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Fresh off a 13-month layoff, featherweight star Gonzalez is rested and ready to make his mark among the sport's best January 21 at Mohegan Sun Arena
Irvin Gonzalez Jr.
 

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Uncasville, CT  Bad news, featherweights: Irvin Gonzalez Jr. is back and finally healthy as he enters his prime.

The Worcester, MA, native returns to the ring for the first time in 13 months on Saturday, January 21 as CES Boxing opens its 2023 season with Winter Brawl at Mohegan Sun Arena.

The 26-year-old Gonzalez (15-3, 11 KOs), a decorated amateur who competed in the 2016 U.S. Olympic Trials, made one of the most difficult, yet beneficial, decisions of his career in 2022 when he sat out the entire year to fully recover from two major surgeries.

In January of 2022, doctors repaired an elbow injury that had been bothering him for years. In April, he had surgery on his hand, another setback that all but derailed his chances of fighting again before the end of the year. The surgery on his elbow was his third; the difference this time was he didn’t halt the recovery process to rush back into the ring.

The end result is a healthier, happier, and well-rested Gonzalez who is mentally and physically ready to make his move in the 126-pound division.

"This is the first time I’ve been injury-free in a long time," Gonzalez said. "In the past when I had injuries, there was always a worry in the back of my mind that something would go wrong. Now I don’t have to worry.

"I took the time to heal completely and mentally I’m in such a better placed now. I’m going into my prime years fully healed."

A fully-healed Gonzalez in his mid-20s could be a game-changer in the featherweight division. At his peak, Gonzalez breezed through his weight class, turning pro at the age of 20 and winning his first 12 fights. After signing with CES in 2019, Gonzalez began his resurgence with back-to-back knockout wins, including a thrilling victory over Yeuri Andujar to capture the WBC Youth title in February of 2020.

Then the pandemic hit, which kept Gonzalez inactive for nine months until he starred on the undercard of the Mike Tyson-Roy Jones extravaganza, narrowly losing to Edward Vazquez in what may have been the fight of the night.

Gonzalez was supposed to return the following summer at CES’ groundbreaking outdoor show in Rhode Island, but the elbow injury flared up, forcing him to withdraw from his scheduled WBC USNBC title bout. Against Adan Ochoa. Gonzalez remained on the shelf until December of 2021 when he beat the dangerous Yeison Vargas in Orlando, another 13-month layoff between bouts.

The obvious goal in 2023 is to be more prolific and remain as active as ever, perhaps enough to line up a major opportunity before the end of the year. Gonzalez fought four times in 2019, but has also stepped in the ring three times in the last three years.

"I want to come out this year on a major note. I want fight after fight after fight," Gonzalez said. "Hopefully, I get the fights I need to get back to where I’m supposed to be and by the end the year hopefully be in the conversation for something big."

The injuries were as big a setback mentality as they were physically; a skilled athlete his entire life, Gonzalez played football, baseball, and soccer and ran cross country in high school, but never suffered physical ailments until he dove deeper into boxing – the sport he chose to pursue over the others. Having boxed since the age of 8, the sudden inability to perform at his best was a bitter pill to swallow for Gonzalez.

"It definitely got frustrating, especially after the first surgery," he said. "When I had to go back a second time knowing it wasn’t fixed, that was tough from a mental standpoint. You try to tell yourself you’re not injured, but I knew I had to get right physically."

With the surgeries behind him, Gonzalez could be one of boxing’s breakthrough stars in 2023. The journey begins January 21 in what might be the biggest fight of Gonzalez’s career – a new lease on life in the squared circle with the much-needed peace of mind to succeed.

Winter Brawl is headlined by heavyweight "The Sicilian Nightmare" Juiseppe Cusumano (21-4, 19 KOs) facing "The Hungarian Hammer" Istvan Bernath (10-1, 8 KOs) in the 10-round main event and the long-awaited return of Stamford, CT, light middleweight Chordale Booker (17-1, 7 KOs) in an eight-round showcase against 37-fight veteran Angel Hernandez (17-17-3, 11 KOs).

The event also features super featherweight Alejandro Paulino (11-0, 9 KOs) putting his undefeated record on the line in a six-round bout against Ryizeemmion Ford (8-3, 6 KOs) and undefeated welterweight Josniel Castro (9-0, 7 KOs), a Boca Raton, FL, native who’s fought his entire pro career in New England from Massachusetts to New Hampshire, facing one of his toughest tests to date in a six-round showdown against Quebec native and Boston resident Mitch Louis Charles (6-3-2, 3 KOs).

