June 19, 2013

Boxing: Sofia Gatti honors her late dad; thanks boxing world for his Hall of Fame induction

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(PhatzRadio / AP) — CANASTOTA, N.Y. – Boosted so she could reach the microphone and speak on a most special day for her late father, 7-year-old Sofia Gatti beamed.

“Thank you from my ,” she said Sunday as Arturo “Thunder” Gatti was inducted into the of Fame.

On a day that included six deceased inductees, Gatti remained fresh on the mind of everybody, especially his longtime manager Pat Lynch.

“It’s a tremendous accomplishment for Arturo. This little girl here shall have this memory forever,” said Lynch, who fought back tears when he spoke. “It was so great to see his mom and all of them come down to celebrate such a . It’s a truly deserving award for him. I know he’s looking down with a big smile on his face.”

Also inducted were: Virgil “Quicksilver” Hill, a five- who won a silver medal at the 1984 Olympics and defended his 20 times over his two reigns; two-time Yuh Myung-woo of South Korea; lightweight Wesley Ramey and middleweight Jeff Smith in the old-timer (posthumous) category; 19th century Irish boxer Joe Coburn in the pioneer category; referee Mills Lane, whose “Let’s get it on” prefight chant endeared him to fans; Jimmy Lennon Jr.; manager Arturo “Cuyo” Hernandez; cartoonist Ted Carroll; and journalist Colin Hart.

Inductees were selected by the Association and a panel of international boxing historians.

Born in Calabria, Italy and raised in Montreal, Gatti moved to Jersey City, New Jersey, as a teenager. He retired in 2007 with a record of 40-9 with 31 knockouts and won titles in two divisions.

Gatti died at age 37 in Brazil in July 2009. His body was found at an apartment that he had rented with his wife and their infant son in a seaside resort. Police initially held Gatti’s wife as a suspect, but eventually released her and concluded Gatti hung himself from a staircase railing using a handbag strap.

He was selected for the Hall of Fame in his first year of eligibility.

“He always used to say to us, ‘Do you think I’m going to be in the Hall of Fame?’ ” Lynch said. “I said, ‘Of course. They can’t stop you from being in the Hall of Fame. You’re deserving.’ It’s just a great celebration.”

“Irish” Micky Ward had three memorable bouts with Gatti. Ward won his first junior welterweight fight against Gatti, blood streaming down his face as he captured a majority decision in May 2002. Gatti avenged the loss in Atlantic City, New Jersey, knocking down Ward in the third with a punch that shattered one of Ward’s eardrums and sent him face-first into a stanchion. Gatti broke his right hand in the fight and won a unanimous 10-round decision.

Gatti triumphed over Ward with a 10-round decision in the rubber match in June 2003, and it was another brutal slugfest. It wasn’t a but had that feel as a raucous sellout of 12,643 — the largest ever for a non-heavyweight fight in Atlantic City — packed Boardwalk Hall.

Gatti was in control for most of the bout, outpunching Ward and never allowing him to get close enough to throw one of his signature left hooks to the body. Bleeding from an early pounding, Ward rallied after Gatti reinjured the right hand he’d broken seven months earlier.

Over the last four rounds the exhausted fighters stood toe-to-toe, teeing off on one another. After the fight, the two shared a bottle of water and hugged, then went to Atlantic City Medical Center, where they lay side by side in the emergency room while being treated.

Small wonder that Ward was touched on this day.

“It’s funny how I became great friends with him,” said Ward, who spoke briefly. “Even though he beat me, I miss him to death every day. I know he’s here. I’m just happy for his family. I’m proud of him like you wouldn’t believe. With the people being here and his family and friends and his daughter being here, it made it worthwhile.”

The 76-year-old Lane, who suffered a stroke in 2002 that left him partially paralyzed and unable to speak, was helped onstage by his two sons. Lane, who refereed the infamous “bite fight” between Mike Tyson and Evander Holyfield, waved triumphantly to the crowd, holding aloft his new ring and smiling broadly.

“This is the happiest I’ve seen him, which is so important,” Tommy Lane said. “We’ll treasure this the rest of our lives. Let’s get it on!”

Touched, too, by the moment, Lennon credited his dad, a for nearly a half-century, with his success. Lennon, who began his career as a backup to his father at the Olympic Auditorium and the Forum in Los Angeles before moving to Showtime in 1991, said it felt odd getting inducted before his dad and made a pitch for that to happen.

“He used to tell me what I did well instead of what I did wrong,” Lennon said. “When his health was failing and he was in the hospital and not able to get the fights on TV, he would be on the phone with my mom on the other end holding her receiver up to the television so he could at least hear me announce.”

