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Former U.S. Olympian Jason “Big Six” Estrada has a stern warning for the rest of the field in the 2015 Boxcino heavyweight tournament.

 

“If I win this first fight,” Estrada (20-5, 6 KOs) said, “it’s over for the rest of these guys.”

 

The 34-year-old Providence, R.I., heavyweight joined the field early this week when Mario Heredia was pulled from the tournament due to an undisclosed medical issue.

 

With an impressive amateur background that includes a spot in the 2004 Summer Olympics in Athens and a professional career highlighted by hard-fought bouts against championship contenders Tomasz Adamek and Alexander Povetkin, Estrada’s resume stacks up against that of anyone else’s in the eight-man field, including Friday’s quarterfinal opponent, Lenroy Thomas (18-3, 9 KOs).

 

“This is a great opportunity,” Estrada said. “I’m always in the gym. I’ve been doing this for 27 years.

 

“Most fighters in the heavyweight division today, I think my resume stacks up great against, regardless of [the fact] I have five losses. I’ve lost to actual real fighters. I just go in there and I fight. That’s all I do. Regardless of whether this guy fights someone else, or this guy fights that guy, I try to make sure that when I go in that ring that I’m fighting someone that’s worth it.

 

“I don’t ever want to be known as a guy who fights guys that aren’t up to my level or above me.”

 

Estrada’s six-round showdown with Thomas, along with the other three quarterfinal bouts in the tournament, will air live on ESPN2’s Friday Night Fights at the Turning Stone Resort & Casino in Verona, N.Y.

 

In addition to returning to the national spotlight, Estrada is also returning to his roots, entering a new promotional agreement with his first promoter, Jimmy Burchfield Sr. of CES Boxing, and Artie Pelullo of Banner Promotions. Estrada began his professional career with the Rhode Island-based Burchfield in 2004 and fought under the promotional guidance of CES against Povetkin and Adamek before becoming a free agent in 2010.

 

“We’ve believed in Jason from Day 1 and never lost our faith in his ability to become heavyweight champion of the world,” Burchfield said. “Long before he qualified for the Olympics, we recognized Jason’s unique talents and are proud to have played a role in his development as a professional.

 

“This is a joyous day for us, because Jason is back where he belongs and with the promotional guidance of myself and Artie Pelullo, one of the best in the business, there’s no doubt in my mind Jason Estrada will be America’s next great heavyweight champion. This tournament is a tremendous opportunity and he’s ready to win.”

 

Estrada’s road to championship glory took a major detour following his narrow loss to Adamek in 2010. He returned 11 months later in a surprising knockout loss to Franklin Lawrence and soon after underwent surgery to repair nagging elbow and ankle injuries, which had plagued him since his amateur career.

 

“I was on a roll, winning fight after fight, so I just put off having surgery,” Estrada said.

 

Having declared himself injury-free for the first time in seven years, Estrada returned to the ring in late 2011, beginning a year-long stretch in which he won four consecutive bouts – two by knockout – but more surgeries followed in 2013 after his win over Galen Brown, including a procedure to repair a torn ACL, derailing his career for two more years.

 

“It seemed like I had a black cloud over me,” Estrada said. “I’m trying to get healthy and everything starts to click and then – boom! – something else happens. Then I’m starting from scratch again, starting to get motivated and I’m doing things I’m supposed to do again and – boom! – something else happens.”

 

Though he still wasn’t 100 percent, Estrada returned in July to face former amateur standout and Massachusetts native Steve Vukosa, who was fighting for the first time in more than 12 years. The 38-year-old Vukosa won by majority decision and has since earned a spot alongside Estrada in the Boxcino tournament, where he’ll face Donovan Dennis (10-1, 8 KOs) Friday night.

 

“Mentally, I think I was prepared. Physically, I wasn’t. I wasn’t at all,” Estrada said of the fight against Vukosa. “I’m still having issues, but it’s not the time to complain. When opportunities like this come along, you have to snatch it up. I’m 34 years old. There’s no more waiting, taking rests and all this nonsense. I have to get up there and fight and hopefully I have everything I need.

 

“After this first fight, these guys are in trouble.”

 

Estrada’s aware this might be his last opportunity to make a run at a world championship. Youth is no longer on his side and he’s coming off major ankle, elbow and knee surgery. He’s dealt with setbacks in the ring and criticism outside of it, whispers from boxing fans and media who say he’s never reached his full potential. He’s learned to brush it off and focus on what matters most.

 

“You hear it, but what are you going to do? That’s their job. It’s their job to either criticize you or love you,” Estrada said. “I can’t get mad at anyone anymore about that kind of stuff. Before, I used to get upset and want to have an issue with it. The more I think about it, it’s their job. Without these guys criticizing you, without these guys loving you, you wouldn’t even have anyone there to talk about you.

