Morales, 140, Maidana 140
Mark E. Ortega
Leave-it-in-the-ring.com
April 8, 2011
The last time Erik “El Terrible”
Morales stepped foot into the MGM Grand for a professional
prizefight, he scored the most illustrious win of his storied career,
a clear cut twelve round unanimous decision victory over Manny
Pacquiao, which serves as the last time the Filipino icon suffered
defeat.
That bout took place little more than
six years ago, and although Morales has slipped a peg or three since,
he is obviously still a big enough draw to be headlining tonight's
star studded HBO pay-per-view card from Las Vegas and has seen much
of the same amount of people show up in support of him than in his
heyday.
Morales [51-6, 35 KOs] is faced with a
daunting task: outlast Argentinian junior welterweight power puncher
Marcos Maidana over twelve rounds while piling up enough offense to
earn a decision. Even those who feel that Morales has even a
miniscule chance of winning; in their wildest dreams they could only
see him edging a decision while having to deal with a high number of
shaky moments.
Morales is too far gone, they say. His
legs won't be able to withstand the pressure that Maidana will bring.
Maidana [29-2, 27 KOs] may not be the best fighter at 140 pounds, or
even the second best, but there is no doubt in anyone's mind he is
the toughest, perhaps out of anyone south of the welterweight
division.
Why Morales would basically beg
promoter Golden Boy Promotions for this fight [after Juan Manuel
Marquez passed on a showdown between the two legends] is beyond
anyone's belief. He says he has a plan and that there is no way that
Maidana hits harder than Manny Pacquiao and that he has glaring
deficiencies that can be taken advantage of.
The first part of that statement is
likely false. Maidana, who weighed in at 140 pounds, has put a damper
in the careers of then undefeated Victor Ortiz and Victor Cayo and
nearly knocked Amir Khan off his block as well. The second part of
that statement is most definitely true, Maidana has shown even in
victories against both that his poor footwork and slow handspeed can
be taken advantage of, if at least for a minute.
One point of contention that some of
the die hard supporters of Morales, who also tipped the scales at
140, hold is how absolutely average Maidana looked in his home
country against the insanely well past it DeMarcus Corley at the end
of last year. Maidana looked gassed after just a few rounds and most
of the cleanest shots he landed were illegal shots to the back of the
former 140 pound world champion's head.
That serves as Morales' only chance in
most people's minds, that Maidana doesn't take an Erik Morales that
spent three years on the sidelines and one year in against C-level
opposition seriously. That perhaps the change in trainers to Rudy
Perez, who trained Mexican legend and Morales rival Marco Antonio
Barrera for much of his prime and in two wins against him, was too
abrupt. In short, that Maidana did not do everything he could to
prepare for the dearth of experience that Morales will bring to the
table tonight.
The crowd support will be heavily in
favor of Morales, who has seen the bright lights of Las Vegas on
fight night an outstanding eighteen times [his record 14-4], six of
which took place at the MGM where tonight's fight takes place.
If one were to compare what a Morales
win would resemble in the historical context of the sport, one would
have to travel back to 1989's Ring Magazine Fight of the Year, which
saw a nearly 39-year old Roberto Duran outlast the gritty and tough
Iran Barkley over twelve rounds in a world middleweight title fight,
a division which was more than twenty pounds heavier than what was
perceived as Duran's prime fighting weight.
Morales won his first world title at
122 pounds with an eleventh round stoppage of longtime reigning champ
Daniel Zaragoza in 1997 and then followed it up with title claims in
both the featherweight and super featherweight divisions over the
early part of the millennium. Morales was just short of claiming a
fourth world title in as many weight divisions when he lost a
controversial decision to David Diaz in 2007 for the WBC lightweight
title. Morales would then take a three year sabbatical from the sport
before returning against non descript opponents last year in an
attempt to shake off the rust.
One respected writer said yesterday
that if Morales were to even make it the twelve round distance in
defeat it would be the upset of the year. There's no doubt that if
Morales were to somehow come away the victor, it would possibly be
one of the biggest upsets this decade in high profile bouts and would
instantly legitimize Morales as a threat in the junior welterweight
division.
The idea that Morales could be a
potential opponent for some of the top tier guys at 140 is unreal.
Over the past ten years, one dream fight that hardcore fans have
imagined but never felt was possible between Zab Judah and Erik
Morales could possibly come to fruition if “El Terrible” pulls
off an upset, or even looks decent in defeat. Judah, who once was the
lineal welterweight champion when Morales was still plying his trade
three divisions lower, expressed interest in the bout when it was
brought to his attention at a fight card in Primm last night.
