MMA: Valdez, 27, isn't yet a pro, but he's patient

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May 19—It might have been the 2007 fight between Georges St-Pierre and Matt Serra, won by Serra in a monumental upset, that lit the fire.

It might have been the 2008 return match, won by St-Pierre, one of MMA's all-time greats.

All Albuquerque's Billy Ray Valdez knows is that, since then, he's wanted to be a professional MMA fighter.

"It's my life's goal. It's my dream," Valdez said on Wednesday in a phone interview, four days before his scheduled heavyweight fight against Hobbs' Erik Jimenez on an all-amateur FightWorld card at FIT-NHB, his home gym.

Yet, at 27, Valdez is a patient man. He won't turn pro, he said, until he and his coaches at FIT decide he's ready.

In the meantime, his job as a delivery driver for Walgreens pays the bills.

"First things first," he said. "I need to focus on this upcoming fight and win, have a good performance here.

"(My coaches) would like to see me have a couple more (amateur) fights before turn I pro, just so we can work out a lot of the kinks in my game so when I do turn pro I'm not trying to figure it out."

The Valdez-Jimenez fight is one of 16 scheduled on Saturday's card. FIT-NHB coach and matchmaker Jon Judy said every active gym in the Albuquerque area is represented, plus others from the Rocky Mountain-Southwest region.

After watching one or both of the St-Pierre-Serra fights, Valdez whetted his appetite for combat sports while wrestling for Atrisco Heritage in 2011-12. He later did some amateur boxing. He brings a 2-2 amateur MMA record into Saturday's fight but is riding the wave of his Oct. 9, 2021, victory by second-round TKO over previously unbeaten Tyrique Ransom on a King of the Cage card in Niagara Falls, New York.

"That win taught me a lot of valuable lessons," Valdez said. "Keeping my composure, being smart and tactical in my performance.

"I believe I'm capable of a lot of great stuff when I'm in the ring. It's just making sure I don't get emotional when I fight."

Valdez said he has lost some 30 pounds since weighing in at 265 pounds for the Ransom fight.

"I just feel tip-top," he said.

Jimenez, Valdez's scheduled opponent, has no listed record. But Valdez expects a tough go.

"(Judy) said he's a roughneck, so obviously you have to be a tough guy to work that type of job, working on an oil rig," he said. "There's nothing I'm overlooking. He's gonna be a tough fight, and it's gonna be fun."

SHE'S OK: Albuquerque UFC strawweight Michelle Waterson (18-9) is booked for a July 16 card, site to be announced, against Brazil's Amanda Lemos (11-2-1).

In March, Waterson withdrew from a scheduled fight against Brazil's Amanda Ribas — explaining emotionally on Instagram that she'd suffered an undisclosed but potentially career-ending injury.

Now, Waterson says, it's all good.

"Go time baby!" She posted last week. "July 16th!!!"

FIGHTING MOMS: Waterson is a parent with husband Joshua Gomez of daughter Araya, 11. She's not the only New Mexico combat-sports mom who'll be fighting in upcoming weeks.

—Albuquerque's Amanda Lovato is a parent with ex-husband and MMA fighter Ray Borg of 4-year-old Anthony. Lovato (0-1-1 as a boxer, 2-7 as an MMA fighter but riding a two-fight win streak) is scheduled to face Randee Lyn Morales (4-4) in a six-round flyweight bout on a pro boxing card in Denver on June 4.

Morales is a Rio Rancho High graduate who lives in Denver.

—The night before in Salt Lake City, Bosque Farms boxer (and single mom of three boys) Katherine Lindenmuth (1-0) is scheduled to face Utah's Maryguenn Velinga (3-2-2) in a flyweight fight.

Lindenmuth is 32. Velinga, twice a national Golden Gloves semifinalist as an amateur, is 40.

Saturday

FightWorld 23, FIT-NHB, 1010 Candelaria NW, 7 p.m.: Tyrell Wisdom vs. Gregoire Seban, Billy Ray Valdez vs. Erik Jimenez, 14 other fights. Tickets: fightworldmma@simpletix.com