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By Mike Indri
Retired Boxers Foundation
November 10, 2007
New York - The fight was super-hyped,
and rightfully so, as undefeated welterweight world
champion Miguel Cotto was facing his most difficult
challenge in four-time, three-division former world
champion "Sugar" Shane Mosley, for Cotto's
World Boxing Association title belt.
Madison Square Garden, the "Mecca
of Boxing", would once again play host for Cotto
and his quest for greatness. While not a sell-out, 17,135
boisterous and proud Puerto Rican fans would cram their
way through the turnstiles, they would not be let down
- neither would co-promoters Bob Arum or Oscar De La
Hoya, as initial reports of the gross gate figures came
in at over 3.8 million dollars!
The fight itself, an exciting, intriguing
good twelve rounder, may not have lived up to all the
pomp and circumstance, but Miguel Cotto truly did. The
classy, hard punching Cotto earned his unanimous decision
win and proved he belongs amongst the top of the talent
laden welterweight list.
Cotto was in with a truly great fighter.
Shane Mosley, the only fighter to have twice beaten
De La Hoya, has always been a lethally dangerous combination
of speed, precision and deceptive power. With his two
technical knockout victories over Fernando Vargas in
2006 and his dominatingly brilliant twelve round unanimous
decision win against Luis Collazo in his most recent
bout (02/10/07), Mosley had proven to all the skeptics
that "Sugar" was back to his sweet self.
Fighting against the thirty six year-old
elite level former champion who feasts off of making
good, and great, fighters look bad, Miguel Cotto looked
very good.
Using a good mixture of jabs, body punching
and constant pressure Cotto seemed to effectively counter
Mosley's quicker hands and appeared to be wearing down
the Pomona, CA. fighter. Mosley would later say that
his desire to fight and go for the knockout may have
hurt, more than help, but a couple of big shots from
Mosley caught Cotto on the ropes in round nine and did
hurt the Puerto Rican champion.
As quickly as Mosley's stingers were bouncing
off of Cotto's head did the party-like atmosphere in
boxing's most hallowed venue abruptly change from rabid
delirium to hushed concern. The bell sounding the end
of round nine brought sighs of relief and nervous cheers.
While tired and hurting, this was when
the true greatness of Miguel Cotto emerged again, as
it had before in earlier battles. An ability that cannot
be taught or trained is that of a fighter's heart, and
even while battling as a prospect and then contender,
before winning his titles, Miguel Cotto has always shown
his heart of a champion.
Mosley put forth his
best effort, actually becoming the aggressor late in
the fight and backing Cotto into the ropes, only to
have his iron willed opponent fire back. Mosley was
the fighter pressing the issue as the final bell sounded,
ending the closely fought match.
As fight announcer Michael Buffer read
the judge's scores (Glenn Feldman 115-113, Wynn Kintz
116-113 and Peter Trematerra 115-113) and referee Benjy
Esteves raised Cotto's hand in victory, Team Cotto hoisted
Miguel on their shoulders.
Miguel Cotto's championship performance
tonight hoisted him into boxing's highest echelon -
that exclusive list of today's truly GREAT fighters.
HBO televised three other fights on the
Pay-Per-View televised broadcast.
The night's co-feature bout saw former
World Boxing Organization welterweight champion Antonio
Margarito crush Golden Johnson (25-9-3, 18 KO's), dropping
the overmatched fighter from San Antonio, TX three times
before referee Wayne Kelly stopped the destruction at
2:38 of the first round. Hurting Johnson early with
his big left hand, Margarito sent his foe to the canvas
within the first minute of the bout. The ropes were
all that was holding Johnson up as the barrage continued
and Kelly rightfully started counting for the second
knockdown. Looking to end it the Mexican champion battered
Johnson around the ring and drove a hard left to the
body, which resulted in the third and final knockdown
as Kelly waved off the fight. Johnson, coming off his
surprising knockout win over Oscar Diaz (11/10/06 TKO
11), was never in the fight against Margarito, now 35-5
(25 KO's), who picked up the vacant WBO Intercontinental
welterweight belt with his impressive knockout victory.
Promising jr. welterweight prospect Victor
Ortiz thrilled the crowd with his powerful first round
knockout over former WBA champion Carlos Maussa. The
twenty year-old Ortiz, fighting out of Oxnard, CA. improved
to 20-1-1, with Maussa becoming his 15th knockout victim.
A straight right-left combination by Ortiz sent the
wide-open, Colombian fighter to the deck where he was
unable to arise. Maussa, now 20-5 (18 KO's), has now
lost his last three fights since dethroning then WBA
champion Vivian Harris.
WBC Interim lightweight champion Joel
Casamayor somehow was awarded a split decision victory
over Jose Santa Cruz in a bout controlled by Santa Cruz
throughout most of the twelve rounds. Having not fought
since his split decision win over the late Diego Corrales
(06/10/07), Casamayor appeared rusty and lethargic.
Sent to the canvas, albeit while off balance, with a
punch to the arm in round one, the Cuban defector never
showed his usual superlative boxing prowess and was
out boxed and out hustled by the twenty seven year-old
Mexican fighter. Santa Cruz slipped to 25-3 (14 KO's),
while Casamayor improved to 35-3-1 (21 KO's) with the
judge's gift.
Judge Tony Paolillo had it 114-113 for
Santa Cruz, while both Frank Lombardi and Ron McNair
scored it 114-113 for Casamayor.
On the non-televised portion of the Top
Rank - Golden Boy Promotions fightcard:
Australian featherweight Billy Dib remained undefeated
with his commanding eight round unanimous decision win
against grizzly veteran Rogers Mtagwa. Dib improved
to 17-0 (9 KO's) with his fine performance against the
usually tough Philadelphia fighter. Mtagwa slipped to
24-12-2 (17 KO's).
Michael Anderson made his pro debut a
successful one with his four round unanimous decision
victory over Brooklyn's Olade Thomas, now 1-3. Anderson
did impress the judges, who saw it 39-37, 40-36 &
39-37 for the New Jersey welterweight.
Jr. middleweight Michael Faragon also
made his pro debut a triumphant one, punching his way
to a four round unanimous decision over Javier Garcia
(now 2-2) from Caguas, PR. All three judges saw it 39-37
for the Schenectady, NY native.
Former amateur standout Ronny Vargas (4-0,
3 KO's) is finding similar success since turning pro
this past September. The Bronx jr. middleweight made
short work of rugged Bryan Mullis, who fights out of
Mount Holley, NC. Following a competitive first round
the long and lanky Vargas hurt Mullis with two big right
hands. A follow-up left hook drove the stunned fighter
to the ropes where the hot prospect pounded away on
the wounded Mullis until referee Johnny Callas jumped
in to stop the punishment being laid out by Ronny Vargas
50 seconds into round two, of the scheduled four rounder.
Unbeaten Jesus Rojas, now 10-0 (8 KO's)
opened the night with a six round technical knockout
over Carlos Diaz, 9-11-4 (7 KO's), in a battle of Puerto
Rican jr. featherweights. The end came at the 2:12 mark
for the gutsy, yet overmatched, Diaz.
Another good night to be a boxing fan,
a jam packed Madison Square Garden witnessing Miguel
Cotto's rise to true greatness. A December 8th win by
pound-for-pound king Floyd Mayweather, over Ricky Hatton,
would set up another fight of mega-fight proportions.
2007 has been a great year for boxing, and the future
looks even better!
Mike Indri can be contacted at RBFMIKE@aol.com.
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