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HEAVYWEIGHT NAGY AGUILERA PROFILE

Posted on | December 3, 2007 | No Comments

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New York?s latest hot prospect
Heavyweight Nagy Aguilera
Dec. 13 at The Roseland Ballroom showcasing Greene, Teron & Quillin

NEW YORK CITY (December 3, 2007) ? Dominican-born heavyweight prospect Nagy Aguilera, New York?s newest rising star, will be in action again December 13 on the ?Holiday Hits? pro boxing show, co-promoted by Ring Promotions and Cedric Kushner?s Gotham Boxing, at The Roseland Ballroom in Manhattan.

NABA middleweight champion ?Mean? Joe Greene (16-0, 12 KOs), the 2004 National Golden Gloves Tournament champion and WBA No. 9 rated challenger, headlines in the 10-round main event.

WBC No. 20 rated lightweight Jorge ?The Truth? Teron (18-0-1, 11 KOs), 3-time New York Golden Gloves champion, will be in the 10-round co-feature. Unbeaten middleweight Peter ?Kid Chocolate? Quillin (15-0, 12 KOs) takes on Troy ?TNT? Lowry (27-7, 16 KOs) in an eight-round Special Middleweight Attraction.

Two-time New York Golden Gloves champion Aguilera (4-0, 2 KOs), raised in Puerto Rico and fighting out of Newburgh (NY), is matched with Darryl Holley (6-5, 1 KO) in a 6-rounder. ?I first came across Nagy when I was looking for a sparring partner about two months before my fight with (Evander) Holyfield,? Nagy?s advisor and former world heavyweight contender ?Big? Lou Savarese said. ?I was told about a good heavyweight in Newburgh, which is about 1 ? hours north of New York City. It?s a beautiful place, right on the Hudson River, but a rough suburb. I was taken back after sparring with Nagy and wondered why I hadn?t heard of him. He was only 20 at the time (Aguilera is now 21) and said he only had about 30-40 amateur fights. But he seemed more seasoned than that.

?Nagy is so fundamentally sound, but he was doing it working on a shoe-string budget, without the benefit of a strength-and-conditioning coach or eating properly. I introduced him to John Silverman, who is now his manager, and today Nagy has those edges. Nagy has great physical attributes (6-3, 230 pounds) and — it?s odd to say about a 21 year old — but he doesn?t really do anything wrong because he?s so technically solid. Nagy later told me he had 137 amateur bouts having started boxing very young in Puerto Rico before moving to the Bronx about five years ago. Mentally, I?ve never see a fighter so relaxed before a fight ? he sleeps in the locker-room! His timing is starting to come around; two fights ago he knocked out (right out of the ring) a guy (Tyrone Smith) who had never been stopped and in his last fight, he floored an opponent (Elfair McKnight) who had never been down before. Nagy almost knocked him out, too.?

Also fighting on the undercard are New York State lightweight champion Freddy Soto (9-3-2, 5 KOs), light welterweight Jeremy Bryan (1-0), Canadian bantamweight Noriko Kariya (7-2-1, 1 KO), and Long Island heavyweights Darrel Madison (7-1, 3 KOs) and Elfair ?The Wyandanch Warrior? McKnight are matched-up.
Tickets are priced at $150.00, $100.00, $75.00 and $50.00. Call Ring Promotions (516.313.2304) or Gotham Boxing (212.755.1944) to purchase tickets or for more information. Doors open at 6:30 PM, first bout at 7:30 PM.

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