The Sweet Science
HOME ABOUT CONTACT
EnglishRussianChineseItalianDeutchFrenchSpanishPortugueseJapaneseKorean
The Sweet Science Boxing
Boxing Podcast Boxing RSS 
Jose Luis Castillo


Saturday Jun 3, 2006

Personal safety should always take precedent over money even though that might not be the most popular decision and thankfully the Corrales camp did what was right. As promoter Gary Shaw reminded the audience, "Don't blame Diego Corrales."

      Print this article     Email this article

Castillo Vs. The Scale

By Benn Schulberg

You could see it coming. Jose Luis Castillo entered the Augustus Ballroom at Caesars Palace for Friday's weigh-in with an exhausted and dejected look on his gaunt face. There was no hiding the fact that he was utterly spent as he lay down on the stage and covered his face with his hand giving the audience an ominous warning of what was to come. Moments later as Jimmy Lennon, Jr. announced his name the crowd responded with an anticipatory hush. Castillo initially hesitated to move from his chair as if weighing in was a death wish and the anguished look on his face told of a man who was looking to escape his captors. It seemed to take all his might as he walked the couple steps over to his great nemesis, the scale. Time had in fact run out and the truth was about to be told.

On and off the scale before the official weight could be read, Castillo was ordered back on to be reweighed. The quick hop onto the scale occurred one more time as he tried his best to confuse newly appointed commissioner Keith Kizer. But the scale doesn't lie and eventually after standing on his toes and trying everything he could to will his weight down to 135 pounds, the official weight was read: 140 pounds. Before leaving the stage, he took one more crack at it and made marginal progress: 139½  pounds. The Nevada State Commission ruled that due to medical reasons, Castillo could only lose two pounds within the two-hour limit provided. Ultimately, there would be no title fight once again, but this time there will be no fight at all. We will all be heading home with the lasting image of the imposing scale knocking out Jose Luis Castillo, which brings his trilogy scale-record to 0-2-1.

Corrales made the 135-pound limit and voiced his frustration by flexing for the audience and yelling out "Yeah, what" as if to remind everybody who the real champion is. Instead of focusing on the negative impact Castillo's made on the sport of boxing with his mockery of trying to make weight, why don't we give Corrales credit for upholding the professional standards all fighters should strive for. He did everything he was asked to do, he tortured himself down to 135-pounds to fight at lightweight for the last time, and gave Castillo the chance to redeem himself for the fiasco that happened before the second fight.

That of course will not happen, and instead, Castillo has disgraced his sport and must live with a stigma that may seriously jeopardize his once stellar reputation. We know he's a great fighter inside the ring, but we also judge a boxer by his character and Castillo's grade in that important category has now slipped considerably. Nobody was cheated more than Corrales who will lose the majority of his $1.2 million purse for the fight. His only consolation is a portion of the fines that the WBC will force Castillo to pay, which will likely amount to about 12.5% of the fighter's purse (roughly $125,000).

All boxing fans were cheated on Friday when Castillo did the unthinkable again. It was deja vu with the only difference being Corrales walking away. Personal safety should always take precedent over money even though that might not be the most popular decision and thankfully the Corrales camp did what was right. As promoter Gary Shaw reminded the audience, "Don't blame Diego Corrales."

There's only one person to blame, not Bob Arum, not Showtime, not the WBC, not even Castillo's manager. A professional athlete is responsible for his own actions and Jose Luis Castillo is no exception to that rule. Our sport deserves better than this and it's appalling that such a great trilogy was destroyed because one if its combatants wasn't able to rise to the occasion and display the integrity of a true champion.

Back in Corrales’ suite after the debacle, he said, “Castillo apologized. I don’t care about his apology. I pushed myself, I paid the price, it wasn’t easy—and he didn’t—it’s as simple as that. I sacrificed for everyone who loves the sport. Why the hell couldn’t he sacrifice? I was tired, beat, hungry, what was he doing? That’s why I’m champion of the world.”

add to Facebook add to Myspace add to Digg add to Mixx add to Linkedin add to Yahoo Buzz

Contact Benn Schulberg @ TheSweetScience.com


Name: Email:  (will not be displayed, TSS Privacy, your email is required to autoapprove your comment)

Please be respectful, and do not use foul language in your comment

Discuss this article in the forum

  THESWEETSCIENCE.COM   More from the Top Team of Writers in the Fight Game ...
 
More from this Writer
Columns by Benn Schulberg
 
Recent boxing Columns and News
•  TSS Salutes One Of Boxing's Special People: Lorraine Chargin by Ron Borges
•  Sechew Powell Gets Revenge With Smart Showing Against Deandre Latimore by Michael Woods
•  Rooting For Chambers Is A Lot Different Than Picking Him To Beat Wlad by Frank Lotierzo
 
 


TSS Video
Roger and Floyd Mayweather in LA talking about Mosley fight
  
Roy Jones and Bernard Hopkins smack talking in L.A.
  
Oscar De La Hoya on Mosley-Mayweather fight and Manny Pacquiao
  
More Video
TSS Photo Archive

Angie And Goody...23 Years Later
Twenty three years later after they seconded Marvin Hagler and Ray Leonard in Las Vegas, Goody Petronelli and Angelo Dundee crossed paths again. This time, it was at Foxwoods. Photo/friend of TSS "The Iceman" John Scully reports there were only pleasantries exchanged. Goody didn't debate the split decision victory enjoyed by Leonard, which to this day Hagler disputes.

Round by Round Coverage
Manny Pacquiao v. Miguel Cotto
Fight aficionados, tune in for live, round by round coverage of the Manny Pacquiao v. Miguel Cotto welterweight championship on Saturday, November 14th beginning at 9 pm ET / 6 pm PT.

The Sweet Science Writers
The Sweet Science
Legal  | Privacy  |  Sitemap  |  Disclaimer  |  The Savage Science © 2004-2007 The Sweet Science Boxing.  All rights reserved. .