From marinated to overcooked?
Lopez-Gamboa, Kirkland-Angulo, & Ortiz-Berto
Mark E. Ortega
Leave-it-in-the-ring.com
April 18, 2011
In this midweek piece,
Leave-it-in-the-ring's Mark Ortega discusses the overcooked bout
between Juan Manuel Lopez and Yuriorkis Gamboa that fell to shambles
following Lopez' shock loss to Orlando Salido this weekend, and why
promoters should put their fighters in tough more often as was the
case with Andre Berto and Victor Ortiz the same night, where the
loser gained just as much in defeat as he had in winning his first 27
pro fights. As was the case with Tua-Ibeabuchi in '97, no career will
be derailed from the great welterweight bout between Berto-Ortiz.
The month of April has already seen its
fair share of upsets in big time bouts as well as the vanquishing of
quite a few future paydays for many fighters on the losing end of
them.
The unusual number of predetermined
outcomes turned shocking finish this month has me re-exploring a
question that I often find myself pondering. In a few of these cases,
fighters were being built into something nobody could really gauge if
the hype was reality.
In the case of James Kirkland, his
demise was perhaps the most unbelievable. A few pointed to how sloppy
he looked in his two comeback fights following an incarceration,
especially one just a few weeks before his slated bout with Japanese
former titlist Nobuhiro Ishida, against Colombian journeyman Jhon
Berrio. The slow handed and footed Berrio found Kirkland way too many
times, and even wobbled the bright prospect with a jab. The level of
opponent was the end of it as Kirkland stopped him early, but the
Ishida assignment was a different beast.
Ishida fought his first ten round bout
in his fifth career appearance. He won his first regional title his
sixth fight and had not fought anything less than a ten rounder since
2005. Eric Gomez deserves high praise for the excitement the Action
Heroes card that this fight appeared on contained, but the
matchmaking on this fight for a young star you are trying to rebuild
was just not very good.
He lost to Rigoberto Alvarez, the less
talented brother of emerging Mexican supserstar Saul Alvarez, who
himself is in danger of seeing his career stalled after having won a
contrived world title in his last bout against Matthew Hatton. More
on that later.
Ishida also stood 6'2” and was a
lefty. Height and a tricky stance are two of the worst things you can
throw at a young guy still trying to find his timing. I and a few
others thought that if Ishida could control the distance and win two
of the early rounds, Kirkland could be in danger of losing a decision
because this was only an eight round bout.
There is not a single soul in the MGM
Grand Garden Arena April 9th or likely not even one
watching from home that thought Ishida was going to crush Kirkland
inside of one round, dropping him three times before referee Joe
Cortez smothered Kirkland on the ground despite him again trying to
make it to his feet.
Ishida himself could not believe what
shots put Kirkland down on his back, having lamented as much in an
interview with Leave-it-in-the-ring.com in the days following the
victory.
“I was surprised when I dropped him
with not a hard punch,” said Ishida in the April 14th
interview.
Golden Boy Promotions went a long way
to secure the marketability of Kirkland, whose career was derailed in
2009 for the illegal purchase of a firearm by a felon. Kirkland had
just scored his most impressive win, a mid-rounds beatdown of former
prospect Joel Julio in a headlining bout on HBO Boxing After Dark in
San Jose, California.
The Golden Boy himself Oscar De La Hoya
spoke at James' hearing in an effort to back up the kid's character
to try and get a reduced sentence. Kirkland would end up out of the
ring for almost two years.
Kirkland's fighting style never lent
itself to the idea that his career was going to be a long one. Which
is why it will always end up being a disappointment that a fight
between Kirkland and Alfredo Angulo never took place at the height of
their hype.
It was a fight that was often
discussed, sometimes even by the casual fan. HBO had done a pretty
good job building the two of them against handpicked opponents on
their airwaves. What's better is they sold the bouts to the public on
the basis they were usually part of three fight telecasts, which
viewers tend to eat up.
Why they never tried to force the two
together when neither one of them had an unbeatable style [but more
likely an unbeatable will] is incredulous.
Promoters shouldn't always promote
behind the demeanor that every loss is a bad loss. That simply is not
true, but it is all dependent on what kind of fight it occurs in.
Just look at another loser in an upset,
former WBC welterweight champion Andre Berto who fell to Victor Ortiz
in a Fight of the Year style candidate just this past weekend.
Both fighters went into the bout with a
lot of questions from the general public. Ortiz and his heart were
questioned after it looked like he quit in a fight against Marcos
Maidana, a fight in which he showed the ability to put his opponent
down multiple times, having dropped the tough Argentinian thrice.
Ortiz looked a lot more cautious than he had in his more aggressive
lead-up fights to the Maidana clash.
