Back On Track In The Ring
Cotto & Pavlik win by stoppage
franciswalker@blackathlete.com •
View all articles by Francis Walker
POSTED: Feb 24, 2009
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| Miguel Cotto pummels Michael Jennings in a corner. Cotto is one again a world champion, as he claimed the vacant WBO welterweight belt once held by Paul Williams Photo Credit: Francis Walker |
Fresh off the first professional losses of their careers, Miguel Cotto and Kelly Pavlik headlined a rare split-site doubleheader that was featured on pay-per-view. Neither fighter disappointed.
Cotto (33-1, 27 KOs) claimed the vacant WBO welterweight championship with a resounding fifth round TKO of Michael Jennings (34-2, 16 KOs) in the main event at Madison Square Garden, New York City.
Also, Pavlik (35-1, 31 KOs) retained the unified WBC/WBO middleweight championships when No. 1-ranked Marco Antonio Rubio (43-5-1, 38 KOs) quit on his stool before the start of the ninth round. That bout was the featured main event at the Chevrolet Center in Youngstown, OH.
Cotto electrifies the Garden
Cotto was destined to prove that he was still the same fighter that steamrolled his way toward two division titles before suffering a bloody bruises, two knockdowns, and an ego-shattering eleventh round TKO loss to Antonio Margarito.
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| Once Miguel Cotto knew that his relentless body punches were hurting Michael Jennings, it was only a matter of time before the fight ended. Photo Credit: Francis Walker |
“He was a good fighter,” Cotto said of the widely unknown Jennings. “I tried to win with all his courage I was very proud of him. He moved a lot. I run a lot in the ring. I tried to cut direction. My punches made it work.”
Cotto-Garden note
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| Miguel Cotto was simply too good for Michael Jennings. Photo Credit: Francis Walker |
Cotto’s biggest and exciting victories against Sugar Shane Mosley (W 12), Zab Judah (TKO 11), and Paulie Malignaggi (W 12) occurred at the Garden.
Overall, Cotto is 5-0, with 3 KOs in “The World’s Most Famous Arena.
Pavlik delights hometown crowd
In another good move, not only did Kelly Pavlik return home following his first pro loss to Bernard Hopkins, but he also defended the world middleweight championship in his native Youngstown.
Pavlik defeated Marco Antonio Rubio, a rough and tough Mexican fighter who earned his WBC No. 1 ranking by outpointing Enrique Ornelas (W 12) in October. Pavlik dismantled Rubio behind stiff left jabs, hard right hands, combination punching, and constant pressure. Rubio retired at the end of the eighth round.
Rubio proved to be target practice for Pavlik, who successfully defended the unified WBC/WBO 160-pound titles for only the second time since knocking out the previous champion Jermain Taylor (KO 7) in September 2007.
Duddy decisions Vanda
The Cotto & Pavlik split-site pay-per-view doubleheader featured undercard fights from Madison Square Garden.
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| Unbeaten middleweight contender John Duddy attacks Matt Vanda to the bondy with a left hook. Photo Credit: Francis Walker |
The selection of Vanda as an opponent was risky. In July 2008, Vanda lost a disputed 10-round split-decision to Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. in Mexico. Vanda came short again once more in a rematch against Chavez, Jr. last November. Vanda is a tough guy who owns a victory over former world champion Ramon Campas.
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| John Duddy ducks underneath a Matt Vanda left jab. |
By the time Vanda rallied, Duddy had already secured the victory. All three official scorers at ringside scored the contest 99-91 (twice) and 97-93.
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| John Duddy and Matt Vanda squares off in the middle of the ring. Photo Credit: Francis Walker |
Maureen Shea stopped
In perhaps the upset of the night, Bronx favorite Maureen Shea lost her first professional contest. Shea was stopped by Kina Malpartida in the tenth and final round round.
Malpartida is the new WBA female super featherweight champion.
The loss was shocking, especially since Shea dropped Malpartida in the opening round off a solid right hand. The 5-foot-4 Shea was able to get inside of Malpartida’s 5-foot-8 height and land some good body shots and right hands up top. However, Malpartida successfully established the use of his left jab-straight right combination that threw Shea off her game.
Malpartida kept timing and landing her punches before a right to the chin dropped Shea and led to the eventual stoppage by referee Eddie Cotton.
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| Russian Olympian Matt Korobov attacks his foe. Photo Credit: Francis Walker |
Russian Olympian at the 2008 Beijing Olympics, Matt Korobov (4-0, 4 KOs) knocked out Cory Jones (4-5, 1 KO) at 2:59 seconds of the fourth and final round. The end came unexpectedly, as it appeared as though Korobov would box toward a decision win. Suddenly, a left followed by a right hand planted Jones flat on his face.
Fight’s over!
Francis Walkerfranciswalker@blackathlete.com
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