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Saturday, July 18, 2009

Cuban boxers put on a show at Planet Hollywood

Cuban boxers put on a show at Planet Hollywood
By Ron Kantowski (contact)
Saturday, July 18, 2009 | 2:05 a.m.
Friday Night Fights

If the performance of the four Cuban exiles on Friday's "Future of
Boxing" ESPN pro fight card at Planet Hollywood can be used as a
barometer, the future of the fistic sport looks promising indeed.
Beginning with two-time Olympic gold medalist Guillermo Rigondeaux, the
Cubans were like the cigars in their former homeland -- as good as
advertised.

It was the boxing in present tense part of the card that produced the
evening's only surprise.

Breidis Prescott of Columbia, ranked No. 5 by the World Boxing
Association, No. 7 by the World Boxing Council, No. 11 by the
International Boxing Federation and No. 12 by the World Boxing
Organization, failed to make those numbers stand up against tough but
unheralded Miguel Vazquez of Mexico in a lightweight main event
scheduled for 10 rounds.

Vazquez shrugged off a first-round knockdown to methodically take
command of a fight that few gave him any chance of winning. He was
awarded a split decision that many at ringside thought should have been
unanimous.

Judge Duane Ford scored it 95-94 for Vazquez while Jerry Roth had it
96-93 for the Mexican. Dave Moretti thought Prescott got the better of
it, marking his scorecard for the previously unbeaten Colombian, 97-92.
The Sun had it 96-93 for Vazquez.

Prescott (21-1, 18 KOs) was coming off an impressive first-round
stoppage of Amir Khan in what was supposed to be a tune-up for the
highly-touted Englishman. This fight was more or less expected to be a
tune-up for the finely-sculpted Prescott, who at a lanky 5-foot-10
surely possesses the body of a champion.

But it was the much less physically imposing Vazquez (25-3, 12 KOs) who
fought like a champion.

Prescott scored a flash knockdown in the first round when he caught an
off-balance Vazquez with a modest punch along the ropes and continued to
dictate the pace during the second and part of the third round. It
appeared the Colombian's only strategy was to wing giant right hands to
Vazquez's kidneys, but it seemed to be working. It appeared he might win
easily.

By the end of the third round, Vazquez started flicking his jab inside
those ponderous right hands. He continued to use the jab to take control
during the middle rounds. During one sequence in the sixth, Vazquez
stuck his jab in Prescott's face and literally followed him from one
side of the ring to the other, finally unfurling a big left hand that
caught the Colombian square on the chin.

Toward the end of the fight, Vazquez's lower back was cherry red from
Prescott's looping right hands. The welt under Prescott's left eye
looked light it hurt a lot more.

After the fight, Prescott told his manager Tony Gonzales that he never
felt comfortable.

"This is a minor setback," Gonzales said. "Next fight out, we're going
to come right back at the KO Drug Games in Panama on Sept. 5 and get
right back in the top five in the world."

Rigondeaux easily was the most impressive of the Cubans, stopping
Roberto Guillen with a vicious left body shot at 2:57 of the first
round. Fellow former Cuban national team members Erislandy Lara, Yudel
Johnson and Yordanis Despaigne also won their bouts, much to the delight
of a crowd of 1,855 that included Mike Tyson and a throng of Cuban
loyalists who shouted "Cu-ba! Cu-ba! Cu-ba!" virtually every time one of
defectors landed a punch in anger.

Cuban boxers put on a show at Planet Hollywood - Las Vegas Sun (18 July
2009)
http://www.lasvegassun.com/news/2009/jul/18/cuban-boxers-put-show-planet-hollywood/

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