 

“I’m not even worrying about that. I’ve had setbacks like everyone else. Some people have it lucky and slide right on through. I just go for it. I don’t run from anyone. That’s a pride thing. I go in there and fight regardless of my situation. If you can’t respect that or respect the type of person and fighter I am, oh well. You can’t please everybody.”

 

Estrada can silence the critics beginning Friday night. The field also includes six-round quarterfinal bouts between Razvan Cojanu (12-1, 7 KOs) and Ed Fountain (10-0,4 KOs) and Andrey Fedesov (25-3, 20 KOs) and Nat Heaven (9-1, 7 KOs).

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Reading, Mass., heavyweight John Johnston will put his undefeated record on the line Friday, March 14th, 2014 at "CES MMA XII" at Twin River Casino in Lincoln, R.I., against UFC vet Josh Hendricks for the vacant CES MMA title. Johnston has won all five of his bouts by knockout. (CES photo by Ian Travis Barnard)
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CES MEDIA ALERT

Johnston hopes to seize golden opportunity in heavyweight title bout Friday 


                          
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UFC vet Josh Hendricks will look for his second win at Twin River Casino in as many tries. Two years ago, he beat Connecticut native Josh Diekmann by submission at the same venue.
PROVIDENCE, R.I. (March 12th, 2014) -- When heavyweight John Johnston made his professional mixed martial arts debut three years ago at the age of 40 with only a few Muay Thai fights under his belt, competing for a title was the last thing on this mind.

 

"It was one of those things I always thought about," he said, "but never imagined it could happen."

 

As if often the case in a sport as unpredictable as MMA, dreams sometimes come true, and Johnston's dream of fighting for a title will, in fact, become a reality Friday, March 14th, 2014 when the unbeaten Reading, Mass., heavyweight faces Josh Hendricks for the vacant CES MMA championship at "CES MMA XXII" at Twin River Casino.

 

Hendricks (19-9, 5 KOs), a 37-year-old Mansfield, Ohio veteran, will have experience on his side, which includes a brief stint with the Ultimate Fighting Championships (UFC), but Johnston (5-0, 5 KOs) has launched his young career with five knockout wins in five fights, making this a must-see five-rounder on a stacked undercard that also includes seven-time UFC vet Drew Fickett.

 

"I respect Josh," Johnston said. "He's had his run. He's had some great fights, but every fight is different. I'm expecting the fight of my life."

 

In addition to his appearance on UFC 91 in 2008, which ended in a knockout loss to Boston-based heavyweight Gabriel Gonzaga, Hendricks has other ties to New England. He beat Connecticut's Josh Diekmann at Twin River in 2012 and recently fought West Yarmouth, Mass., prospect Juliano Coutinho, who happens to be Johnston's jiu-jitsu coach. Johnston actually worked Coutinho's corner in that fight and has also sparred with Gonzaga, but won't rely too heavily on the input of others when it's his turn to face Hendricks.

 

"Everyone is different," Johnston said. "When Juliano fought Josh it was a totally different fight because Juliano is real comfortable on the ground and there wasn't much standup.

 

"We watch a lot of tapes on the people we're fighting and figure out what we have to do and what the game plan will be. Going into a fight, we're always well-prepared and ready to take the fight wherever it goes."

 

If Hendricks takes it to the ground, so be it, Johnston says, but the 6-foot-4, 257-pound heavyweight would prefer to trade hands with Hendricks given the fact he's won all five of his fights by knockout -- four in the first round. That doesn't mean he's one-dimensional, even if some opponents believe that's the case.

 

"My ground game gets overlooked because people never see it," Johnston said.

 

Johnston has worked with Division I wrestlers, most notably former Iowa State Hawkeye Quinn Boyce, and fellow MMA vet Pat Walsh to improve his ground game, which has come a long way since his pro debut three years ago.

 

One of the rare instances where Johnston had to use his wrestling and jiu-jitsu occurred in his second pro fight in 2011 against Shaun Durfee when he slipped on the canvas on the way into the cage and broke his ankle. In the opening round, Johnston thought he saw an opening for a head kick and tried to execute, but his support foot -- the one with the broken ankle -- gave way and he fell against the cage. Durfee immediately took him to the ground and tried his best to earn a submission, but Johnston held his ground and survived the round.

 

The fight didn't last much longer with Johnston earning the stoppage 38 seconds into the second round.

 

"I was fighting on a broken ankle and he couldn't submit me or finish me," Johnston said. "I'm mostly a standup fighter, which is fine with me. I'd rather people see that."

 

As far as conditioning goes, particularly for a 43-year-old fighter who has never fought past the second round, Johnston isn't concerned, not with all the training he's done since the end of 2013.

 

"I haven't had any breaks for a while," he said. "My last fight was in January and I trained nine weeks for that, and when that was over I got right back into the gym. I'm not worried at all about my conditioning. Our coaches put us through the wringer here. I'll be ready to go all five rounds."

