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Cintron crushes
Mathysse in two round blowout!
By Mike Indri
Retired Boxers Foundation
July 14, 2007
Atlantic City, NJ - To the dismay of the
9,437 faithful fans that once again transformed Atlantic
City's Boardwalk Hall into "Arturo Gatti's backyard",
Alfonso Gomez, a supposed perfect opponent due to his
lighter punching, pounded the New Jersey legend throughout
the surprisingly one-sided bout, putting an end to the
career of one of the most beloved and cherished fighters
- of this, or any era.
For seven rounds Gomez, of the television
reality series "Contender" fame, out-boxed
and out-hit Gatti, landing too many clean power punches
along the way before finally battering the blood and
guts warrior into submission at the 2:12 mark of the
fateful seventh round. A scorching round in which Gomez,
according to Comp-U-Box, landed 40 of his 62 power shots.
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While winning four of the first six rounds
on two of the judges scorecards, and pitching a shutout
on that of highly respected Steve Weisfeld's ledger,
Gomez hurt Gatti early in round seven with bludgeoning
bombs along with an effective body attack which instilled
desperation into his damaged foe. Resorting to the type
of homerun swings which pulled him from the depths of
defeat in his career defining dramatic knockout triumphs
against Wilson Rodriguez and Rafael Ruelas, Gatti valiantly
unleashed his best effort, and paid dearly for his reckless
abandon. A big right hand was the exclamation mark for
which Gatti had no answer. Totally spent, annihilated,
and with nothing left to give Gatti slumped down the
ropes and onto the canvas. As a true champion, the lion
hearted Jersey City native struggled, in vain, to get
to his feet.
As sad and regrettable this scene was
for the true boxing fan, the moment turned proud for
the sport and business as Commissioner Larry Hazzard,
Sr. jumped into the ring ensuring stoppage of the fight.
While many ringside observers wondered aloud why referee
Randy Neumann or Gatti's trainer Micky Ward were allowing
this non-competitive punishment to continue, Hazzard's
actions again proved why the state of New Jersey, through
its State Athletic Control Board, runs the finest, most
stringent and strictly regulated fight commission in
the country. For this, Commissioner Larry Hazzard, Sr.
should be commended.
Afterwards, a realistic Gatti, 40-9 (31
KO's), announced his retirement before leaving for the
hospital to check on a nasty looking injury to the left
side of his face (lip/cheekbone area). "I will
be back to Boardwalk Hall," said a smiling Gatti,
"but only as a spectator!"
To his credit, Alfonso
Gomez was given an opportunity and he seized the moment.
Figuring to be a tailor-made opponent, due to his coming
straightforward approach and a lack of punching power,
Gomez proved his detractors wrong. From the fight's
opening bell to his fight-ending picture perfect right
hand, Gomez, who improved to 17-4-2 (8 KO's), controlled
the action, displayed an effective jab and wore his
thirty five year old opponent down with a solid attack
to the body and head.
Showing himself to be a class guy, Gomez
referred to Gatti as one of his respected heroes growing
up and that this was simply his time to shine - and
shine he did.
The night's co-feature bout pitted IBF
champion Kermit Cintron against Argentina's Walter Matthysse,
for Cintron's welterweight title belt, in what promised
to be a battle of heavy-handed sluggers. Cintron delivered,
while Matthysse never had a chance. The Puerto Rican
champion pounced on his highly regarded foe and hurt
Matthysse late in round one with several big shots.
A clean right hand sent the stunned fighter into the
ropes and down to the canvas, with the bell only prolonging
the inevitable. Another stinging Cintron right hand
drove the still dazed Matthysse back to the deck, and
much credit is to be given to the damaged fighter for
even being able to arise. Unfortunately, for Matthysse,
a vicious combination of a left hook-left uppercut-overhand
right put the overwhelmed fighter to sleep at the 29-second
mark of round two. Matthysse fell to 26-2 (25 KO's),
while the impressively destructive Cintron improved
to 28-1 (26 KO's) and totally vindicated himself from
his mentally damaging KO loss at the hands of Antonio
Margarito (TKO 5: 04/23/05) - who would lose his WBO
147 pound title to Paul Williams later in the evening
on HBO's west coast telecast.