That very few are contemplating
Morales' future sans retirement is indicative of how long the odds
are of him pulling off the win. If Morales can even pull off an
astounding old man performance for even one half of a fight, fans and
pundits would feel that the main event gave them their money's worth.
Most are crossing their fingers that the Mexican legend doesn't
suffer an embarrassing defeat that puts a bitter end to one of the
more storied careers of the past few decades. Either way, there is
definitely drama tonight in Las Vegas' featured bout.
In the co-featured bout, Robert “The
Ghost” Guerrero [28-1-1, 18 KOs] of Gilroy, California looks to
score a true career defining victory as he meets battle tested
Australian warrior Michael “The Great” Katsidis in a twelve round
interim title unification bout [yes, we've reached this point now] in
the lightweight division. Both fighters weighed in at 134 pounds.
Guerrero, who has claimed gold in both the featherweight and super
featherweight divisions, has an opportunity to finally get that
exclamation mark style victory that he has longed to secure since
turning professional ten years ago. Katsidis [27-3, 22 KOs] is
looking to bounce back from a defeat in last year's Fight of the Year
candidate against reigning lightweight champion Juan Manuel Marquez,
a fight in which Katsidis' face betrayed him the way it has in the
past.
Katsidis' face rips like Kleenex at the
first sign of wear, which works out favorably for Guerrero who will
likely try and force an outside fight against his shorter armed
opponent. If Katsidis can apply pressure early and take Guerrero off
his game, the chance of an upset seems possible more than in any
other televised bout. Two bouts that lay evidence to a gameplan that
can be implemented against Guerrero in order to earn a victory are
the two fights the Gilroy, California native had with fringe
gatekeeper Gamaliel Diaz just prior to jumping into top tier
competition. The first fight saw Diaz work the inside distance
perfectly as he secured a split decision to hand Guerrero his first
loss. In the rematch two fights later, Guerrero opened up a big lead
early as he dropped Diaz early but allowed him to fight his way back
into contention before being stopped by a single body shot in the
sixth. If Katsidis implores the same kind of gameplan, he could walk
away with the victory.
In his toughest fight since returning
to the ring following a layoff due to incarceration, James Kirkland
[27-0, 24 KOs] meets former fringe junior middleweight beltholder
Nobuhiro Ishida [22-6-2, 7 KOs] of Japan in an eight round bout that
saw both fighters weigh in at 158 pounds. Ishida maintains a lofty
height advantage but Kirkland is expected to break him down in two or
three rounds according to trainer Kenny Adams, who took over the
career of the once troubled fighter following his release from jail
stemming from a weapons charge in early 2009. Adams has Kirkland
living and training out of Las Vegas and both trainer and fighter
expect him to be back in the mix with the top names at 154 pounds by
the end of the calendar year.
In the opening bout of the pay-per-view
telecast, Paulie Malignaggi looks to avenge a defeat against Miguel
Cotto as he takes on the less talented brother of the Puerto Rican
family in Jose Miguel Cotto in a ten round welterweight bout.
Malignaggi [28-4, 6 KOs] suffered his first defeat as a professional
against Miguel in June of 2006, a fight in which “The Magic Man”
was battered but showed immense heart as he gave Miguel all he could
handle for twelve rounds, making it a close fight down the stretch.
Jose Miguel Cotto [32-2-1, 24 KOs] nearly put a dent in the hype
train of Saul Alvarez on HBO pay-per-view last year as he buzzed the
red headed Mexican early on but later succumbed to a late stoppage.
Both fighters weighed in at the welterweight limit of 147 pounds.
Weigh-In Quick Results:
Erik Morales [51-6, 35 KOs], 140 vs.
Marcos Maidana [29-2, 27 KOs], 140 – 12 rounds interim WBA junior
welterweight title
Robert Guerrero [28-1-1, 18 KOs], 134
vs. Michael Katsidis [27-3, 22 KOs], 134 – 12 rounds vacant interim
WBA and interim WBO lightweight titles
James Kirkland [27-0, 24 KOs], 158 vs.
Nobuhiro Ishida [22-6-2, 7 KOs], 158 – 8 rounds
Paulie Malignaggi [28-4, 6 KOs], 147
vs. Jose Miguel Cotto [32-2-1, 24 KOs], 147 – 10 rounds
Danny Garcia [20-0, 14 KOs], 139 vs.
Nate Campbell [33-7-1, 25 KOs], 140 – 10 rounds
Mikael Zewski [8-0, 5 KOs], 151 vs.
Clint Coronel [4-1-2, KO], 151 – 6 rounds
Rakhim Chakhkiev [9-0, 7 KOs], 203 vs.
Harvey Jolly [11-16-1, 6 KOs], 203 – 4 rounds
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