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| Cory looked pretty sharp without Kevin Cunningham in his corner. Or so I thought. The judges weren't as kind. And the vet Phillips hung tough, and was rewarded with a split decision victory. |
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Spinks Loses To Phillips In Hometown Shocker
By Michael Woods
It would've been nice if Don King had shown a new millenium Thrilla in Manilla for his inaugural webcast on his website, but the main event between Cory Spinks and Verno Phillips gave web-viewers some decent action, and a surprise ending, as Phillips got the nod after twelve rounds at the Scottrade Center in St. Louis, Missouri on Thursday evening.
The judges saw it 115-113 (Phillips), 115-113 (Spinks) and 116-112 (Phillips), and the veteran Phillips exulted in earnest when he had his hand raised in Spinks' hometurf, his state of residence, Missouri. Give a round of applause to the judges, for not sticking to the typical script, and rewarding the workmanlike Phillips, whose edge in power (he owns 21 KOs to Spinks' 11) swayed the arbiters to award a split decision.
Spinks didn't go ballistic at the decision. “I felt good, just a little rusty that’s all," he said. "Verno fought a good fight. He came in to do a job, but I feel I did what I came to do. I am upset with myself. I let myself down.”
Phillips gave the lowdown on his effort afterwards. “I hit more with my left," he said. "They told me not to reach in. He is hard to adapt to. He is sneaky. You lean in, he will hit you with a one-two. I just relied on my experience. I did my best and I am still in the top 10. I had harder shots. I felt like his people were booing him because they felt he didn’t bring it.”
Spinks kept up his intensity in the last two rounds, as he was careful not to make a foolish mistake, and hand over a presumably large edge to Phillips. With a minute to go, Spinks stood and traded some, so you have to give the man some credit, for not simply running to preserve the win. Or what he thought was a win.
Spinks kept pawing with a weak jab, and loading up on rights into the middle rounds, as Phillips landed the occasional left hook to the head that would have shook the champion, if Phillips had more oomph on his blows. In the ninth, the crowd got a kick out of some fierce trench action, and it was Phillips who got the better of it. He scored with a right hookercut and hooks from both sides. If he had heavier hands, Cory would have been in deep doo-doo.
Spinks' movement was too smart for Phillips through the first four rounds, though Verno did manage to land a lead right or two to remind Spinks that he better keep his feet going, or risk getting tagged.
I covered the fight from watching it on Donkingnetwork.tv, King's website. I downloaded a player on my iBook G4, in about a minute, and had the card playing live right after. Was the quality high def, or even what I see on my six year old Sharp non-plasma, non LCD old school special? No. But could this mean good things for fight fans? Yes. But how often could King do this without monetizing the experience, without major sponsors, or some other means of defraying costs? He said he will continue to offer fights on the web, and I'm all for it.
Spinks, 30, came in with a 36-4 mark, while Phillips, age 38, entered the arena with a 41-11-1 record. His IBF junior middleweight title was up for grabs. Phillips had held that belt in 2004, when he beat Carlos Bojorquez for the strap, but dropped it to Kassim Ouma four months later. Spinks held the same title in 2006, earning it when he beat Roman Karmazin, and he defended it once, against Rodney Jones, in Feb. 2007. Both men weighed in at 153. Gerald Scott was the ref.
Devon Alexander (15-0) beat Miguel Callist (24-7) in a junior welterweight warmup scrap. The twelve round bout was all Alexander, and the judges saw it 120-105, 120-106, 120-106. He scored a knockdown with a three punch combo in the final round, as he looked to cap the showing with a stoppage. But Callist was on his backwards unicycle, looking to finish the fight.
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Radam G n PI:
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The year of the upsets is in full effect. Spinks was a 6 to 1 favor. Heck! He is really hated, and couldn't win in his own hometown. Wow! Holla
Thursday Mar 27, 2008 10:10:34 PM
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donputo69:
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thats good for that bumass bum..just hang'em up..PLEASE..
Thursday Mar 27, 2008 10:11:12 PM
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Eastar:
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The "Spinks Jinx "stinks!!!!!!!!!!! I never thought he was the best jr middleweight either.
Friday Mar 28, 2008 01:39:20 AM
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manboobs:
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Cory Spinks had a fight? I'm glad I missed it!
Friday Mar 28, 2008 07:26:58 AM
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paulbo:
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I'm with you, manboobs. Some jokers just aren't worth watching. Hope he retires.
Friday Mar 28, 2008 11:26:33 AM
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Smiley C:
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Haters! Cory Spinks will be back. I hope that you miss it, again. And in the rematch the Spinks Jinx will cause Phillips to sink. Fo' sure!
Friday Mar 28, 2008 03:35:09 PM
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Elmore:
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I have no hate for Spinks. He has no power yet still succeeds in boxing at a high level. That's not easy. Antonio Tarver, on the other hand, actually carries decent pop but is scared. He's the most crowd dis-pleasing fighter around. Spinks Jinx just lacks that God given power.
Friday Mar 28, 2008 06:58:25 PM
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DaveB:
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Guys please realize that everytime someone does not like a style a fighter has, or the way he carries on his affairs (selection of fighters he faces, too defensive minded, not a crowd pleaser or interesting to the crowd) it doesn't mean that we are haters. I think that most of these guys are probably pretty decent guys and that all of them have a lot of guts. Personally I thought Spinks won the fight but it all depends on what you like in styles. I don't like his style either but I thought he was effective. The judges liked the more aggressive style of Phillips and didn't like the evasive, defensive style of Spinks. That doesn't always hold true, of course, because judging fights as we always see is very subjective. So you can't call the jugdes haters or say that someone was cheated on judgement call. Heck even the crowd boo'd the action and it was Spinks' hometown. They couldn't have been booing Phillips because he was trying to make a fight out of it in earnest.
Saturday Mar 29, 2008 07:03:49 PM
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Joe:
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This loss is Sinks Jinx's career obituary.
Tuesday Apr 1, 2008 05:05:20 PM
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2009 Reader Of The Year Weighs In On Legacies Of Pacquiao And Mayweather
"Pacquiao has proven....in the ring... time and time again that he is the greatest of this time. He has earned his respect. He begs for nothing. He is a man content with his growth, his family and his achievements. A man the world has now turned it's eyes to behold. Floyd Mayweather is not even close in stature. He may possess the greatest skills but he is not the Face of Boxing today. Google Manny Pacquiao. There are 20 million searches. Google Floyd. There are 6.5 million. Look at the NYTimes, the Wall Street Journal and Time. Count how many words were used these past years to mention Floyd Mayweather. Then count the words still being printed about Manny. And keep counting. As I've said many times, Floyd has been too clever by half. He has short changed his public.....and has out-smarted himself. Manny will fight but a few more times. Enjoy it while you can. He is an all time great pugilist. Floyd, with all of his remarkable skills lack the will to be truly great in the biggest sense of the word. His legacy will look more like Holmes that Ali. He has earned it." ---November is half-way gone, but we don't need to keep counting ballots. It's a landslide. Fe'Roz has won the 2009 Reader of the Year award. His comments add to the website immeasurably, and he epitomizes the thoughtful, respectful, educated fan of pugilism we strive to cater to at TSS. Congrats, Fe'Roz, and please accept my thanks for being the valued member of this community that you are. Sincerely, Editor Mike
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