___

Follow Kekis on Twitter at http://www.twitter.com/Greek1947

Boxing: Sofia Gatti honors her late dad; thanks boxing world for his Hall of Fame induction is a post from: PhatzRadio.com

 Boxing: Sofia Gatti honors her late dad; thanks boxing world for his Hall of Fame induction  Boxing: Sofia Gatti honors her late dad; thanks boxing world for his Hall of Fame induction  Boxing: Sofia Gatti honors her late dad; thanks boxing world for his Hall of Fame induction  Boxing: Sofia Gatti honors her late dad; thanks boxing world for his Hall of Fame induction  Boxing: Sofia Gatti honors her late dad; thanks boxing world for his Hall of Fame induction

 Boxing: Sofia Gatti honors her late dad; thanks boxing world for his Hall of Fame induction

Boxing: Floyd Mayweather Jr. dominates Robert Guerrero to win title fight with lopsided decision

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(PhatzRadio / AP) — LAS VEGAS, Nev. – The defence was back, just like it used to be. .’s was back, too, just like he used to be.

And Mayweather was a winner once again — just like he always is.

Mayweather fought as if he had never left the ring, coming back from a year’s to win a unanimous 12-round decision over Robert Guerrero in their welterweight .

The was defence, and Mayweather followed it perfectly. With his father directing from the corner after a 13-year absence, he dominated Guerrero in a performance not totally expected at the age of 36.

“I needed my father tonight,” Mayweather said. “My defence was on point and he told me to stick with my defence and that the less you get hit the longer you last.”

Mayweather was masterful at times, landing thudding right hands and bloodying Guerrero’s face in a performance that mimicked some of his best fights. Mayweather hurt Guerrero on several , including a series of right hands near the end of the eighth round that buckled Guerrero’s .

All three judges scored the bout 117-111. The Associated Press had it 119-109.

“We did it again,” Mayweather said after earning at least $32 million for his night’s work. “I take my hat off to Robert Guerrero. He’s a true warrior.”

If it wasn’t terribly pleasing to the of 15,880, it was terribly effective. Mayweather made a fighter who hadn’t lost in eight years look befuddled as he danced and moved and shot out right hands with increasing frequency.

He remained unbeaten in 44 fights and, more importantly, looked so fresh that he may follow through on his plan to fight again in September.

“I was looking for the but I hurt my hand,” Mayweather said. “I feel bad I didn’t give the fans the .”

Mayweather was booed at times for not mixing it up more, but he didn’t need to. He was content to move and land and right hand leads, while Guerrero grew increasingly frustrated trying to chase him.

When Guerrero did hit him, Mayweather quickly got out of the way and, more often than not, landed a right hand of his own.

“I landed some good shots on him,” Guerrero said. “He’s a great fighter. He’s slick and quick.”

The fight at the MGM Grand arena settled into a familiar pattern from the third round on as Mayweather made adjustments and started landing some crisp right leads to Guerrero’s head. Guerrero was eager to trade punches, but often couldn’t find Mayweather, who had already moved out of range.

Before the fight there had been some concern about Mayweather having ring rust after going a year without a fight. But he didn’t miss a beat, using his defensive skills to baffle Guerrero and keep him off balance.

Mayweather was a 5-1 favourite coming into the fight, but Guerrero was considered dangerous coming off a big win over Andre Berto. Guerrero hadn’t lost in eight years, and vowed to be the first to beat Mayweather, now 44-0.

But he had never fought Mayweather, who got hit more than normal in his last fight against Miguel Cotto a year ago.

“Honestly, Floyd could have danced the whole night,” . said. “There wasn’t anything he couldn’t do in there tonight.”

Mayweather had crafted much of his career using his defence as his main weapon, and said he turned to his father — who used to be his trainer — to regain his old style.

“After the Cotto fight I realized my defence wasn’t what it should be and I had to hone my skills,” Mayweather said.

By the fifth round Mayweather’s confidence was growing and he began landing some heavy right hands to Guerrero’s head. Guerrero kept plodding after him, but paid the price as Mayweather shot counter right hands through his

Mayweather was faster and stronger than Guerrero, who was fighting for only the third time at 147 pounds. Mayweather said he hurt his right hand while going after the in the eighth round, but still managed to control the fight round after round.

Guerrero (31-2-1) was cut over his left eye in the eighth round, when Mayweather seemed on the verge of stopping him.

Ringside punch stats showed Mayweather landing 60 per cent of his power punches, an unusually high rate. That included 23 of 30 power punches in the eighth round, when Guerrero was wobbled.

All told, Mayweather was credited with landing 195 punches to 113 for Guerrero.

“He ran like a chicken,” said Guerrero’s trainer and father, Ruben. “I thought we were going to go toe-to-toe with him.”

Robert Guerrero didn’t complain about Mayweather’s style at all. Not when he wants to fight him again some day.

“I’m going to keep fighting and hopefully before Floyd Mayweather retires I’m going to get that shot again,” Guerrero said.

Mayweather said he planned to fight again in September, a short turnaround for him, as part of a six-fight deal he has with the Showtime network.

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Floyd Mayweather-Robert Guerrero undercard results

(PhatzRadio / AP) — LAS VEGAS — Abner Mares scored a ninth-round TKO of Daniel Ponce de Leon to win the WBC featherweight title in the final undercard bout ahead of Saturday’s main event between Floyd Mayweather and Robert Guerrero at the MGM .

Mares, who had floored Ponce de Leon in the second round, scored another knockdown with an overhand right in the ninth. Ponce de Leon made it to his feet, but Mares closed in, raining blows on the champion until referee Jay Nagy intervened with 40 seconds left in the round.