Maybe Cintron is now ready to prove that
his mismatch loss was a fluke, while Margarito can fight
for another world title in a rematch against the new
and improved fighter, now trained by Emanuel Stewart
and Joey Gamache?
On the Main Events "Welter Skelter"
undercard:
Philadelphia's Kaseem Wilson opened the show with a
four round unanimous decision win against Sergio Garcia,
from Miami. Wilson improved to 8-0-1 (3 KO's), controlling
the action, as well as having his weaker opponent's
face bloodied, due to a cut right eye by fights end.
Garcia fell to 6-4 (5 KO's).
Raul Martinez stayed perfect with his
technical knockout win over Everasto Primero in a battle
of Texan flyweights. Primero, 14-11-1 (7 KO's), was
unable to continue after taking a brutal beating for
five rounds against the San Antonio fighter, who made
the El Paso native his thirteenth KO victim, Primero
is now 0-7-1 in his last eight fights and hopefully
is considering another line of work.

Crawford, a supporter of the Retired Boxers
Foundation, wears the RBF on his boxing trunks
and his "statement performance"
shows he is as impressive a fighter inside
the ring, as he is a special person outside
the squared circle.Photo courtesy of Tom Casino |
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Almost as awe inspiring of a finish as
Cintron's impressive knockout was that of fellow Main
Events promoted fighter Henry Crawford. It took the
highly regarded welterweight prospect a mere 35 seconds
to dispose of Fort Smith, Ark. native Josh Hammock.
Crawford improved to 16-0-1, made short work of his
overmatched opponent by crushing a monstrous right hand
to the temple of his eighth KO victim, who made no effort
to even think about getting up before the count of ten.
Crawford, a native of Paterson, NJ and
a former three-time NJ Golden Gloves champion has steadfastly
improved under the watchful eye of respected trainer
Nettles Nasser and feels he is ready to take his career
to the next level. "I'm in great shape and I'm
ready for anyone," stated the likeable Crawford.
"I wanted to prove a point tonight, and I did!"
Bronx middleweight Giovanni Lorenzo stayed
perfect with his fourth round knockout win over Sherwin
Davis (now 18-5, 12 KO's) from Indianapolis. Lorenzo
dropped Davis four times, once in round two and twice
in the third, before staying down for good at round
four's 2:56 mark, of a scheduled ten round bout. The
highly skilled Lorenzo improved to 25-0, with his seventeenth
knockout win.
Jr. middleweight Pawel Wolak pleased his
large contingent of avid supporters with his dominating
second round technical knockout win Edgar Reyes. Reyes,
who traveled up from Orlando, Florida for his beating,
tried to make a fight of it, but the stronger and more
aggressive Polish fighter quickly broke down his game
opponent. The toe-to-toe action continued into round
two as Wolak showed himself worthy of his "Raging
Bull" moniker and clobbered Reyes (10-8, 3 KO's)
who was forced to take a knee under Wolak's heavy barrage.
Pouncing on his wounded prey Wolak continued his hurtful
assault and forced referee Lindsey Paige to jump in
and save Reyes from further punishment at 2:05 of round
two. The popular and exciting Mt. Arlington resident
remained unbeaten, improving to 16-0 (11 KO's).
A big night of boxing at the Atlantic
City Boardwalk Hall brought to all by Main Events Promotions
and HBO.
We saw the last of the legendary Arturo
Gatti, a favorite son of New Jersey and a hero to all
who love boxing, but we also saw many talented, young
fighters who have dreams to someday get to the place
where the revered "human highlight reel" has
been for close to ten years.
The classy brawler, who was always as
gracious in defeat as he was in victory, rose to cult-like
rock star status with his 21 appearances on HBO and
a fighting style, which virtually guaranteed sold out
venues and a loyal fan base, second to none.
Arturo Gatti finishes his gloried fighting
career with lots of money, great memories to be proud
of, and maybe more important to him, the ultimate respect
of knowing that everything he had to give in a fight
was left inside the boxing ring, in Atlantic City, where
he is loved by all.
Thanks Champ! For giving it all you had
and fighting the only way you knew how - with your heart
and your balls.
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