Sammy Cobra Brown

Joel Martinez Shines in Epic Night for Fort Worth Boxing and FHG Gym

6ft tall southpaw Featherweight Joel "The Owl" Martinez of Fort Worth said before Saturday's fight at the Southern Junction in Irving that he has been inactive lately due to no one wanting to fight. Apparently, no one wants to fight the freakishly tall and long southpaw with incredible one-punch power. If Martinez found it hard to find a willing opponent before Saturday night, he did himself no favors in destroying unbeaten Xzavier Jackson. After a quick start in the opening round, a beautiful straight left from the long rangey southpaw put Jackson on the canvas to the surprise of most in attendance and to "The Owl" who said, " I am surprised he got up." Martinez got backed to work and swarmed a wounded Jackson, who was somehow able to survive the round. However, in the third round, Martinez unleashed violent shots from the opening bell and put the finishing touches on his opponent. This time a body shot put Jackson down and out early in the third. Securing Martinez his second professional win in two official bouts. "I kept my composure the whole time. I took my time, I fought my fight." Martinez said of his performance. It was also the third win for the guys from FHG gym in Fort Worth. Gary Hampton Jr ran his record to a perfect 3-0 with a one-sided unanimous decision victory over the previously unbeaten Rensley Washington of Cincinnati by scores of 40-36x2 and one score of 39-37. In the evening's opening bout, Desmon White put on a master-class performance and dominated Devon Jones of Tyler. Scoring a unanimous decision to move his record to 1-0-1.

Fort Worth-based amateur standout and Regional and State Champ Sammy "Cobra" Brown made his highly anticipated professional debut, a successful one in scoring a unanimous decision victory over a rugged and determined Austin Dulworth of Dallas. Brown got going with a big right hand that hurt Dulworth just a minute into the fight. A punch Brown would have success with throughout the fight. A punch that seemingly hurt Dulworth every time it landed. Brown found the mark with that shot again a minute into the second round and then would again double up with it later in the round. The Cobra also sported excellent movement and was able to avoid much of his opponent's artillery. Brown continued outboxing and outworking his opponent, building a lead on the cards. With the fourth and final round still in doubt, the Fort Worthian saved his best for last and put together his best rally of the night late in the final stanza. Brown scored with a body shot that slowed Dulworth down and then scored with a big right hand that snapped his head back and put a left hook behind it for good measure. The cobra would strike again with two more big right hands just before the bell sounded to end the fight. Putting an exclamation point on his pro debut and sealing the victory. All the judges scored it in favor of Brown 39-37. Brown fought this fight at 168 pounds, but plans on moving down to 154 in the future, He said he potentially could go as low as 147. Post-fight, a victorious Brown said, "It felt good... All the hard work finally paid off." Sporting the nickname Cobra carries a lot of weight in Fort Worth. It's the nickname of the legendary hall of Famer Donald Curry. While Brown has a long way to go to get to the level, he got his career off to a great start Saturday night in Irving.

In the main event, Dallas native Edgar Ramires improved his record to 6-1 (4) in pulling the upset over Rashad Coulter. Ramirez was able to overcome Coulter's reach advantage and was able to get on the inside and fire heavy artillery while in there. Outworking and outlanding Coulter. Ramirez was able to slide onto the inside and land the cleaner blows, and it was clearly breaking his opponent down. Ramirez carried the middle rounds for him. Fighting off the ropes in the sixth round, Ramirez put together one last brilliant rally that secured the upset for him as he rolled to the unanimous decision victory. A combination resulted in a cut above the eye of Vargas in the third as Foster was in complete control.

Fort Worth's Next Great "Cobra" Sammy Brown To Make Pro Debut on February 11

The nickname "The Cobra" is synonymous with one man in particular. Donald "The Cobra" Curry. A Fort Worth legend and a two-division world titleholder who held world titles in the welterweight and junior middleweight division from 1983 to 1989, and was inducted into the International Boxing Hall of Fame in 2019. For the last 40 years, worldwide but especially in Fort Worth, "The Cobra" was and is Donald Curry! However, just like one great Dallas Cowboys Wide Reciever to the next pass down the #88, there's another "Cobra" on the rise. 21-year-old Sammy "The Cobra" Brown, a regional and state champion from Fort Worth. He is poised to carry that nickname to the next generation. Brown showed plenty of respect when asked about the nickname, "I go by cobra, and we already know we had someone who went by the name of cobra, Donald Curry. So I gotta represent!!" It's a lofty goal for the youngster, but he lacks no confidence and added, "my goal is to be better than him!" A lofty goal but not an unreasonable one.

Brown is scheduled to make his professional debut on February 11th at the Southern Junction in Irving, 43 years after Curry made his pro debut.

After a sensational amateur career that saw Brown win his first-ever tournament. He then went on to the national Golden Gloves and made it all the way to the semi-finals. The Fort Worthian combined a relentless love for the sport, natural athleticism, and a willingness to listen from his coach, a former title holder Kendrick Releford, also of Fort Worth, and parlayed that into massive amateur success. He won the regional and state Golden Gloves in 2022 at 165 pounds, and at that point determined it was time to turn pro.

