Mikey Garcia: Celebrity In The City by Ashley Dinkel - City News Group, Inc.

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Mikey Garcia: Celebrity In The City

By Ashley Dinkel, Staff Writer
July 27, 2016 at 01:04pm. Views: 50

MORENO VALLEY >> Miguel Angel Garcia, also known as Mikey Garcia, a Mexican-American professional boxer, is making a comeback after a two-and-a-half-year absence and has been training to get back in the ring. The professional boxer, who has numerous championship titles, is a husband and father to three children and currently lives in Moreno Valley, California with his family. Soon, however, Garcia will fly to New York to get back in the ring and continue what he started. With a pro record of 34-0, 28 KOs, Garcia rose to the top winning the World Boxing Organization featherweight belt and the WBO super-featherweight belt. In April 2014, Garcia filed a lawsuit against his boxing promoter, Top Rank, asserting violations of the Muhammad Ali Boxing Reform Act, claiming Top Rank attempted to extend his contract term illegally. In April 2016, after two years of litigation, a settlement was finally reached between the two parties allowing Garcia to become a promotional free agent. Now, Garcia has continued to work hard and has trained with his brother, Robert Garcia, a former world champion boxer; and their father, Eduardo “Big G,” a former amateur boxer. Garcia trains with his brother and father at the Robert Garcia Boxing Academy in Riverside, California. The boxing academy is a private training camp for professionals and also has two other boxing facilities in Oxnard, California and San Antonio, Texas. His father and Robert have always been by his side and helped work his corner of the ring during fights. Garcia is set to go up against professional boxer Elio "The Kid" Rojas during a televised fight on Showtime at the Barclays Center in Brooklyn, New York, July 30. Rojas has a pro record of 24-2-0, 14 KOs. Garcia said he gets a lot of support and moved to Moreno Valley after his father purchased rental properties in the area. He said he has three sisters and a brother who live close by. Although he holds many titles, he says he is just a normal guy. "I do everything that everyone else does," Garcia said. "I just took my kids to the drive-in (theater) and it was a fun time. I'm just a normal guy in the area." With his upcoming fight quickly approaching, Garcia said he is excited and ready to be back. "I haven't had a match in two years and I'm excited for coming back," Garcia said. "There is a lot more I want to accomplish and fight more for world titles." Although he was exposed to the boxing lifestyle at a young age, Garcia, the youngest of seven children, said he never thought about becoming a professional fighter. When Garcia was 14 years old, he became an amateur boxer and won his first fight. As he continued to work hard, his classmates at school saw him on TV in the ring with other fighters. When he was a freshman in high school, a teacher advised him to quit boxing because his grades had been suffering from being away at fights. Although he was advised to quit, he never did. He pursued his dreams and after only nine amateur fights, he competed in the California Junior Olympic boxing tournament, where he won the district and regional tournaments, and made it to the national tournament finals. In the finals, he experienced his first amateur defeat to a more experienced, Michael Concepcion of New Jersey. Later that year, he won his first amateur boxing tournament, the Junior Golden Gloves in Chattanooga, Tennessee. He won all of the preliminary rounds of the tournament by knockout and earned a unanimous decision in the finals. After winning the Junior Golden Gloves Championship, Garcia competed at the National PAL tournament in Virginia Beach, Virginia, and returned home with a silver medal. Later, he compete in the National PAL in Oxnard where he defeated Michael Evans and eventually won the tournament. After the PAL Tournament victory in Oxnard, Garcia competed in the 2006 U.S. Olympic Trials in the 132 lb lightweight division. In his first fight of the Olympic Trials, held in Colorado, he lost a decision to Terence Crawford. The Olympics were not scheduled to take place until 2008, so Garcia elected to turn professional. He finished his amateur career with a record of 48-12, with 22 KOs. At age 18, Garcia received several promotional offers to become a professional and only one month after graduating from high school, he turned professional and signed a promotional deal with Bob Arum of Top Rank and manager Cameron Dunkin. At the start of his professional boxing career, Garcia balanced boxing activities with his schoolwork, even earning a 3.8 GPA one semester. He graduated from Pacifica High School in Oxnard, with a 3.2 GPA. Following high school, he attended Oxnard Community College and completed a two-year liberal arts and science degree. At 20 years old, he joined the Ventura County Police and Sheriff’s Reserve Academy. While attending the academy, his typical day included running in the early morning, followed by college classes, then training at the boxing gym at night. After boxing training, he had to report to the Sheriff's Office for further police training. Garcia kept this routine while having two of his professional boxing fights. He graduated from the Ventura Police and Sheriff’s Academy in January 2010 but decided to focus solely on boxing. He continued his boxing career and fought Puerto Rican southpaw, Jose Hernandez, in 2008 and had his first major televised appearance in a co-main event on an HBO broadcast in Atlantic City against Matt Remillard in 2011. In that fight, he dropped Remillard twice in the ninth round, and once in the 10th round, causing the referee to stop the fight. In 2011, Garcia fought Rafael Guzman in the HBO co-main event in Los Angeles and stopped him in the fourth round. In that same year, he continued to fight in Madison Square Garden, which was also broadcasted on HBO. Over the next few years, Garcia traveled to Puerto Rico, Las Vegas and New York City to take part in his passion of boxing. In 2013, Garcia was scheduled to make his first title defense against Juan Manuel Lopez but had to take off several days from training due to illness. Garcia was not able to recover in enough time and making weight was not attainable. He was 1.75 lb over and lost his 126 lb title on the scales. Garcia said he was crushed because he was not able to defend the title he had recently won. He stopped Lopez in round four but was unable to retain his title. After the Lopez fight, Garcia decided to move up in weight to challenge 130 lb WBO Super Featherweight Champion, Rocky Martinez. He defeated Martinez with a knockout in round eight, becoming a two-division world champion. Garcia successfully defended his title in 2014, in a wide, unanimous decision win against Juan Carlos Burgos on HBO. In October 2014, Garcia vacated his WBO Super Featherweight belt, and planned to move up in weight. For fans of Garcia or anyone who wants to watch the local star in action, his upcoming fight will be televised July 30 on Showtime.

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