Berto and his desire to be a great
fighter were questioned in the days and weeks prior to the Ortiz
fight. He had enjoyed perhaps the easiest run to a legitimate world
title in recent history, having been matched against a series of
fighters with questionable credentials, many of which looked like
they belonged in a Street Fighter game.
He also looked vulnerable in fights
against David Estrada, Cosme Rivera, and most obviously Luis Collazo.
Berto engaged in a great fight with Luis Collazo, a fight many felt
he lost. Berto looked beatable in that contest but he had the public
behind him because his display of heart in the contest.
Berto's title run consisted mostly of
defenses against smaller bodied opposition, like former 130-pound
titlist Steve Forbes and 140-pound champion Juan Urango. Berto also
reportedly got 1.1 million dollars for a title defense against Freddy
Hernandez in a one round blowout. To put into perspective how big
that purse is, he made more than twice what Nonito Donaire and
Fernando Montiel made combined in their February bantamweight clash.
Berto was scoring purses like this
despite not being a major ticket seller or a truly great fighter. In
his defense against Carlos Quintana in his home state of Florida,
Berto sold only slightly more than 900 tickets. His scheduled fight
with Shane Mosley fell through when Berto's homeland of Haiti was hit
badly by a natural disaster. Many people also felt the lack of
tickets sold for the bout were a major reason that HBO and promoters
tipped towards scrapping it.
Berto was down twice officially, a
third was incorrectly ruled a slip in the opening round by referee
Mike Ortega. Ortiz was down twice as well. Despite how vulnerable
both men looked they emerged from the contest with a newly restored
credibility. Ortiz answered his doubters about his heart and
aggressiveness as he came right at Berto for twelve rounds despite
being dropped harshly twice. Berto looked gassed from the early
rounds and languished on the ropes for much of the bout but proved
his heart in defeat.
In fact, Berto in defeat may have drawn
in more fans than in the twenty seven prior victories he secured.
There are many people out there that haven't been more interested in
seeing him in the future than they are right now.
It would have been much worse for his
career had his loss come against a lower tiered opponent that the
fans were unfamiliar with.
Like Orlando Salido, who scored a shock
stoppage of 31-0 Puerto Rican featherweight king Juan Manuel Lopez,
who fell to his Mexican counterpart while fighting at home in Puerto
Rico Saturday in their Showtime headlining bout. Lopez was 11-to-1 to
make a successful defense of his WBO belt, despite Salido presenting
some interesting strengths that would give Lopez trouble.
Lopez controlled the fight over the
first three rounds but Salido began finding a clubbing right hand in
the fourth, then dropped Lopez with a left right combination that hew
as badly hurt from. Lopez fought off of solely his heart in the next
two rounds before getting clubbed by some heavy artillery in the
eighth and stopped on his feet by the referee.
It was a controversial ending but it
will no doubt hurt the future marketability of Lopez and moreso a
fight with fellow featherweight Yuriorkis Gamboa, a bout that the
boxing public has been clamoring for since about five fights
previous. Both fighters are handled by Top Rank, but the super powers
seemed set in waiting until the two reached 130 pound to put them
together.
Both Lopez and Gamboa have proven
vulnerable in the past as well and it has been suggested that there
was someone out there who could halt this fight from being as big as
they envisioned. True that almost nobody thought it would be Orlando
Salido, who had lost to Gamboa in a prior contest last year. It is
also true that Lopez barely survived the last three rounds against
journeyman Rogers Mtagwa.
A fight between Gamboa and Lopez no
doubt would be big even now. But two months ago it would have earned
the winner heavy pound-for-pound consideration and the loser would
not lose much in defeat.
The past lends itself to this idealism.
When David Tua lost a hard-fought contest against Ike Ibeabuchi in
their 1997 fight, he didn't lose much in eyes of the public. It took
him a few easy fights to get back in contention but he eventually
found himself in a pay-per-view headlining title shot against Lennox
Lewis in 2000. The fans also got a high action heavyweight bout out
of it as Tua-Ibeabuchi is the all-time punch stat champion amongst
heavyweights. If the promoters behind those two had tried to build
the fight much longer, it would have never happened as Ibeabuchi went
to prison not soon after on charges of rape.
The marination of these fights can
sometimes lead to them being overcooked, as in the case of Lopez and
Gamboa. Take a look at another more recent case in former Olympic
teammates Jermain Taylor and Jeff Lacy. Taylor was the 160-pound king
right at the time Lacy was at the height of his hype. It didn't make
much sense to make that fight right then as they were still a weight
class apart but once Joe Calzaghe ruined Lacy and Taylor had twice
lossed to Pavlik, this fight became a crossroads clash when the two
met in 2008.
Promoters should look to fights like
this weekend's Ortiz-Berto bout as evidence that it is better for all
parties involved to put two guys in together that are on a similar
plane than constantly trying to hype the fighters into something that
is more perception than reality. In the process, everyone seems to
get a fun fight or few out of it.
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