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"Magic Man"
keeps IBF belt with unanimous decision win
By Mike Indri
Retired Boxers Foundation
January 5, 2008
Atlantic City - Defending his International
Boxing Federation Jr. Welterweight belt in front of
a standing room crowd in the main ballroom at Bally's
Casino tonight, Paulie Malignaggi did what he does best
- he boxed. While not the most fan-friendly type of
a fight, or the most exciting, Malignaggi was effective
and did what he had to do to win, and to keep his well
earned title belt.
If challenger Herman Ngoudjo, the IBF
top ranked mandatory contender, had fought with the
same notion - of doing what he had to do to win - there
may have been more of an entertaining fight for the
overflowing crowd on hand, and the SHOWTIME television
audience.
Ngoudjo, who earned the right to challenge
Malignaggi by narrowly besting veteran Randall Bailey
in their twelve round title eliminator bout (split decision,
June 8th, 2007), started slowly against the quick-handed
champion. Getting tagged with a constant jab and unable
to catch up with the elusive Italian-born & Brooklyn-breed
slickster, Ngoudjo was lucky to have won a lone round
on one of the judge's scorecards by the end of the third
round. Much of the same followed in rounds 4, 5 &
6, as Ngoudjo hardly applied any pressure, while the
ever cocky and confident champion appeared content popping
his jab and slipping and sliding away from the bigger
and stronger fighter, born Cameroon, who now calls Montreal,
Canada his home.
The many Ngoudjo fans were brought to
their feet in round seven as the 2000 Olympic representative
for Cameroon bounced several big shots off of Malignaggi's
head early in the round and looked to have the feisty
champion hurt! Bleeding from an earlier cut around his
left eye and shaking out the cobwebs from Ngoudjo's
bombs, Malignaggi was relegated to holding on and managed
to escape any further damage, in Ngoudjo's best round.
Had the challenger continued the pressure and forged
on with his attack this could have been a crucial turning
point of the fight, instead the twenty-eight year old
fighter reverted back to his listless self and let his
golden opportunity pass. The effective aggression was
replaced with a sporadic mix of wide looping punches
and lunging telegraphic headshots - which served no
purpose and did no good.
As the championship rounds approached
it was obvious to all that a knockout was Ngoudjo's
only hope, and as the gutsy Malignaggi showed, in his
admirable lone defeat at the hands of Miguel Cotto,
his solid chin and giant heart are two of his biggest
assets. While Ngoudjo pressed the issue in the last
two rounds it definitely was "too little, too late".
As the final six minutes slipped away, so did Ngoudjo's
claim for boxing immortality. While it was obvious that
the talented "Black Panther" had spent much
time on his neatly trimmed and cut hair - which featured
stars in bleached highlight, the time could have been
better spent preparing and ensuring an effective offensive
attack.
Constant pressure may have made a big
difference in the fight's outcome; something Henry Ngoudjo,
now 16-2 (9 KO's), can think about on his trip back
home to Montreal, without a championship belt in his
luggage. All three judges had it right (Al Bennett:
117-111, Kenny Chevalier: 116-113 and Steve Weisfeld:
115-113) for Malignaggi, who improved to 24-1 (5 KO's)
and proudly left the ring with the IBF Jr. Welterweight
Championship belt around his waist.
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On the non-televised portion of the SHOWTIME
"Championship Boxing" undercard:
The night's co-feature bout pitted former two-time light
heavyweight world champion Glen Johnson taking on Colombian
native Hugo Pineda. Johnson came out slugging from round
one and delighted the crowd with his workmanlike effort.
Continually banging away at the bigger southpaw, Johnson
had his foe all bruised up and slowing down by round
four of their scheduled ten round bout. Johnson, looking
to impress as an April 12th date with WBC light heavyweight
champion Chad Dawson is in the works, drove Pineda all
around the ring and had the staggering back to his corner
at the end of round 5. More brutal work by Johnson followed
as the Florida resident pounded away to the head and
body with both hands. Unbelievably Pineda lasted until
late into the seventh round before the game fighter
finally hit the canvas.