For more information, follow CES Boxing on FacebookInstagram and Twitter at @CESBOXING.

INFORMATION

CES Boxing is one of the top promotions in the northeast and one of the few to successfully promote both mixed martial arts and professional boxing. Launched in 1992 by longtime boxing judge Jimmy Burchfield Sr., the promotion is the only in professional boxing to boast two reigning WBC Youth world champions in lightweight Jamaine Ortiz and featherweight Irvin Gonzalez. CES Boxing recently teamed with UFC FIGHT PASS, the world’s No. 1 streaming platform for combat sports, to showcase its events to a worldwide audience, and worked as a promotional consultant for the Mike Tyson-Roy Jones Jr. pay-per-view event in November of 2020.

Mohegan Sun Arena is one of the busiest Arenas in the United States and is ranked consistently among the top venues in the world according to Billboard MagazinePollstar and VenuesNowMohegan Sun Arena finished 2021 with its first "#1 Indoor Arena" ranking for its capacity in the world according to Pollstar and VenuesNow, ranked among the top 10 venues in the United States regardless of size based on ticket sales, and was named "2021 Innovator of the Year" by Celebrity Access for its ViacomCBS residency.  In recent years, the award-winning venue has also been the "#1 Casino Venue in the World," "#1 Social Media Venue in the World" and a seven-time national award winner for "Casino of the Year – Arena" by the Academy of Country Music. For more information on concerts and other great events, visit MoheganSun.com. For information on this week’s schedule, call the Entertainment and Special Events hotline at 1.888.226.7711.

 

–CES–
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Photo courtesy of Will Paul
MIDDLEWEIGHT CHUCK O'NEIL (above), seen here landing a left hand against Dominique Steele in their June bout at Twin River Casino, will move up from 170 pounds and fight in the middleweight division at 185 beginning Friday, Oct. 30th, 2015 when he battles Daniel Vizcaya on the nationally-televised main card of "CES MMA XXXI" at Twin River. O'Neil enjoyed tremendous success at welterweight, even winning CES MMA's 170-pound title, but is hoping to benefit from being stronger and more energetic at 185. 
With no more weight cuts or loss of energy, O'Neil ready to make CES MMA debut in 185-pound division

LINCOLN, R.I. (Oct. 26th, 2015) -- It's fight week and Chuck O'Neil isn't sweating the small stuff.
 
In fact, he's not sweating at all now that he's moving up from 170 pounds to 185 to fight in the middleweight division, which means no exhausting weight cuts, no more trips to the sauna and no additional stress heading into Friday night's nationally-televised bout against Daniel Vizcaya on the main card of "CES MMA XXXI" at Twin River Casino.
 
The difference in O'Neil's appearance and demeanor is noticeable, especially among the clients he works with as a personal trainer at Snap Fitness in Raynham, Mass., less than an hour from his hometown of Bourne.
 
"They all say I'm a fun-loving, good-natured person," O'Neil said, "but they're like, 'You know, usually fight week you're so down and miserable and you're not having fun.' Now I'm still smiling and everything.
 
"I feel good. I've got muscle still on my body. I haven't been eating away at muscle for the last six weeks. I'm walking at a very comfortable weight. This weight cut should be way easier. I feel good. I'm exciting going into Friday to actually feel good and see what I'm able to do with that kind of performance."
 
Some fighters switch weight classes for different reasons. Sometimes it's a strategic move aimed toward taking advantage of a particular skill set (size, strength, speed, etc.). Sometimes it's about money, seeing as though some weight classes are more densely populated than others, thereby offering more lucrative opportunities for big-time TV dollars.
 
Asked why he chose to move from welterweight to middleweight, O'Neil made it perfectly clear "it was all about the weight cut," blaming some of his recent sluggish performances -- even fights he won -- on being physically exhausted come fight night.
 
"I was cutting a tremendous amount of weight," he said. "I was able to rebound my weight back up, but I was just feeling worse and worse every time I was doing it, killing myself to get there. Like I said, my body wasn't actually working properly, so after that last fight, it was time for me to be done at 170 pounds.
 
"I walk around lean at 205. Getting down to 170 was a six-week process, dieting down to 188 getting completely shredded and then cutting 18 pounds of water in the last day and a half, I wasn't doing very well."
 
