Home Page
Search WBAN
Latest News-Women
Biography- Sue TL Fox
Boxer's Profiles
Fight Results
Upcoming Events
Knockouts!
Past/Present Ratings
Fight Photo Gallery
Boxing Trivia
Tiger Tales by Fox
Amateur Scene

Women Cops who Box
Bust a Fighter!  
Mixed Matches
Mismatches
About WBAN


Sue Fox Named  in the "Top Ten" Most -Significant Female Boxers of All Time - Ring Magazine - Feb. 2012

HISTORY OF
WOMEN'S BOXING


It's our pleasure to provide some of the top news in boxing on this site for no cost,  but (if you feel like it) you can say "Hi" and buy us a Coffee here

Historical -All links
Historical Events
History Firsts
Flash from the Past
Past Boxer Profiles
70'S/80'S Past Boxers
Pre-70'S Boxers
Past Amateur Boxers
About Sue TL Fox

FREE TOP GALLERIES!

Video streaming, over
11, 500 photos, and more! 
   

Hot Hot HOT Photo Galleries!Flash Photo Slideshows!
   

Boxing Records for women boxers..archived records!
To Check out Go Here
 


Sue TL Fox Inducted into the West Coast Hall of Fame Oct. 17, 2021  Full Story

History-First
"Women's Boxing"
Database


Sue TL Fox Featured on Episode of Video Game - Boxing Manager 2! 
Press Release 2023

 

Having Problems
 with the website?
Send an Email

Directly to WBAN!

 





 

 

 

 

                 
                                                                                      
                                      
   

 
 



Melissa Hernandez: Angles and All
by Bernie McCoy
November 16, 2009

     
   
   
   
   

(NOV 16) Melissa Hernandez, like many boxers, is about angles. However, Hernandez's penchant for angles often extends beyond the confines of ring ropes. Watch her moving around Gleasons Gym in what, at first glance, appears to be haphazard path, cutting zigzags between the rings, the heavy bags, the various stools and benches, among the other fighters, male and female, trading quips with some, offering instructions to others and then, she arrives exactly where she was headed, all along, in this case, to sit down next to a guy with a notebook. Angles, likewise, frequent Melissa Hernandez's conversation. She seems to say whatever, first comes to her mind, statements that are, at once, outrageous, sometimes purposely controversial and, more often than not, quite insightful. But if one listens closely, you soon notice that her conversation converges, almost symmetrically, exactly where Melissa Hernandez intended it to go, and that in the end, it enforces the point she wants to make. And that quality may be a pretty good definition of what focus really is.

You can get, without much effort, a fair sized sampling of opinion in the boxing community that will contend that Melissa Hernandez lacks control. That's a misread. Melissa Hernandez is in complete control, she knows exactly where she is and, more importantly, she knows exactly where she wants to go. It's simply that, at times, it is only Hernandez who clearly understands where she's headed, another pretty good description of focus. Friedrich Nitzche said it best, "If you keep your focus, eventually, your focus will keep you."

When I spoke with her last week, Hernandez's focus was on December 4 and the upcoming WIBA title fight with Holly Holm in Albuquerque, NM. And while she might not readily admit it to a guy with a notebook, maybe especially to a guy with a notebook, she's focused on that fight and fully understands what lies ahead, even as she approaches the bout, from her own different angles. Asked what weight she'll come into the ring in Albuquerque, Hernandez replies, "Whatever shows up on the scale. The catch weight is 140, I was 128 my last bout (a five round TKO over unbeaten Ambar Fajardo in Panama in July). I wanted a 137 "catch" in New Mexico, but, hey, weight is not going to win this fight, neither is height."

"Holly's a fighter, I'm a boxer and people wonder if I can get past her size and power. I tell them 'my whiskers stood up pretty good with Chevelle' (Hallback), so I'm not really worried about Holly Holm." At this point Hernandez shifts her analysis angle: "Has anyone given any thought to the fact that Holly has never fought anyone my size? Does Holly know to fight to her height? We'll see. And, believe me, whatever happens during the course of the fight, I'll adapt, because I've had to do it before. Chevelle hit me as hard as I've ever been hit in our first round and I changed my tactics and came at her differently for the rest of the bout and got a draw. Even in my first bout (Zhang Mao Mao in New York in October 2005) I came out convinced I could end it early and I walked into a big right hand, changed my plans completely and won a four round decision by sticking and moving away from that right hand. I'm ready for whatever fight there is out there in New Mexico and I'll change my strategy as needed as the fight goes on. Can Holly make those changes mid-fight? We'll see."