Totally spent and unable to defend himself
referee David Fields pulled Johnson away from the damaged
fighter at the 49-second mark of round eight. The technical
knockout win pushed Johnson's record up to 47-11-2 (32
KO's), while Pineda slipped to 39-4-1 (28 KO's). Unreal
to think that the 177 lb. Pineda suffered his first
loss over eleven years ago at the hands of Kostya Tszyu,
as Pineda challenged the former world champion for his
IBF Jr. Lightweight title!
Former IBF Jr. Welterweight Champion Lovemore
N'duo opened the seven-bout fightcard with a dominating
7th round technical knockout win over Rafael Ortiz,
now 14-13-2 (13 KO's), out of Lebanon, Oregon.
N'duo, who lost his title to current belt
holder Malignaggi in a one-sided boxing clinic (6/16/2007
UD 12), dropped the overmatched Ortiz with a left hook
to the body, and referee David Fields waved off the
mismatch at 2:14. N'duo, who has a contracted rematch
set with Malignaggi improved to 46-9-1 (31 KO's).
Heavyweight prospect Chazz Witherspoon
had to dig down real deep to come away with his eight
round unanimous decision win against tough-as-nails
Kendrick Releford, from Ft. Worth, Texas. Outweighed
by close to twenty pounds, Releford gave the bigger
and stronger Philadelphia fighter all he could handle,
right up until the fight's final bell. Releford, who
slipped to 15-10-2 (6 KO's), earned the respect of the
crowd as he constantly tagged Witherspoon, now 21-0
(14 KO's) with just about every left hand he threw.
Credit goes to Witherspoon, a cousin of
former two-time world heavyweight champ "Terrible
Tim" Witherspoon, who showed that championship
heart does apparently run in the family.
Two judges had it at 78-74, while the
third saw it 78-75 - all for the still undefeated Witherspoon.
Many of the local fans were disappointed
as the popular, young, jr. lightweight Nicky DeMarco
dropped another fight and saw his record level off at
2-2 (2 KO's). Alberto Amaro, fighting out of Cantano,
Puerto Rico, surprised the Staten Island fighter and
dropped him quickly in round one. Apparently hurt, DeMarco
struggled to hold off the rushing Amaro and survived
the disastrous first round. Unable to truly recover
until late in the fourth and final round DeMarco valiantly
tried to salvage the bout, but came up short. The judge's
marks of 39-36, 38-37 and 38-36 justified the win for
Amaro, who improved to 2-1.
The sold-out crowd caught a brief glimpse
of a possible future world champion, as Cuban-defector
Yoriokis Gamboa needed only 1:54 to annihilate his bewildered
opponent, Gilberto Lugue; who made the trip from Phoenix,
Arizona for the savage beating. Gamboa, aptly called
"El Cyclone" blistered Luque, now 7-5-2 (3
KO's) with a Joe Frazier-like left hook, which crushed
his stunned foe into the canvas. Beating the count but
very hurt, Luque absorbed more hurtful blows before
getting driven back down to the deck twice more before
the bludgeoning was halted. Gamboa is now 8-0, with
7 knockouts, and all jr. lightweight fighters are now
warned!
In the nights walk out bout; 263 lb. Ohio
heavyweight Ryan Thompson withstood six rounds of agonizing
punishment from Kevin "Big Man" Burnett, and
found himself on the short side of a unanimous decision.
Burnett hit Thompson so much, and so hard,
that it pained the audience to watch. Somehow the resilient
Thompson, now 4-3 (4 KO's), finished on his feet and
earned all the cheers from the respectful crowd. Burnett,
a giant of a man from Augusta, Georgia rose to 11-1
(6 KO's).
It was great to see the Bally's Casino
ballroom filled to capacity, and the boxing fans were
treated to a good night. While only the Malignaggi-Ngoudjo
main event was telecast on the SHOWTIME Network, the
DiBella Promotions fightcard showcased current, former
and quite possibly future world champions. These are
the type of fights, and fighters, that will keep the
fans coming back for more great boxing action!
Mike Indri can be contacted at RBFMIKE@aol.com.
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