“When I dropped him both times, it was hard,” said Mares, who was moving up from super bantamweight, where he holds the WBC title. “I wasn’t just fighting some , he’s my friend. Especially the second time, I hoped he stayed down.”

Ponce de Leon, who insisted the stoppage was premature, said at least three times he wanted a rematch.

“I don’t want to discredit Mares, but I was winning the fight,” Ponce de Leon said. “The ref stopped the fight so quickly.”

Leo Santa Cruz (24-0-1, 14 ) finished off Venezuela’s Alexander Munoz (36-5, 28 ) with a crushing TKO after five one-sided rounds.

Santa Cruz, a former bantamweight titleholder moving up to junior featherweight, floored Munoz in the third and fifth before one of his corner men entered the ring and referee Vic Drakulich waved it off at the 1:05 mark.

“I wanted to give a good show for the fans and that’s what I did,” said Santa Cruz, who landed 57 body shots and had a 135-26 edge in landed punches over the last three rounds. “I felt strong and confident tonight.”

J’Leon Love (16-0, 8 KOs) stayed undefeated thanks to a highly dubious split decision over gritty North Philadelphia middleweight Gabriel Rosado (21-7, 13 KOs) in the first televised pay-per-view bout.

Boos rained from the half-full after the scores from ringside judges Glenn Trowbridge (95-94 to Rosado), Herb Santos (97-92 to Love, inexplicably) and Dave Moretti (95-94 to Love) were announced.

“I just fought a guy that has world championship experience and I thought I put up a good fight,” Love said. “We can do it again if he wants so we all know who’s the clear winner.”

The action was mostly even during the early rounds, but Rosado took control when he dumped Love to the canvas for the first time in the Las Vegas native’s career with a straight right hand near the end of the sixth. Love recovered nicely in the seventh and even got the better of a series of toe-to-toe exchanges in the eighth, but Rosado opened up in the ninth and landed the hardest shots of the fight, drawing oohs and aahs from the audience.

Love landed 191 of 487 punches (39 percent) compared to 165 of 555 for Rosado (30 percent), yet the Philadelphian was clearly landing the more meaningful blows.

“My performance spoke volumes tonight,” said Rosado, who was coming off a hard-fought loss in January to Gennady Golovkin in a world title fight. “I don’t think I need to prove myself against him again but I’ll fight him if I have to.”

In the final prelim before the pay-per-view telecast, super middleweight prospect Ronald Gavril (4-0, 1 KO) stayed unbeaten with a third-round TKO of Roberto Yong (5-7-2, 4 KOs). Garvil had Yong on the ropes throughout most of the fight, which was scheduled for four rounds, before three straight head shots prompted referee Russell Mora to intervene at 2:12 of the third.

The victory made it 4-for-4 for Mayweather Promotions fighters in the non-pay-per-view prelims.

Luis “Cuba” Arias (5-0, 3 KOs) outpointed DonYil Livingston (8-3-1, 4 KOs) in a six-round super middleweight bout. The Phoenix, Ariz., native overcame a strong finish by Livingston to pull out a majority decision by scores of 57-57, 58-56 and 58-55.

Badou Jack (14-0, 10 KOs), a rising light heavyweight prospect from Las Vegas, scored a third-round TKO of Michael Gbenga (13-8, 3 KOs), of Silver Spring, Md., by way of Accra, Ghana. Jack sent Gbenga to the canvas with a right hook to the body late in the third round. Gbenga made it to his feet but protested to referee Russell Mora that the punch was low. When the fighter refused to continue, Mora waved it off at the 2:26 mark.

In the night’s first bout, Las Vegas native Lanell Bellows (4-0-1, 4 KOs) scored a fourth-round TKO of Matthew Garretson (2-1, 1 KO) of Charleston, W. Va., in a four-round super middleweight fight. Bellows punished Garretson with body shots in the first two rounds before rocking him with a right uppercut near the end of the third. Referee Kenny Bayless put a stop to it just 32 seconds into the final round.

Boxing: Floyd Mayweather Jr. dominates Robert Guerrero to win title fight with lopsided decision is a post from: PhatzRadio.com

 Boxing: Floyd Mayweather Jr. dominates Robert Guerrero to win title fight with lopsided decision  Boxing: Floyd Mayweather Jr. dominates Robert Guerrero to win title fight with lopsided decision  Boxing: Floyd Mayweather Jr. dominates Robert Guerrero to win title fight with lopsided decision  Boxing: Floyd Mayweather Jr. dominates Robert Guerrero to win title fight with lopsided decision  Boxing: Floyd Mayweather Jr. dominates Robert Guerrero to win title fight with lopsided decision

 Boxing: Floyd Mayweather Jr. dominates Robert Guerrero to win title fight with lopsided decision

Boxing: Mayweather, Guerrero make weight, talk smack

815ec1e847b0b61852a55ec062bc6cb6 Boxing: Mayweather, Guerrero make weight, talk smack
Floyd Mayweather and Robert Guerrero stare down after their weigh-in Friday. Both made weight. They will fight on Saturday at the MGM Grand.(Photo: Al Bello, )

Story Highlights

. weighed in at 146 pounds Friday for their on Saturday.
Robert Guerrero weighed in right at the 147-.
The two will fight for Mayweather’s

(PhatzRadio / ) — LAS VEGAS – Floyd Mayweather Jr. looked ripped and ready. Robert Guerrero said it was time to rock and roll.

