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| Ouma may be looking at retirement. The Dream's career is in a nightmare slump. |
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ANOTHER UPSET: Bundrage Ousts Ouma On FNF
By Phil Woolever
In some ways, to be a contender, you have to be a survivor. Round after round. Day after day.
Then again, surviving often translates out as nothing more than staying in contention for the grand scheme of bigger things.
On Friday night, Cornelius Bundrage emerged from an upper echelon crossroads type encounter by earning a close, unanimous 10 round decision over faded Kassim Ouma, and survived as a junior middleweight contender.
If you looked at the most basic roles heading into their clash at Seneca Allegany Casino in upstate New York, former kidnapped child soldier Ouma was cast by the whim of destiny in a survivor’s position at an early age.
“K-9” Bundrage got his mainstream notoriety as a standout in a season two of “The Contender” reality series.
It seemed perhaps roles had been reversed. Ouma appeared to be the real contender. Coming in, Ouma’s resume was far more substantial than Bundrage’s.
In fact, the disparity in previous quality of opposition was so clear, it seemed like Bundrage should be cast in survival mode.
Once the bell rang of course, fistic fates rolled their own dice and things played out in designated character on the ESPN Friday Night Fights featured contest.
You could make a movie out of Ouma’s life journey so far. They did, as a matter of fact. Excerpts from “Kassim The Dream”, soon to be released, looked intense. In terms of Ouma’s boxing trip, Friday night was no highlight reel.
Talk about clinching a victory. There was more holding than hitting. Bundrage looked stiff as a board but controlled enough of what action there was to take the Sweet Science card by a point or two.
Bundrage came out quick behind straight lefts. Ouma kept too much of a defensive posture for most of the fight, and leaned in without effective punches.
Bundrage scored a slim margin of points as the crowd grew increasingly restless with the sloppy mauling.
Bundrage shoved Ouma back without landing much. When Ouma tried to initiate action it was usually smothered.
Bundrage suffered a nasty cut next to his left eye from inside action during the fourth frame, and lost a point from referee Steve Smoger for holding infractions in round eight.
Considering the fight was well on the line, round nine was surprisingly uninspired. At times you could have kept punch stats with a sundial.
The fighters finally looked like they really wanted a victory as they went at it to start round ten. Bundrage landed enough straight left leads to make a difference.
Scoring: Julie Lederman 96-93, Don Ackerman 96-93, Eddie Scunzio 95-94.
Headliner Ouma, now 25-5-1, showed he could still survive heavy leather, but after three straight losses he now has to prove his brief reign as a top tier performer has any legs left at all.
When it came down to slugging survival supremacy in the main event, it was Bundrage, 28-3 (16), who kept on chugging and put himself in contention for another high profile, televised pay increase.
Not exactly a dream, but not bad for a Friday night’s work.
In the televised appetizer, spoiler Germaine Sanders ended the knockout streak of welterweight Philly prospect Mike Jones, now 13-0 (12), but couldn’t stop Jones from taking another step in his tutorial stages. 38 year old birthday boy Sanders, 27-6 (17), showed up to win but dropped a unanimous 8 round nod. It was a solid effort for Jones but he showed he’s not yet a real contender. Sanders showed well poised survival durability.
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donputo69:
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hahahahahahahahahahahahahaha...naaaaa let me stop...lol..poor ouma..he just cant get a break..he should fight vargas next..the loser will have to retire for good..
Friday Mar 28, 2008
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esmith5400:
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Ouma looked like he wasn't inspired at all. He had the look of a zombie throughout the entire fight. I wish him well but it looks over for the former champ. Good Luck Kassim!
Friday Mar 28, 2008
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Rig Mortis:
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Ouma is now officially a journeyman. Sometimes that's not bad though. He can get fights much more easily and heck, he's probably at the top of Mayweather's list for his next opponent after the second farce with De La Hoya!
Saturday Mar 29, 2008
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Adrian:
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Saw this; very suprised. I cannot believe this fellow won a championship fighting the way he did. This junior middle division is a mess; who is the number one fighter anyway. Forrest? Oscar? or Verno Philips who lost to Ouma who lost to Karmazin who lost to Bunema who lost to Ouma. Or Travis Simms or Rivera or Alejandro Garcia who don't seem to hold on to the title for a single defence. And are Mr Wright or Mr Mayorga and Mr Mayweather at junior middle? Yikes.
Maybe the heavies are not the only weak division here.
Saturday Mar 29, 2008
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Radam G returning 2 da USA:
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There will be plenty of upsets this year -- 08 is the year of the upsets. Holla!
Saturday Mar 29, 2008
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Wait And See On Hamed Wanne Be
"I reckon there'll be quite a few Brits in the crowd routing for Bradley to beat this Hamed wanna be. The British public may have adored Hamed's theatrics, but most of the British boxing fans just found it embarassing. If Witter was a little less mouthy, and could keep up the aggressiveness he shows on occasion (he can whack), he'd win over a lot more boxing fans, and make a fight with Hatton a more attractive prospect. As Ricky says, he can't be the only one bringing something to the table. Do another Vivian Harris and we'll see."
---TSS reader Newscastle Andy is waiting to make a verdict
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