Saturday, April 9, 2011

Maidana's record improves, Morales' all-time status soars


Maidana's record improves, Morales' all-time great status soars
Mark E. Ortega
Leave-it-in-the-ring.com
April 9, 2011

In what can be considered one of the more impressive performances by a fighter who is long past his best, Mexican hero Erik “El Terrible” Morales silenced all of his critics as he made it to the finish line against Argentinian heavy hitter Marcos Maidana, losing a hard fought twelve-round unanimous decision victory at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas, Nevada in a bout that many will tab as a candidate for Fight of the Year.

If the first two rounds were any indication of how the fight would play out, the public criticism of the bout as a mismatch of a pay-per-view headliner looked to be right on the money as Morales looked shopworn and had his right eye all the way closed from a first round Maidana uppercut. For all but ten seconds of the second round, Morales was getting lambasted. In those ten seconds, a glimmer of light shined through as Morales answered a flurry from Maidana with a nice combination of his own that actually backed up an opponent that is naturally three weight classes bigger than he is. It was the kind of answer that Morales circa 2000 would have been known to come up with.

The next portion of the fight featured more of those moments and it quickly became apparent that it was now not only just a glimmer of hope for the 34-year old from Tijuana but a ray of light and through eighth rounds all of a sudden ringside observers were finding that they had Morales in the fight, many of them with even scorecards. That alone had people buzzing considering most pundits were fearful for Morales' health in engaging with such an established power puncher.

As the fight wore on, the question was whether or not Morales' legs would fail him as his chin seemed to be holding up well under the pressure of Maidana's wide shots. Morales fought the perfect gameplan, resting his legs on the ropes as he turned with the punches Maidana threw while blocking many more, rarely being hit clean by any of this shots.

In fact, if anyone was hurt it was Maidana, who seemed buzzed a number of times, though he claimed in the post fight press conference he was only hurt once and he was mostly trying to play possum.

The drama in the fight was palpable as watching Morales felt similar to watching a guy run a marathon and crossing your fingers he makes it to the finish line.

In the last two rounds, Morales seemed to be fading and Maidana, knowing the fight hung in question, came on strong to win them on all three judges scorecards, which served as the margin of victory with Maidana winning via majority decision by scores of 116-112 twice and 114-114.

Morales was returing to the MGM for the first time since scoring his career defining 2005 victory over Manny Pacquiao, but felt the support of his Mexican contingency that, as per usual, followed the living legend to Vegas to cheer on one of their idols, probably for the last time if you asked nearly any astute fan of the sport. Morales rose to the occasion of his first big fight since 2007's near victory against David Diaz for the WBC lightweight title. Many detractors of this bout pointed to the unevenness of Morales' performances in his three fight comeback last year, but it became clear through the fight with Maidana that he took those fights as a way to shake off the rust and regain his timing and that he was not taking the opposition seriously.

Despite officially being the loser on this night, Erik Morales bolstered his resume tremendously by fighting a guy that nobody else in the junior welterweight division asked for. Amir Khan avoided fighting Maidana, who was his mandatory, for almost a year and a half before finally being forced into the ring with him.

“[Khan and Morales] are on the same level, pretty much,” offered Maidana following the win. “Amir Khan is a bit faster, but he runs. Erik doesn't run, he stands and fights.”

The fact that Morales, a former 122, 126, and 130 pound world champion, went toe to toe with one of the biggest punchers in a weight class two divisions higher than where he last claimed gold speaks volumes to the fighting spirit of a guy who had no financial need to return to the ring but did so instead out of his love for the sport. It's no wonder why Morales was able to bring over 7,000 fans to the arena despite this being classified as a heavy mismatch going in.

In the immediate aftermath, Morales made it clear he would like a rematch and before he could finish saying his piece, Maidana jumped in and exclaimed, “Anytime.”

So what happens when you get two guys in the ring with each other whose lone focus is fighting? A really great fight, and one that a majority wouldn't mind seeing again.

Two division world champion Robert “The Ghost” Guerrero [29-1-1, 18 KOs] finally earned his career defining win as he fought brilliantly en route to a unanimous decision over game but outgunned Michael Katsidis [27-4, 22 KOs] in a thrilling lightweight bout that had two bogus sanctioning body titles on the line. Guerrero, who won world titles at featherweight and super featherweight, finally put together an effort that was both exciting and impressive. Despite referee Russell Morta's best attempt to ruin the fight [by deducting two points from Katsidis for low blows that nearly put him on the brink of disqualification, as well as one from Guerrero], the two traded heavy fodder for most of the contest with Robert's technical skills shining through. Guerrero ate some of Katsidis' best shots and was lured into a firefight early on but looked to fare the better. Guerrero was able to get back into his form and he hit Katsidis with nearly every one-two he threw. Katsidis began to do tremendous body work in the eighth that seemed to affect Guerrero, but the momentum was stifled when Mora stepped in to issue deductions. Mora tried going against the old adage that two wrongs don't make a right and he deducted a point from Guerrero in the ninth as a makeup call. Official scores for the fight were 117-108, 118-107, 118-106 for Guerrero.

In an Upset of the Year candidate, lightly regarded former fringe titleholder Nobuhiro Ishida [23-6-2, 7 KOs] demolished James Kirkland [27-1, 24 KOs] in a single round, dropping the heavily favored undefeated three times before Joe Cortez finally called it off at 1:52 of the first round. Ishida took Kirkland's best shots surprisingly well and after a hesitant first thirty seconds he landed a one-two combination that sent Kirkland down hard. Kirkland made it to his feet and to his credit did not deviate from his gameplan and marched forward, albeit straight into Ishida's extended left hands. On the third knockdown, Ishida ate a good shot from Kirkland but it wasn't enough for him to keep from throwing his two punch combination, which resulted in Kirkland crashing down the third and final time. Terrible news emerged from ringside as Kirkland trainer Kenny Adams allegedly collapsed in the dressing room following the fight.

Paulie Malignaggi kept himself in talks for future paydays as he marched to an easy ten round unanimous decision victory over Jose Miguel Cotto, avenging a loss against younger brother Miguel from 2006. Cotto came out to a quick start in the first but saw his momentum stifled the remainder of the way as Malignaggi flicked out enough accurate straight shots to keep Cotto from opening up.

Junior welterweight prospect Danny “Swift” Garcia [20-0, 14 KOs] made the jump to contender as he basically shut out former lineal lightweight champion Nate Campbell [33-7-1, 25 KOs] over ten lopsided rounds. Campbell, who announced retirement following a defeat last year to gatekeeper Walter Estrada, was unable to land efficiently while Garcia placed his punches very well for the duration. Campbell tried old school antics like clowning and hitting after the bell but the young New Yorker stayed composed and kept with his gameplan. Garcia looks to be ready for top ten opposition following the impressive win.

In the non-televised opener of the evening's action, Canadian junior middleweight prospect Mikael Zewski [9-0, 5 KOs] had to work harder than he figured against game Clint Coronel [4-2-2, KO], winning a six round split decision victory. The scores were a bit peculiar, Herb Santos scored it a shutout 60-54 for Coronel, which was overruled by Tim Cheatham's 60-54 and Ricardo Ocasio's 59-55 for Zewski.

Rakhim Chakhkiev [10-0, 8 KOs] remained unbeaten as he stopped journeyman Harvey Jolly [11-17-1, 6 KOs] at 2:18 in the third round of a scheduled four-round heavyweight bout. Jolly remained in the fight longer than many anticipated as Chakhkiev fought at a very measured pace until he forced a knockdown of him while he was on his feet. Jolly was later dropped legitimately in the third and referee Joe Cortez waved it off.

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