Boxer ramen to go3/1/2024 ![]() ![]() They're open for lunch and dinner Wednesday through Sunday, 11 a.m. If you want to check out the new Boxer, head on down to 1668 NW 23rd Ave. Their generous happy hour, which runs from 2:30 to 5:30 p.m., includes a variety of drinks and some favorite dishes, including the katsu burger, chicken karaage, furikake tots, and more. You can enjoy several kinds of small plates, sashimi, sushi, ramen, and a slew of alcoholic beverages from sake and cocktails to draft beers and wine by the glass. Having the chance to reopen and redefine ourselves has been incredible.”Įven though there's only one Boxer now, their bigger menu is sure to bring in both new and old patrons. ![]() "There is a strong sense of community, and we are excited to be able to contribute to that. Devin Haney completely outclassed Regis Prograis to take his WBC belt. "All of our neighbors have been very welcoming," Thornton says. Chris Thornton, Boxer’s general manager, told Willamette Week they love the new location. "Home to Portland's favorite ramen, we now offer sushi, beer, and cocktails." The revitalized restaurant recently welcomed back customers at its new location in Slabtown. "Boxer is back and better than ever," according to its revamped website. Now Boxer Ramen, now rebranded as Boxer, is back, according to local sources. Prograis said he will take a break and try to get back into a world title fight next year.It's been two years since a popular ramen shop mini-chain in Portland shuttered all its locations in the wake of the devastating COVID-19 pandemic. It’s not a one-punch type of shot, but he’s quick. Prograis added: “His feet are faster, he’s quicker than I thought he was. I say what I mean, but I’m gonna tell the truth, Devin Haney is better than I thought, he is.” “That motherfucker good, I’m not gonna lie, he’s better than what I thought,” he said. Prograis, to his credit, made no bones about how the night went. There are major names to fight at 140, and Haney also said they’ve talked internally in the team about moving up to 147 already. Haney also said he felt a “tremendous difference” moving up to 140 from 135, and that he felt “so much stronger” in camp and in the ring. “At times, I wanted to go (for the knockout) and hit him with big shots, but my dad said, ‘Stay focused, stick to the game plan.” I knew he had a habit and we capitalized off his habit of leaning in.” ![]() Other than that, he tipped his left hand off.”Īsked about the knockdown, Haney said, “I hit him with a sharp right hand. Occasionally, I went into it to make him throw it and I’d counter it. “I did everything I said I was gonna do,” Haney said. It was Haney who looked like the harder puncher, and certainly the more accurate, more fundamentally sound, and simply better man in the ring. Prograis, 34, talked a lot about “hurting” Haney in this fight, but never came close to it. Meanwhile, Prograis (29-2, 24 KO) seems to have totally hit the wall in his last two fights, and looked pretty well hopeless by the third round, when he was dropped by Haney. There was no holding, no “negating,” this was a genuine domination, and perhaps a career-best performance. We went early on a Sunday Evening so I was a little surprised that there wasnt a longer wait for a table. It wasn’t a typical Haney (31-0, 15 KO) fight, either. Honestly I wasnt expecting too much from a non-Japanese Ramen place, but I was totally impressed by the tonkotsu Ramen. Bet on Rodriguez vs Edwards and more boxing with DraftKings Sportsbook!
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