me and my family were really tight-knit and my parents wouldn’t let me over to their house for months. And so it was just like the dogs and I chilling at home and I would take them on so many walks. I think they were so sick of me because I was just so bored.”

Once loath to speak out on thorny issues, Biles has become an outspoken voice for change within USA Gymnastics. Since coming forward as a survivor of sexual abuse by Larry Nassar in 2018, she has openly criticized the national governing body for its failures in protecting and caring for its athletes. Her tweets led to the closing of the Karolyi Ranch, the place where many of the gymnasts were abused, and played a role in the resignation of USA Gymnastics president Mary Bono.

Simone Biles
Biles landed her triple-twisting double backflip, also known as the triple-double, at the 2019 world championships in Stuttgart. Photograph: Getty Images

Biles, who’s also thrown her support behind the Black Lives Matter movement, spots further opportunity to leverage her global celebrity for a greater good with the USOPC announcing it will allow social justice demonstrations at the US Olympic trials, in a break with the International Olympic Committee policy.

“If you were to ask me years ago, I would say no, because I was just a little bit nervous of what Marta [Karolyi] or other people would think,” she said. “But now that I’ve kind of found my voice, I feel like not only can it benefit me, the team, and the people that are supporting and advocating for, but it kind of helps everybody and people get to see a little bit of who you are just besides an athlete and what you stand for.

“I’ve thought about it a little bit because as soon as they announced it I was like, ‘Oh my gosh, we could do so much with the [leotards] a make a statement for good. So it’s been really exciting, but, it wasn’t easy to find my voice or to put it out there because it’s a little bit scary about what people are going to say. Because at the end of the day, a lot of people are like, ‘Oh, you’re an athlete.’

“But we’re not just athletes but people, too. And we have a right to speak up for what we believe in.”

Biles confirmed she plans to compete three times in the run-up to Tokyo: at the US Classic in May, the US national championships in early June and the US Olympic trials in late June. Which means she’s back in the grind of her famously rigorous training regimen at the World Champions Centre, the sprawling 56,000 sq ft gym outside Houston built by her parents as their retirement venture.

“The first practice starts at 7am and then we go to 10.30 and that starts off with warmup and conditioning,” she said. “Then we do beam and bars twice a day. And if we do vault in the morning, then we’ll do floor in the afternoon.

“At 10.30, I’ll head home and usually have a quick lunch, chicken or salmon, whatever that may be. I don’t have a crazy strict diet. I kind of eat whatever I want, just in proportion, but definitely on the leaner and healthier side.

If Biles performs the Yurchenko double pike at the Olympics, it will be named after her in the code of points.

“Then I take a shower. I try to be down from my nap at 12, wake up at 1:30, then I’m back at the gym at 2 to 5, or whenever we finish working out. On Mondays and Wednesdays, I get therapy after with our trainer here and then that’s kind of how it is. And then Thursday, we have a half day, Saturday we have a half day, so at the end of the week, it’s about 32 to 34 hours. But since we’re gearing up for competition season, we’re doing more routine work.”

Despite winning by margins that are unusually large for gymnastics, Biles keeps adding new and more difficult skills to her routines and pushing the technical limits of the sport. Lately, she’s been drilling a Yurchenko double pike vault, a technique no woman has ever thrown down in competition. Should she land it in Tokyo as planned, it will become the fifth element named for Biles in the women’s artistic gymnastics code of points.

“I know we will definitely debut it before the Olympics,” she said. “Just because we need to see, get out there and kind of control my adrenaline once I do that before the Olympics so we can perfect it in competition before that.”

It’s all the same for Biles after nearly a decade of gravity-defying supremacy. Somehow, there’s nowhere to go but up.


https://summerolympics2020s.com

[VIDEO] JARON ENNIS TELLS PORTER, SPENCE, & CRAWFORD “JUST CALL” TO DANCE; OPEN TO DANNY GARCIA PHILLY CLASH || FIGHTHYPE.COM

April 9, 2021 by admin

Undefeated welterweight contender Jaron Ennis and former world champion Sergey Lipinets hosted the final press conference leading up to their upcoming April 10 showdown. You don’t want to miss what they had to say about the fight and much more. Check it out!

[ Follow Ron Goodall on Twitter @FighteriQMedia ]


https://summerolympics2020s.com

[VIDEO] PACQUIAO GETS “KEY WITH CRAWFORD” TIP FROM THOMAS DULORME; RAW ON “TOUCHING THE CANVAS” STANIONIS CLASH || FIGHTHYPE.COM

April 9, 2021 by admin

FightHype.com recently caught up with welterweight contender Thomas Dulorme just days away from his upcoming clash with Eimantas Stanionis. You don’t want to miss what he had to say about the fight and much more. Check it out!

[ Follow Sean Zittel on Twitter @Sean_Zittel ]


https://summerolympics2020s.com

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