Mayweather, the undefeated welterweight , tipped the scales at 146 pounds for their Saturday at the MGM . Guerrero, the WBC’s mandatory challenger, weighed in at the class limit of 147. The fight will be televised lived on Showtime pay-per-view (9 p.m. ET).

Mayweather, 36, sporting a goatee, looking stone-faced and smacking chewing gum, didn’t blink as the two fighters stood with their noses apart for photographers. Guerrero never backed up either.

PREDICTIONS: Experts weigh in on fight

At one point, trainer Floyd Mayweather Sr., the fighter’s father, made a slashing motion across his throat directed at the Guerrero camp. Earlier in the week, Guerrero’s father, Ruben, called Mayweather Jr. a “wife-beater.”

Confident and smiling, Mayweather told Showtime’s , “I always control the tempo of the fight.”

Earlier this week, Mayweather told that he did not expect the scheduled 12- to go the distance.

“Do I think this fight will go the distance? Absolutely not,” Mayweather said. “I’m in tip-top shape. And I’m punching hard.”

Guerrero, 30, tried to whip the into a frenzy.

“We’re going to beat him down – that’s what we’re going to do!” he shouted.

Mayweather enters the fight a heavy favorite but he had endured one of his most-difficult training camps after being off for the last year. There was noticeable puffiness under his eyes this week. He acknowledged that he had some rough sessions in the gym preparing for Guerrero.

“I’ve had some good work for this camp,” he said. “(My sparring partners) have been pushing me to the limit. I’ve had bad days in the boxing gym (before) but I’ve never had bad paydays.”

Boxing: Mayweather, Guerrero make weight, talk smack is a post from: PhatzRadio.com

 Boxing: Mayweather, Guerrero make weight, talk smack  Boxing: Mayweather, Guerrero make weight, talk smack  Boxing: Mayweather, Guerrero make weight, talk smack  Boxing: Mayweather, Guerrero make weight, talk smack  Boxing: Mayweather, Guerrero make weight, talk smack

 Boxing: Mayweather, Guerrero make weight, talk smack

Boxing: Guillermo Rigondeaux batters Nonito Donaire in surprising win

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(It took , but outlasted Nonito Donaire for a .Al Bello/)

(PhatzRadio / AP) — NEW YORK — Not since in the early 1990s has seen a little man as dangerous as Nonito Donaire. For years, he’s been regarded as one of the world’s five best fighters regardless of weight. He was everybody’s choice for Fighter of the Year in 2012 after laying waste to four , scoring seven knockdowns in those bouts. Donaire isn’t just a fearsome puncher — the possessor of one of the most devastating left hooks in the industry — he’s a highly precise technician with acute timing and counterpunching ability.

But all that went out the window against Guillermo Rigondeaux.

Rigondeaux reduced Donaire to an ordinary plodder over Saturday night at Radio , winning on points to unify the super bantamweight championship before a of 6,145. All three judges had it for the , by scores of 116-111, 115-112 and 114-113. (SI.com had it 116-111.)

Donaire, who was born in the Philippines before moving to Northern California when he was 10, looked sloppy and unprepared. And Rigondeaux, an amateur superstar heretofore unproven as a top-flight pro, was more than capable of making him pay.

Most boxers with 11 pro fights going up against a fighter of Donaire’s formidable vintage and body of work would have been distant longshots, but the 32-year-old Rigondeaux is no greenhorn. had installed him as a 2-to-1 underdog, largely on the strength of his amateur credentials, which are ample. A two-time , Rigondeaux fled to the U.S. in 2009, set up shop in Miami and won a title in his sixth pro fight before finally scoring his high-profile opportunity to date Saturday in Manhattan.

He made the most of it Saturday beneath the soaring arches and shimmering gold stage curtain of the world’s largest indoor theater, which was hosting just the second boxing card in its 81-year history.

“The people that saw this fight, the people that know boxing, saw it was a very good fight,” Rigondeaux (12-0, 8 ) said afterward through an interpreter. “I made him look the way he looked, which was bad.”

Rigondeaux’s timing, hand speed and footwork were superior from the opening bell as he kept Donaire off balance and, more importantly, stayed out of range of his opponent’s TNT-packed left hook.

The 30-year-old Donaire (31-2, 20 KOs) is typically a slow starter, but it was clear by the third round that something was different. The Filipino looked uncommonly timid and underprepared for what clearly was an unfavorable stylistic matchup. He never could find a way to consistently land punches while Rigondeaux, 122 pounds of fast-twitch muscles and Cuban guile, continued to pick his spots and rack up points. Near the end of the round, Donaire finally connected with a lunging straight right — his best punch of the fight to that point — though Rigondeaux fired back with a stinging left hook right before the bell.