 

Johnston's improbable run began more than a decade ago when he began training under Mark DellaGrotte at Siyodtong in Boston. Johnston was one of the school's head Muay Thai trainers, but soon began working -- and sparring -- with established veterans Jorge Rivera, Stephan Bonnar and Marcus Davis.

 

"I got the itch to fight," Johnston said.

 

After a long talk with DellaGrotte, who has hesitant at first to let Johnston turn pro at the risk of losing one of his best trainers, Johnston made his debut in 2011. Three years later at 43, he's fighting for a title against a former UFC vet. It's an improbable story, but not an impossible one, further prove that dreams do come true.

 

"This is what I do full-time now," Johnston said. "I'm looking at this one fight at a time. CES is a real good organization and has taken care of me. I'd love to continue with them, but if Bellator or someone like that gets in touch with me, hopefully I can get to a big show before I get to the point where I have to retire. I'm 43 now. I'm not getting any younger, but I'll keep going until my body tells me I can't."

 

Tickets for "CES MMA XXII" are on sale now at $40.00, $55.00, $100.00 and $125.00 (VIP) and can be purchased online at www.cesmma.com or www.twinriver.com or by phone at 401-724-2253/2254. All fights and fighters are subject to change.

 

The main event of "CES MMA XXII" features Fickett (42-20, 3 KOs) battling Providence's Luis Felix (10-7, 3 KOs) in a lightweight bout. Several undercard bouts could steal the show, including the highly-anticipated middleweight bout between UFC vet Thomas Egan (7-4, 6 KOs) of Dorchester, Mass., and Plymouth, Mass., veteran Chip Moraza-Pollard (7-6, 4 KOs) a former Reality Fighting and Bellator contender. Egan, born and raised in Kildare, Ireland, starred on UFC 93 in Ireland.

 

Looking to keep the momentum going from his win over Chris Woodall in November, former TUF vet Chuck O'Neill (12-6, 4 KOs) of East Bridgwater, Mass., will battle Dade City, Fla., welterweight Roger Carroll (13-10) in a three-round bout. Caroll has won 11 bouts by submission. Lightweight contender Andres Jeudi (5-2, 1 KO) of Somerville, Mass., will face Brendan Rooney (5-1) of Shelton, Conn. 

 

Also on the undercard, rising featherweight star and Johnson & Wales alum Charles Rosa (6-0, 3 KOs) of Boynton Beach, Fla., will return to Twin River for the fourth time in a three-round bout against Philadelphia veteran Brylan Van Artsdalen (9-9, 1 KO), an eight-time Bellator veteran.

 

Marshfield, Mass., featherweight Brendan Fleming (3-2) will take on Baltimore's Robert Sullivan (3-1); fellow featherweight Josh LaBerge (8-4, 3 KOs) of Fall River, Mass., will battle Philadelphia's Steve McCabe (6-14, 5 KOs); Tommy Venticinque (0-1) of Warwick, R.I., will face Rick Rivera of Springfield, Mass., in a welterweight bout; and Winthrop, Mass, featherweight Kyle Bochniak (1-0) will aim for his second win of the year when he faces Marius Enache (1-2) of Philadelphia. 

 

-- CES --

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johnstonhendricks

Johnston-Hendricks heavyweight title bout set for next CES MMA next month at Twin River
 
PROVIDENCE, R.I. (Feb. 8th, 2013) – AXS TV’s Inside MMA announced Friday that undefeated Melrose, Mass., heavyweight John Johnston will fight for the vacant CES MMA championship March 14th, 2014 at Twin River Casino against former Ultimate Fighting Championships veteran Josh Hendricks.
 
The 6-foot-4 Johnston (5-0, 5 KOs) is fresh off his fifth knockout win in as many tries after stopping William Baptiste just 1 minute, 49 seconds into the opening round of their scheduled three-round bout Jan. 24th courtesy of a vicious head kick that sent both fighters crashing to the canvas.
 
Training out of Sityodtong in Boston, Johnston has yet to fight past the second round, winning four of his five professional bouts by first-round knockout. Facing Hendricks (19-9, 5 KOs), a Mansfield, Ohio native, will be a major step up for Johnston. The first and only time he fought at Twin River, Hendricks submitted Josh Diekmann via triangle choke in the opening round of their heavyweight bout, one of Hendricks’ 12 career submission victories.
 
Between 2005 and 2007, Hendricks amassed an impressive streak in which he won 10 of 11 bouts with one no contest, earning him a spot on the UFC 91 card in November of 2008 in Las Vegas, where he lost to Gabriel Gonzaga.
 
The March 14th card will also feature the return of Bourne, Mass., welterweight Chuck O’Neil (12-6, 4 KOs); Providence lightweight Luis Felix (10-7, 3 KOs) and Boynton Beach, Fla., welterweight Charles Rosa (6-0, 2 KOs), a graduate of Providence’s Johnson & Wales University. For more information or to pre-order tickets, visit www.cesmma.com.
 
– CES –

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