Hernandez admits to watching tapes of Holm's past fight, but also admits, "You can't really learn a lot (from tapes), certainly not from the mistakes she's made in the past. Her team is going to watch those same tapes and correct those mistakes. So, what you learn is tendencies, something a fighter does every time in every situation in every fight and Holly does have certain tendencies, every fighter does. Can I take advantage of those tendencies? That'll be one part of December 4. I also have Jill Emery, this time, as my chief sparring partner. Jill has been a great addition, better than I could have hoped for, a blessing in disguise (not coincidentally, Emery is 5' 8" and, in the ring, leads with her right hand). "She's not only Holm's size, she's also a southpaw and she has an uncanny ability to imitate Holly's style. It's probably her training as an actor."

Melissa Hernandez has had fourteen fights in her four year professional career (11-1-2) and has had only one bout in her current hometown of New York (her debut with Mao Mao). She has no qualms about traveling to Holm's "home court" and will still be the
sports betting favorite.   (her debut with Mao Mao). She has no qualms about traveling to Holm's "home court." "I've been through that with McCarter (splitting two bouts with Layla McCarter in Las Vegas in February and April 2007). In fact, Hernandez was encouraged when she went to Albuquerque for a late October "presser" announcing the bout: "there's a sizable Latino population in New Mexico and a lot of those fans were there for the announcement. I got a great reception, before, during and after the press conference and I expect the same thing on December 4 at Isleta Casino. From what I saw, Albuquerque is not totally pro-Holm." As far as that October 20 press conference, Hernandez brought several different angles to what was billed as the standard fighter introductions. The enduring photos that came out of Albuquerque were not quite the run-of-the-mill boxing face off shots. One showed Hernandez sticking her tongue out at the clearly taller Holm. In another, Hernandez is standing on a chair in order to get an eye/eye view of her opponent. "As I was dragging the chair over for that shot, I don't think anyone in the room had any idea what the hell I was doing." That's not an unusual reaction around Melissa Hernandez, but in fact, there was, at least, one person in that room who knew exactly what she was doing: coming at the status quo from a totally different angle.

But Melissa Hernandez is fully aware that all the angles and all the focus gets her only to the opening bell. She knows, full well, who is the overdog in the December 4 bout. "Of course, I want to win, but most importantly, I want to be part of a great bout. I would almost rather come away with a good 'L' than a bad 'W' (dramatic pause)........almost." Melissa Hernandez is not going to get a "bad W," not in Albuquerque, not against Holly Holm.  Can she pull an upset? I don't know. I'll stay with my first "take:" that this is an intriguing bout featuring two very good female boxing champions, each with exceptional skills, who have campaigned, throughout their careers, at different weight levels. It is Hernandez who brings the largest measure of intrigue to New Mexico and, taking nothing away from Holly Holm, on December 4, it will be Melissa Hernandez who will probably provide the most angles and focus.

Bernie McCoy

 
     
     
   
 
Back to WBAN
WBAN Disclaimer
Send in News Story!
     
         
         

 

 Free to Public!  Huge Database of Boxing Records with Galleries, over 15,000 photos, Galleries connected with the boxing records, Videos. Mpegs, and More!   Go Here!

#wban, #womenboxing, #suetlfox, #iwbhf, #internationalwomensboxinghalloffame, #womensboxing, #femaleboxing, #wbanbuzz, #foxbiography, #foxhalloffame, #boxersprofiles, #amateurfemaleboxers, #profemaleboxers

 


         [
HOME [ADD YOUR SITE] [EMAIL TL FOX]  [DO YOU HAVE A TIP?  [WBAN'S MISSION]  [PRIVACY POLICY] 
AUX   
 
              GOOGLE NEWS  [WBAN DISCLAIMER]   [PROBLEMS WITH WEBSITE OR FORMS? EMAIL TL FOX]   
                                        WBAN™ (WOMEN BOXING ARCHIVE NETWORK) Copyrighted© MAY 1998