Rigondeaux was never where Donaire expected him to be: oftentimes it seemed the slippery Cuban was moving in two directions at once, leaving Donaire looking like a man trying to chase down a balloon on a windy day.

The first four rounds played out like the opening strains of a classic: the underdog was winning but the favorite was right on the brink.

But a classic this was not.

The crowd grew restless and booed at several points during the middle rounds as Rigondeaux seemed content to sit on his lead and let Donaire be the aggressor — a role he seemed reticent to embrace. Rigondeaux was quicker, smarter, busier, craftier and better defensively. He slipped, pivoted, parried and countered with verve. He took away Donaire’s offense with his movement. It was his night.

Right up until the start of the 10th round, it was a one-sided performance. That’s when Donaire briefly switched to a southpaw stance — one of the few on-the-fly adjustments he made all night — and connected with a short left cross that dropped Rigondeaux and stirred the crowd from their torpor.

But just when it seemed like Donaire might have found the window he needed for a smash-and-grab victory, Rigondeaux braced himself and demonstrated the finishing kick of a champion. He dominated the final two rounds with speed and accuracy, hurting Donaire’s right eye badly with a straight left in the 12th.

“The last two rounds I got stupid,” said Donaire, who landed 82 of 352 punches (23 percent), compared to 129 of 396 (33 percent) for Rigondeaux. “I didn’t really feel his power till that last round.”

Said Rigondeaux’s trainer Pedro Diaz: “We fought a Cuban boxing fight: hit and don’t get hit. We made Donaire look very bad.”

The loss comes at a strange time for Donaire, who earned a career-high $1.32 million. For the past few years, he’s been one of boxing’s most active elite fighters, but he’d already planned on taking some time off with his wife Rachel expecting this summer. He had won 29 fights in a row — a streak that stretched back more than 12 years, including very good fighters like Jorge Arce, Toshiaki Nishioka, Fernando Montiel and Volodymyr Sydorenko — and now finds himself in the rare position of coming off a loss.

For Rigondeaux, who made a career-best $750,000, the future may be even more uncertain. The boos during the middle rounds — as he dominated Donaire while seldom throwing a punch — spoke volumes about his salability (or lack thereof).

It’s not that Rigondeaux lacks power — the grim markings on Donaire’s face were not the workings of a feather-fisted slapper — but he engages so sparingly it calls his marketability into question. Even promoter Bob Arum blushed at questions regarding the Cuban’s mass appeal.

“That [S.O.B.] has a lot of power and he has a lot of movement,” Arum said, “but running the way he does really makes it into not a watchable fight.”

When pressed about the boos, Rigondeaux shook off the criticism.

“Every boxing match has a different plan,” the new unified 122-pound champ said. “I punched as much as I could and I won.

“Convincingly.”

Boxing: Guillermo Rigondeaux batters Nonito Donaire in surprising win is a post from: PhatzRadio.com

 Boxing: Guillermo Rigondeaux batters Nonito Donaire in surprising win  Boxing: Guillermo Rigondeaux batters Nonito Donaire in surprising win  Boxing: Guillermo Rigondeaux batters Nonito Donaire in surprising win  Boxing: Guillermo Rigondeaux batters Nonito Donaire in surprising win  Boxing: Guillermo Rigondeaux batters Nonito Donaire in surprising win

 Boxing: Guillermo Rigondeaux batters Nonito Donaire in surprising win

Boxing: Guillermo Rigondeaux batters Nonito Donaire in surprising win

ec4c0be05650fdf50156ace4290ab526 Boxing: Guillermo Rigondeaux batters Nonito Donaire in surprising win
(It took , but Guillermo Rigondeaux outlasted Nonito Donaire for a .Al Bello/)

(PhatzRadio / AP) — NEW YORK — Not since in the early 1990s has boxing seen a little man as dangerous as Nonito Donaire. For years, he’s been regarded as one of the world’s five best fighters regardless of weight. He was everybody’s choice for Fighter of the Year in 2012 after laying waste to four , scoring seven knockdowns in those bouts. Donaire isn’t just a fearsome puncher — the possessor of one of the most devastating left hooks in the industry — he’s a highly precise technician with acute timing and counterpunching ability.

But all that went out the window against Guillermo Rigondeaux.

Rigondeaux reduced Donaire to an ordinary over Saturday night at Radio , winning on points to unify the super bantamweight championship before a of 6,145. All three judges had it for the , by scores of 116-111, 115-112 and 114-113. (SI.com had it 116-111.)

Donaire, who was born in the Philippines before moving to Northern California when he was 10, looked sloppy and unprepared. And Rigondeaux, an amateur superstar heretofore unproven as a top-, was more than capable of making him pay.

Most boxers with 11 pro fights going up against a fighter of Donaire’s formidable vintage and body of work would have been distant longshots, but the 32-year-old Rigondeaux is no greenhorn. had installed him as a 2-to-1 underdog, largely on the strength of his amateur credentials, which are ample. A two-time , Rigondeaux fled to the U.S. in 2009, set up shop in Miami and won a title in his sixth pro fight before finally scoring his high-profile opportunity to date Saturday in Manhattan.

