(OCT 4) Rhonda Luna is a
featherweight boxer. She is possessed of ring skills that rank
her high in one of the most competitive weight classes in the
sport of Women's boxing. She is also an educator armed with
several graduate degrees and she continues to coach middle
school sports, in what little spare time she has, drawing on her
experience as a college athlete. And, on the last weekend in
September, Rhonda Luna was doing "touristy" things in New York
City, visiting from California with her brother/boxing manager,
Jacob and his wife. I sat down with Rhonda in the lobby of a
hotel in a neighborhood whose avenues were once jammed with push
carts, sweat shops and all manner of industrial complexes but is
now home to film festivals, art galleries, chic restaurants and
undersized, overpriced living quarters. Tribeca (Triangle
Beneath Canal St.) was the first in what is now a long list of
gentrified New York City enclaves, with a new look and a new,
hip nickname.
"Boxing is not my life," Luna makes clear, at the start of our
conversation, while at the same time conceding, "I really love
the sport. I love the competition. I love that it's just you out
there and you rise and fall based on what you bring when the
bell rings." Luna's last fight was a razor thin ten round loss
to Ji-Hye Woo in South Korea last November, for the IFBA super
featherweight title. "It was a tough loss," Luna relates, "if I
had won the title, my career, obviously, would have been very
different."
The IFBA title fight was Luna's fourth bout in 2009. This year,
her first fight will be on October 28 against Ela Nunez at the
San Manuel Indian Bingo and Casino in Highland California, just
outside San Bernardino. "I think a close loss, on foreign soil,
against a tough fighter in her home country, sent a couple of
signals across the boxing community. I sure didn't get the
opportunities to fight this year that I did in 2009." It's an
old story in boxing, one best filed under a fighter's reputation
preceding her.
Luna is no stranger to this particular phenomenon. In late 2008,
she was contacted by Top Rank Boxing and offered a WBA super
featherweight title fight, in Madison Square Garden, the
following February, against Maureen Shea. "We couldn't say 'yes'
fast enough," Luna remembers. "I already had a bout scheduled in
November 2008 which I went ahead with. I beat Kina Malpartida in
six rounds and, suddenly, the title fight disappeared. The WBA
found a new opponent for Shea: Kina Malpartida." It's easy for
an outsider to say, "that's boxing," but you don't lose a title
fight spot on a Top Rank card in Madison Square Garden without
it hurting, and listening to Rhonda Luna, nearly two years
later, recount the tale, you realize that the hurt has stuck
around.
The Luna/Nunez bout, also, winds, circuitously, in a "six
degrees of separation" path to Kina Malpartida and the WBA
title. Prior to Malpartida winning the WBA title over Shea in
the Garden, Malpartida lost two bouts: to Luna and, a year
prior, a fifth round TKO to Ela Nunez. I ask Luna if the winner
of the October 28 bout should be in line for a WBA title fight.
If there was such a thing as a "Duh!" look, Luna flashes it as
she replies, "Yeah, I'd say the winner of our bout makes a
deserving contender for the WBA crown. Do I think it will
happen? We've already had several discussions with Kina's
management about a title fight and let's just say, they haven't
been particularly productive."
I refrain from mentioning a comment I heard, a long time ago,
from an old trainer in an old gym on North Charles Street in
Baltimore. I knew him as "Deke" ("Deacon") and he said to me one
time, "In boxing deservin' don't have nothin' to do with gettin'
." Malpartida has defended the WBA crown three times since her
tenth round TKO of Shea and the kindest observation that can be
made of those three bouts is that they have significantly
expanded the definition of "challenger," at least as far as the
WBA super featherweight title is concerned.
Right now Rhonda Luna is concerned with Ela Nunez and six rounds
in Highland, CA on October 28. "I appreciate that Patrick Ortiz
(the promoter and president of Ringside Ticket in Santa Rosa,
CA) is willing to bring Ela Nunez from New York to fight on this
card. It indicates his ongoing commitment to the sport and to
good female bouts." A subsequent email from Ortiz indicates he's
equally happy with the prospect of Luna/Nunez, "I think the
fight with Rhonda Luna and Ela Nunez may be the fight of the
night. Both are action fighters and I really cannot predict who
will win the bout, but it should be very entertaining."
For now, Rhonda Luna gets Ela Nunez over six rounds in Southern
California on October 28. Did she deserve more opportunities to
fight in 2010? Sure, no one with Luna's skills should go almost
a year, outside the ring, in a talent laden featherweight
division. Does the winner of Luna/Nunez deserve a return with
Kina Malpaartida, this time for the WBA crown? It would be a
very good fight and would add some needed luster to the WBA
super featherweight title and to the championship bona fides of
Kina Malpartida. Will it happen? That gym on North Charles
Street is gone and so is Deke, but his words stick around and,
for the most part, in this, the most heartless of sports, they
still ring true. It would be nice, however, if this time, "deservin'
and getting' " came together.
Bernie McCoy
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