Perfect Fit: 602 fits Elijah Garcia like an AZ fighter

By Norm Frauenheim –

Elijah Garcia wears 602 on his waistband. It’s his hometown. It’s also a busy area code, a fight town that is beginning to live up to the name of the city it represents.

Phoenix is named for a mythic bird rising from the ashes. it’s the city crest. It’s on the side of busses and on the patch police wear on their uniforms.

But it’s more than myth these days. There’s Kevin Durant, who has the town buzzing about whether the Suns can finally soar to their first NBA title. And there’s boxing, a market that is climbing off the deck the way that proverbial bird is coming out of those ashes.

Phoenix and most of Arizona are becoming a go-to area for matchmakers looking for fighters and promoters searching for an audience.

From A to Z, fighters and fans are drawing the boxing business back to a market that had gone dormant in the years after Michael Carbajal’s Hall of Fame run in the 1990s.

Increasingly, AZ’s place in the boxing universe is evident.

It was a month ago in Emanuel Navarrete’s stoppage of Australian Liam Wilson in an entertaining, controversial junior-lightweight bout in front of an ESPN audience and a lively crowd at Desert Diamond Arena in suburban Glendale.

AZ will be there again Saturday, this time on the road when the 19-year-old Garcia (13-0, 11 KOs) gets a true test of his middleweight credentials in Ontario CA against Amilcar Vidal (16-0, 12 KOs)) on a Showtime Championship Boxing card (6 pm PT/9 pm ET) featuring featherweights Brandon Figueroa and Mark Magsayo.

Vidal, of Uruguay, is 27. He had 59 amateur fights, reportedly losing only once. Vidal has his own AZ connection. His manager/promoter is Sampson Lewkowicz, who promotes former super-middleweight champion David Benavidez, today’s best-known AZ fighter.

Lewkowicz has been at ringside for two Garcia fights, first when Benavidez beat Kyrone Davis at the Suns home area and then last year when Benavidez blew out former middleweight champion David Lemieux in Glendale.

In terms of physical maturity, Vidal is a tough fight for Garcia, who is still nearly two months from turning 20. His birthday is April 26.

“Yeah, it’s my toughest,’’ Garcia said.

But, Garcia says, he wouldn’t have it any other way. He has watched video of Vidal.

“He’s a tough guy who likes to come forward,’’ Garcia said. “I like to fight on the inside.’’

The idea is that Vidal will step forward and into Garcia’s wheelhouse. It’s not clear whether Vidal can fight in retreat, off his back foot.

“I’m not sure what’s going to happen, to be honest,’’ Garcia said.

But it’s an answer Garcia will pursue. It’s what he’s been doing since he was a kid. A son of former Arizona heavyweight George Garcia, Elijah says he never envisioned a prizefighting career.

“I hated boxing as a kid,’’ he said. “But when I was about 11, I was in the gym, working out and suddenly I just knew. I loved it.’’

Boxing was there, in his DNA and his geography. On the same night as his bout with Vidal, there will be a card in the 602 at Phoenix’s Celebrity Theatre (7 p.m.) promoted by Iron Boy’s Robert Vargas. It is Vargas’ first boxing card in the New Year.

Garcia is an emerging face in a AZ generation that includes David Benavidez and his brother, Jose Jr., a former 140-pound champion who has a film role in the current sequel, Creed III.

There’s also welterweight Abel Ramos and his nephew, junior-middleweight Jesus Ramos, both of Casa Grande, 50 miles from Phoenix. Both will fight on the Showtime pay-per-view card featuring David Benavidez versus Caleb Plant at Las Vegas MGM Grand on March 25.

Then, there’s Oscar Valdez, Jr., a former featherweight and junior-lightweight champion who calls himself a Son of Sonora, the name of the desert that stretches from northern Mexico to Phoenix. Valdez grew up in Nogales in the Sonoran state of Mexico, south of Tucson. He went to school in Tucson.

After Navarrete got up from a knockdown to beat Wilson in Glendale, Valdez joined him in the ring. He and Navarrete are expected to fight later in the year for the 130-pound title.

“Maybe, here in Arizona,’’ Valdez said.

The crowd roared, as if to say:

Where else.