He made the most of it Saturday beneath the soaring proscenium arches and shimmering gold stage curtain of the world’s largest indoor theater, which was hosting just the second boxing card in its 81-year history.

“The people that saw this fight, the people that know boxing, saw it was a very good fight,” Rigondeaux (12-0, 8 KOs) said afterward through an interpreter. “I made him look the way he looked, which was bad.”

Rigondeaux’s timing, hand speed and footwork were superior from the opening bell as he kept Donaire off balance and, more importantly, stayed out of range of his ’s TNT-packed left hook.

The 30-year-old Donaire (31-2, 20 KOs) is typically a slow starter, but it was clear by the third round that something was different. The Filipino looked uncommonly timid and underprepared for what clearly was an unfavorable stylistic matchup. He never could find a way to consistently land punches while Rigondeaux, 122 pounds of fast-twitch muscles and Cuban guile, continued to pick his spots and rack up points. Near the end of the round, Donaire finally connected with a lunging straight right — his best punch of the fight to that point — though Rigondeaux fired back with a stinging left hook right before the bell.

Rigondeaux was never where Donaire expected him to be: oftentimes it seemed the slippery Cuban was moving in two directions at once, leaving Donaire looking like a man trying to chase down a balloon on a windy day.

The first four rounds played out like the opening strains of a classic: the underdog was winning but the favorite was right on the brink.

But a classic this was not.

The grew restless and booed at several points during the middle rounds as Rigondeaux seemed content to sit on his lead and let Donaire be the aggressor — a role he seemed reticent to embrace. Rigondeaux was quicker, smarter, busier, craftier and better defensively. He slipped, pivoted, parried and countered with verve. He took away Donaire’s offense with his movement. It was his night.

Right up until the start of the 10th round, it was a one-sided performance. That’s when Donaire briefly switched to a southpaw stance — one of the few on-the-fly adjustments he made all night — and connected with a short left cross that dropped Rigondeaux and stirred the crowd from their torpor.

But just when it seemed like Donaire might have found the window he needed for a smash-and-grab victory, Rigondeaux braced himself and demonstrated the finishing kick of a . He dominated the final two rounds with speed and accuracy, hurting Donaire’s right eye badly with a straight left in the 12th.

“The last two rounds I got stupid,” said Donaire, who landed 82 of 352 punches (23 percent), compared to 129 of 396 (33 percent) for Rigondeaux. “I didn’t really feel his power till that last round.”

Said Rigondeaux’s trainer Pedro Diaz: “We fought a Cuban boxing fight: hit and don’t get hit. We made Donaire look very bad.”

The loss comes at a strange time for Donaire, who earned a career-high $1.32 million. For the past few years, he’s been one of boxing’s most active elite fighters, but he’d already planned on taking some time off with his wife Rachel expecting this summer. He had won 29 fights in a row — a streak that stretched back more than 12 years, including very good fighters like Jorge Arce, Toshiaki Nishioka, Fernando Montiel and Volodymyr Sydorenko — and now finds himself in the rare position of coming off a loss.

For Rigondeaux, who made a career-best $750,000, the future may be even more uncertain. The boos during the middle rounds — as he dominated Donaire while seldom throwing a punch — spoke volumes about his salability (or lack thereof).

It’s not that Rigondeaux lacks power — the grim markings on Donaire’s face were not the workings of a feather-fisted slapper — but he engages so sparingly it calls his marketability into question. Even promoter Bob Arum blushed at questions regarding the Cuban’s mass appeal.

“That [S.O.B.] has a lot of power and he has a lot of movement,” Arum said, “but running the way he does really makes it into not a watchable fight.”

When pressed about the boos, Rigondeaux shook off the criticism.

“Every boxing match has a different plan,” the new unified 122-pound champ said. “I punched as much as I could and I won.

“Convincingly.”

Boxing: Guillermo Rigondeaux batters Nonito Donaire in surprising win is a post from: PhatzRadio.com

 Boxing: Guillermo Rigondeaux batters Nonito Donaire in surprising win  Boxing: Guillermo Rigondeaux batters Nonito Donaire in surprising win  Boxing: Guillermo Rigondeaux batters Nonito Donaire in surprising win  Boxing: Guillermo Rigondeaux batters Nonito Donaire in surprising win  Boxing: Guillermo Rigondeaux batters Nonito Donaire in surprising win

 Boxing: Guillermo Rigondeaux batters Nonito Donaire in surprising win

Boxing: Bernard Hopkins beats Tavoris Cloud in historic title win

40af911e7ab0b357d10908bbab89f5e2 Boxing: Bernard Hopkins beats Tavoris Cloud in historic title win
Tavoris Cloud, left, takes a punch from , who won Cloud’s and became boxing’s oldest champion at 48.(Photo: Ed Mulholland, )

NEW YORK — Bernard Hopkins became the oldest boxer to win a major title on , scoring a 12-round over Tavoris Cloud to claim the IBF light .

The 48-year-old Hopkins broke the record he set by beating for the WBC on May 21, 2011.

Hopkins improved to 53-6-2 in the main event of an eight- at the Barclays Center. It was his 29th . The 30-year-old Cloud fell to 19-1.