In part, it was a financial decision, and in part, he was simply ready. Brown said "I lost my mom in 2013. I have a brother and a sister that I'm trying to provide for, and my granny. I am trying to take care of my family." A lot of pressure put on the 21-year-old."

Releford, who Brown describes as "like a father to me." is supremely confident in his pupil saying "from the beginning, you could tell he was something different... you couldn't hit him. I'd put him in with anybody. I never had any fear of putting him in with anybody." Releford spoke of "consistent development and staying busy" and insisted they weren't in a rush, and Brown will definitely find his sport in the sport. Relford went on to add that The Cobra's greatest strengths are his ability to adapt and being able to listen.

He is getting to adapt and make a big adjustment from the amateur ranks to the pros, something he is ready for. When asked if there was a difference between preparing for a professional fight and an amateur tournament. He said preparation is "pretty much the same, but we are working on more technical things. Staying tighter and keeping my defense tighter and we're sparring much better opponents... definitely running more and keeping the intensity high."

Brown will make his pro debut at the middleweight limit of 160 pounds, but the plan is to move him down to the junior middleweight limit of 154 and eventually down to 147 when he's ready to start competing at the world-class level. The same divisions Donald Curry competed at. At the top of the 147-pound division currently is WBC/WBA/IBF Worlch Champ Errol Spence of DeSoto and numb top-ranked contender Vergil Ortiz of Grand Prairie. The Fort Worthian acknowledges, "I got quite a while till I make it up there probably, not Errol [Spence], he'll probably be retired, but Vergil [Ortiz], yea I'll probably fight him.

That March to the top starts this February 11th at the Southern Junction, and the plan is to keep the Cobra bust throughout the year and have him fight at least 4 to 5 times this year, if not more. There's no rush to rush Brown to the top, but if he stays dedicated and stays focused, he could get there sooner than expected.

Former Heavyweight Title Holder Kendrick Releford Bringing Fort Worth Boxing Back in a Big Way

For decades Fort Worth boxing was a force to be reckoned with from the 80s to the 2000s. Fighters like the"Lone Star Cobra "Donald Curry, Paulie Ayala, Sergio Reyes, and heavyweight contender Kendrick Releford put Fort Worth on the boxing map and represented the city well. It gave the city its own identity, not just a city 35 miles west of the bright lights of Dallas. Fort Worth had its own identity and stood on its own. In recent years that identity has started to fade with fighters like Errol Spence and Maurice Hooker winning world titles and the emergence of upstart prospects like Vergil Ortiz Big D has stolen the spotlight.

Releford, a former title holder, spoke on the recent Golden Boy card held in Fort Worth this past summer that was headlined by Grand Prairie native Vergil Ortiz "I'm thankful for Golden Boy being here. I hate the fact that we have a Golden Boy card but never Fort Worth Fighters on it right here in our city." Releford explained that we have good fighters "they just need exposure."

Releford, is the owner of Dream performance Boxing Gym in Fort Worth and REMG, a professional boxing management Company, and is working to bring a list of boxing events to the area. First up is this Saturday, January 21st, an 80s throwback amateur event at OD Wyatt High School. He will follow that up with a card stacked with some of Fort Worths' best talent on February 11th, at the Southern Junction in Irving. Additionally, there are plans to bring three more cards to Funky Town in the upcoming months. With July 8th official, additional dates in April and June are in the works. "We're gonna put Fort Worth Boxing Scene on our back and take off." The former heavyweight title holder said and added " "it's building... it's only up" when asked about the direction of Fort Worth boxing.

February's main event will be between two Fort Worth natives. The undefeated Ben Gurment, 7-0-2 (5), and Emmanuel Tennision 3-3 (2), who has won two consecutive fights by stoppage and will be for the Texas state title. Releford said the two fighters "know each well. They have sparred plenty of times. It's going to be a great fight." it's a stacked card filled with some of Fort Worth's finest "the whole card is a crowd pleaser" Releford explained.

Other Fort Worth talent on the card includes a 6-foot-tall, featherweight, amateur stand-out, and unbeaten professional Joel Martinez. He will have a Fort Worth VS Dallas battle with Xzavier Jackson. Also, undefeated Gary Hampton will be on the card. A hard-hitting super featherweight who looks to move his record to 3-0.

The February 11th show will also feature the professional debut of Sammy "Cobra" Brown the 2022 regional and state Golden Gloves champion a fighter near and deal to Relefords heart "that's like my son... I Have a 21-year-old son.. he has developed really well.. it is his time to make a move now and we're ready... He's ready to start making money." Relford explained.

The event is promoted by Made Men Promotions, an out-of-state promotional company that has relocated to Fort Worth and is on a mission to highlight Fort Worth Fighters and get them the exposure they deserve.

Tickets for the February 11th event can be purchased on their website https://www.mademenpromotions.com/

Tickets for this Saturday's amateur event can be purchased at Eventbrite and start at just $15 https://www.eventbrite.com/e/dream-performance-remg-talent-presents-an-80s-throwback-boxing-event-tickets-494561425537?aff=ebdssbdestsearch