His boxing coach, Dave Keefe, and even some of his stablemates, including Providence's Eric Spicely, suggested he make the change while he's still in his prime at the age of 30.
 
"Diamond Dave said it best: 'You can own a Maserati, but if you don't have the gas to drive it, what's the point?'" O'Neill said.
 
"There are definitely going to be bigger guys and stuff. I'll come out there and this guy might be a little bigger than me, but I've gone from being an extremely big 170-pounder to being a good-sized 185er. Eric Spicely is always saying, 'Dude, you're stupid for ever going down to 170. You look so big now.'
 
"I'm not worried about it. I train with big guys all the time. Strength-wise I'm a pretty strong guy, so I'm going to be able to deal with that. As far as punching power goes, I'm going to be able to crack. We'll see if he can handle it."
 
Credit the improved technique to Keefe, who taught O'Neil that the secret to tremendous knockout power is often more brains than brawn.
 
"When I first came to him, straight up, his words were, 'You hit like a bitch.' I'm like, 'I thought I hit hard!'" O'Neil said. "I was just pushing punches for so long because I had muscle, but it doesn't mean I know how to box, so now I'm turning punches over and everything and he says, 'Power is an MFer.' If you've got power, that can change a fight in a second. Being able to have more than just power in the right hand has been a big help, too."
 
Vizcaya (8-3, 2 KOs) figures to be a worthy adversary and an appropriate first test for O'Neil in the middleweight division. The Aurora, Ill., native has won five of his last six fights, albeit over a four-year stretch, including a victory over Jack Hermansson at Bellator 84 in 2012.
 
Looking to rebound from his June loss to Dominique Steele in which he lost his CES MMA Welterweight Title, O'Neil now knows it's mind over matter. He should be at his physical peak come Friday, no excessive fatigue from a torturous weight cut. The rest is up to him.
 
"I don't ever look past the fight I have in front of me," O'Neil said. "That's all my mind is set on right now, Friday and dealing with this guy here and taking care of business. It's really big in my mind to go out there and not only perform and win, but to get a finish, to go out there and make a statement that, 'OK, this is my new division and this is where I belong.'"
 
Tickets for "CES MMA XXXI" on Friday, Oct. 30th, 2015 are priced at $50.00, $55.00, $100.00 and $125.00 (VIP) and available for purchase online at www.cesboxing.com or www.twinriver.com, www.ticketmaster.com, by phone at 401-724-2253/2254, or at the Twin River Players Club. All fights and fighters are subject to change.
 
The vacant CES MMA Welterweight Title is on the line in the main event as Plymouth, Mass., vet Chip Moraza-Pollard (10-8, 5 KOs) battles Sao Paulo, Brazil native Gil de Freitas (17-5, 6 KOs) in a five-round bout.
 
Also on the main card, Providence, R.I., heavyweight Greg Rebello (18-6, 10 KOs) faces Syracuse, N.Y., vet Mike Mucitelli (7-2, 1 KO); Woonsocket, R.I., native Andre Soukhamthath (8-3, 4 KOs) returns in a bantamweight bout against Carlos Galindo (10-3, 3 KOs) of Woburn, Mass.; and bantamweight Dinis Paiva (7-5, 4 KOs) of East Providence, R.I., looks to extend his four-fight win streak against Cumberland, R.I., vet Kody Nordby (4-3).
 
Providence middleweight Eric Spicely (7-0, 2 KOs) puts his unbeaten record on the line in his toughest test to date against Charlotte, N.C., vet Aaron Johnson (13-9, 1 KO) and Remo Cardarelli (5-2) of Milford, Mass., makes his CES MMA debut in a flyweight bout against New York native Darren Mima (6-4, 1 KO).
 
The preliminary card includes a flyweight bout between Carlos Candelario (1-0) of New Britain, Conn., and Jesse Gutierrez (1-1) of West Roxbury, Mass., in addition to a middleweight bout between Buck Pineau (0-1) of Ashland, Maine and Berkley, Mass., native Pat McCrohan, who is making his professional debut. Flyweights David Baxter (1-0) of Bellingham, Mass., and newcomer Brandon Warne of Ovid, N.Y., battle in a three-round bout and featherweight Shane Manley (2-2) of Cortland, N.Y., battles Taylor Trahan (5-3) of Littleton, N.H.
 
For more information on "CES MMA XXXI" visit www.cesmma.com, follow @CESMMA on Twitter and Instagram and "like" the official CES MMA Facebook fan page.
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