With Hopkins forcing a patient, technical match, Cloud was unable to press the issue and Hopkins circled him, landing to his face, eventually opening a cut above his left eye.

Hopkins connected on 169 of 417 punches. Cloud landed 139 of 650.

Keith Thurman won the intercontinental with a 12-round, unanimous decision over Jan Zaveck. Thurman improved to 20-0 and Zaveck fell to 32-3.

(18-1-2) and (14-4-3) fought to a majority draw in the first bout on the main card. The bout was called midway through the seventh round after Perez absorbed what was ruled “an accidental head butt” that led to blood running down both sides of his face.

Judges and both had the fight 66-66, while Perez led 67-65 on ’s card.

Steve Bujaj (9-0), Claude Staten Jr. (1-0), Frank Galarza (9-0-1), Marcus Browne (3-0) and (13-0) won undercard fights.

Boxing: Bernard Hopkins beats Tavoris Cloud in historic title win is a post from: PhatzRadio.com

 Boxing: Bernard Hopkins beats Tavoris Cloud in historic title win  Boxing: Bernard Hopkins beats Tavoris Cloud in historic title win  Boxing: Bernard Hopkins beats Tavoris Cloud in historic title win  Boxing: Bernard Hopkins beats Tavoris Cloud in historic title win  Boxing: Bernard Hopkins beats Tavoris Cloud in historic title win

 Boxing: Bernard Hopkins beats Tavoris Cloud in historic title win

Boxing: Bernard Hopkins beats Tavoris Cloud in historic title win

40af911e7ab0b357d10908bbab89f5e2 Boxing: Bernard Hopkins beats Tavoris Cloud in historic title win
Tavoris Cloud, left, takes a punch from , who won Cloud’s IBF and became ’s oldest champion at 48.(Photo: Ed Mulholland, )

NEW YORK — became the oldest boxer to win a major title on Saturday night, scoring a 12-round over Tavoris Cloud to claim the IBF light .

The 48-year-old Hopkins broke the record he set by beating for the WBC light heavyweight title on May 21, 2011.

Hopkins improved to 53-6-2 in the main event of an eight- at the Barclays Center. It was his 29th . The 30-year-old Cloud fell to 19-1.

With Hopkins forcing a patient, technical match, Cloud was unable to press the issue and Hopkins circled him, landing to his face, eventually opening a cut above his left eye.

Hopkins connected on 169 of 417 punches. Cloud landed 139 of 650.

Keith Thurman won the intercontinental with a 12-round, over . Thurman improved to 20-0 and Zaveck fell to 32-3.

(18-1-2) and Lonnie Smith (14-4-3) fought to a majority draw in the first bout on the main card. The bout was called midway through the seventh round after Perez absorbed what was ruled “an accidental head butt” that led to blood running down both sides of his face.

Judges and both had the fight 66-66, while Perez led 67-65 on Joe Pasquale’s card.

Steve Bujaj (9-0), Claude Staten Jr. (1-0), Frank (9-0-1), Marcus Browne (3-0) and Eddie Gomez (13-0) won undercard fights.

Boxing: Bernard Hopkins beats Tavoris Cloud in historic title win is a post from: PhatzRadio.com

 Boxing: Bernard Hopkins beats Tavoris Cloud in historic title win  Boxing: Bernard Hopkins beats Tavoris Cloud in historic title win  Boxing: Bernard Hopkins beats Tavoris Cloud in historic title win  Boxing: Bernard Hopkins beats Tavoris Cloud in historic title win  Boxing: Bernard Hopkins beats Tavoris Cloud in historic title win

 Boxing: Bernard Hopkins beats Tavoris Cloud in historic title win

Boxing: Klitschko to defend heavyweight title against Pianeta

0b2bb75f922e696716450ca21675898f Boxing: Klitschko to defend heavyweight title against Pianeta

() – Ukraine’s will defend his four world heavyweight against former German-Italian challenger Francesco Pianeta in Mannheim on May 4, his management said on Tuesday.

Klitschko, who holds the , IBO, and crown had used the 28-year-old Pianeta as a last year.

The 36-year-old Ukrainian’s record stands as 59 wins and three defeats after his three successful in 2012, including a November victory over Poland’s .

Pianeta, who at 1.93 meters is five shorter than his , is still undefeated with 28 wins and one draw.

“I have a lot of respect for Pianeta because he is young and has a big ,” the 36-year-old Klitschko said in a statement.

Klitschko’s older brother, , holds the .

“I was briefly his sparring partner last year and I noted where his weaknesses are and how best to exploit them,” said Pianeta. “I understand many see me as an and that is fine but I will knock Klitschko out and turn the world of on its head.”

(Reporting by Karolos Grohmann, editing by Justin Palmer)

Two Frances on one street in “lazy” tire worker town

Boxing: Klitschko to defend heavyweight title against Pianeta is a post from: PhatzRadio.com

 Boxing: Klitschko to defend heavyweight title against Pianeta  Boxing: Klitschko to defend heavyweight title against Pianeta  Boxing: Klitschko to defend heavyweight title against Pianeta  Boxing: Klitschko to defend heavyweight title against Pianeta  Boxing: Klitschko to defend heavyweight title against Pianeta

 Boxing: Klitschko to defend heavyweight title against Pianeta

Boxing: Broner Beats Rees With 5th-Round TKO

810fc8f30af51409e07c966414d5af1b Boxing: Broner Beats Rees With 5th Round TKO
(Photo: Tim , AP)

Story Highlights

Adrien Broner raied his record to 26-0 with his against Gavin Rees
Broner knocked Rees down twice en route to the victory
Broner said he would fight whoever wants to fight him.

ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. (AP) — Adrien Broner had remaining undefeated Saturday night.

The WBC lightweight overcame Gavin Rees’ and determination by stopping the in the fifth round before a roaring of 4,812 at Boardwalk Hall.

“I knew he was coming to fight,” Broner said. “He’s a world-class fighter. I had to see how much gas was left in that Toyota. He kept coming and threw every shot like it was his best shot. I knew he would be tough. He’s tougher than a steak that’s well-done. When you have two world-class fighters going toe to toe it’s going to be great fight.”

Broner (26-0, 22 ) scored two knockdowns in the bout and ended the fight with a powerful to the body that forced Rees (37-2-1, 19 ) to take a knee in the fifth.

Rees, a native of Newport, Wales, got to his feet, but Broner landed a series of and combinations that drove Rees into a corner and prompted trainer Gary Lockett to wave a white towel. Referee halted the fight 2 minutes, 59 seconds into the round.

“I wanted to (stop the fight) after four rounds, but Gavin said no way he was quitting,” Lockett said. “I also considered stopping it after the third, but Gavin is too proud.”

Broner, a 23-year-old Cincinnati native, controlled most of the bout, but Rees didn’t back down. The 32-year-old wasn’t by Broner’s antics and continually pressed forward. At times, he even did a little clowning himself, which drew some cheers from the fans.

Broner scored his first in the fourth, catching Rees with one of his trademark right that sent the Welshman to the canvas. Rees got up and endured a savage beating along the ropes just before the bell sounded to end the round.

“I’m disappointed in my performance,” Rees said. “I made a lot of mistakes. I think I have a better skill set than that. He hits incredibly hard for a lightweight. I knew he hit hard, but the power just stunned me. But I disagree with my trainer stopping it. I was always going to get back up. I was going to get keep getting up until I got knocked out cold. I disagree with my trainer stopping it. I was always going to get back up. He’s the best I’ve ever been in with.”

Both fighters weighed 150 pounds on HBO’s unofficial scales on Saturday after making the 135-pound lightweight limit Friday afternoon. Broner weighed 134 and Rees checked in at 134½.

Broner wore a microphone and joined in a rap song on his way to the ring.

In the co-feature, Australian super-middleweight Sakia Bika (31-5-2, 21 KOs) earned another shot at unified champion Andre Ward (20-0, 16 KOs) by earning a 12-round, over Montenegro’s Nikola Sjekloca (25-1, 7 KOs). Ward beat Bika via decision three years ago.

“I had a great plan and worked hard,” Bika said. “I give (Sjekloca a lot of credit). He was undefeated and came to fight. It was a great opportunity for me. Now I want to fight all the great fighters — Lucian Bute, Andre Ward, all of them.”

Boxing: Broner Beats Rees With 5th-Round TKO is a post from: PhatzRadio.com

 Boxing: Broner Beats Rees With 5th Round TKO  Boxing: Broner Beats Rees With 5th Round TKO  Boxing: Broner Beats Rees With 5th Round TKO  Boxing: Broner Beats Rees With 5th Round TKO  Boxing: Broner Beats Rees With 5th Round TKO

 Boxing: Broner Beats Rees With 5th Round TKO

Boxing: James DeGale gives up European crown in pursuit of world title

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(PhatzRadio / Sports) — James DeGale has given up his European super- as he turns his focus to winning a world title.

The Beijing 2008 beat Pole Piotr Wilczewski in October 2011 to win the belt, defending it twice.

DeGale claimed a points win over Fulgencio recently to win the WBC silver belt and European Union rules forbid boxers to hold any world title as well as its own crown.

“It’s a that I have had to choose between the two ,” DeGale said.

After beating Wilczewski to win the belt, DeGale saw off Cristian Sanavia and Hadillah Mohoumadi in his two .

“It has been an real to be EBU champion. However, I feel my decision to relinquish the European belt is the at this stage in my career,” he continued.

“I’ve won it and defended it twice and I feel the best course of action is to defend my WBC belt on route to a world title.

“The WBC belt will give me a wider choice of world-class .”

DeGale’s only defeat of his career so far came in May 2011 against domestic rival George Groves when he lost his British title on points.

Boxing: James DeGale gives up European crown in pursuit of world title is a post from: PhatzRadio.com

 Boxing: James DeGale gives up European crown in pursuit of world title  Boxing: James DeGale gives up European crown in pursuit of world title  Boxing: James DeGale gives up European crown in pursuit of world title  Boxing: James DeGale gives up European crown in pursuit of world title  Boxing: James DeGale gives up European crown in pursuit of world title

 Boxing: James DeGale gives up European crown in pursuit of world title