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| Estrada's main attributes are hand speed and defense. It remains to be seen if he can excite a fan base beyond Rhode Island with his skill set. |
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FNF Report: Estrada Defeats Lance Whitaker
By Ron Borges
LINCOLN, R.I. – Normally, a fighter waits until after a fight to retire. Friday night former world title contender Lance Whitaker retired before his bout with Jason Estrada.
There is little other explanation for the somnambulant manner in which the 35-year-old Whitaker sleep-walked his way through the first nine rounds of what proved to be a lop-sided points victory for Estrada on ESPN2’s Friday Night Fights. Though clearly in shape, Whitaker fought like a man on his last legs. Or at least one who had taken a vow of nonviolence.
Whatever he was doing, he wasn’t fighting very often, which made the task of looking good a difficult one for Estrada. He did what he could, throwing flurries of punches all night while controlling the action and the distance precisely as he had hoped. Whitaker was in such a defensive posture there was little chance of doing much damage, especially against a man with an 82-inch reach and the intention of using every inch of it to not get hit.
In the end, Estrada won by wide margins on all cards, 98-92 on two and 97-93 on the third in large part because Estrada (12-1, 2 KO) was able to do as he’d promised, staying mostly inside on the chest of Whitaker, where Estrada’s far superior hand speed allowed him to consistently beat Whitaker to the punch while effectively smothering the 6-8 Whitaker’s offense by giving him little room to punch effectively.
Whitaker (32-5-1, 27 KO) made little use of that advantage, seldom jabbing but rather looking more like the Heisman Trophy – sticking his left arm out to ward Estrada off rather than attack him. In contrast, Estrada was consistently the aggressor, landing a stinging right uppercut repeatedly when they were in close as well as looping hooks that often caught the much taller man as he backed away.
“His size was no big deal,’’ Estrada said. “My hands were just too fast. I thought he was going to go a couple of times but he hung in there. He’s a tough guy. The key was I fought my fight.’’
That and the fact that Whitaker didn’t fight at all, which was hardly Estrada’s fault. Growing ever more frustrated at Whitaker’s unwillingness to engage, Estrada began to talk to his former world-rated opponent late in the fight, perhaps hoping to taunt him into taking the kind of risk that might open him up for a counter attack. But the lanky Californian, who was one fight into a comeback after a 26-month layoff following knockout losses in 2005 to Luan Krasniqi and future heavyweight WBO heavyweight champion Sultan Ibragimov, would have no part of it.
With the way he fought Friday night it appeared he also wanted no part of continuing his comeback much further. Rather, he looked like he was well on his way back to retirement and in many rounds it appeared he already had.
In the end, it was not a stirring performance but one could hardly blame Estrada for that. He did what he could to make it a fight against an opponent who clearly was disinterested in such a proposition.
In the semi-main event, undefeated cruisersweight prospect Aaron Williams (17-0-1, 12 KO) made short work of Andre Purlette, dropping him with an explosive double right hand late in the second round and then finishing him with a flurry of punches when Purlette rose on unsteady legs.
Purlette (40-3, 35 KO) was supposed to have been a step up in class but he was down on his back before anyone had time to find out when Williams set him up perfectly for a punch he said he learned from his idol, Floyd Mayweather, Jr.
“I doubled up the right like Floyd,’’ Williams said. “I did just what he does. Every body thinks I’m just a boxer but I can punch when I sit down on my punches.’’
He had worked on that for weeks in Las Vegas with his trainer, former light heavyweight champion Eddie Mustafa Muhammad, who has been working hard to convince him that he can do more than simply outbox his opponents. He can also outbomb them.
“Aaron is a boxer-puncher,’’ Muhammad said. “When Purlette got up he hit him with a six punch combination and the fight was over. Aaron is still a baby. He’s only 21. We’re not trying to rush him. We want to keep him moving at a moderate pace. This was a step up and he handled it well. Now we move on to the next phase.’’
On the undercard, super middleweight Andrey Nevsky (5-0, 3 KO) won a four round decision from Fitzgerald Johnson (1-4, 1 KO); undefeated flyweight Isander Beauchamp (5-0, 2 KO) stopped Rob Bell in his pro debut at 2:14 of the second round; Providence light heavyweight Joey Spina (22-1-1, 15 KO) slugged his way to a hard fought and frequently ferocious if inelegant six-round split decision decision from Quebec’s David Whittom (10-6-1, 6 KO); and Lowell, MA. light heavyweight Joe McCreedy (8-1, 5 KO) dropped a decision to Henry Mayes (6-6-1) in a six rounder.
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Radam G:
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On this Friday night, Whitaker appeared to be actually practicing nonviolence in honor of the 40th anniversity of MLK's death. "Goofy" Whitaker is no double what his nickname indicates. One doesn't do non-violence in the squared jungle of the hurt business. This guy is a real Civil Rights trooper. Now, I just hope that he take his butt out of the ring, and go to the streets with his nonviolence protests. We need lots of violence and artful hurting in this game. So those who don't like damaging -- doing it or taking it -- stay the heck out of this business. Holla!
Friday Apr 4, 2008
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Spinach Chin:
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Aint that the truth. Pacifism is an nice idea but it can get you hurt in the ring, but luckily for him not against a lazy overfed Jason Estrada. BORING. I'll take the crusierweights over the lazyweights.
Saturday Apr 5, 2008
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Byrd FanMan:
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Chris Byrd is back at light heavyweight!!! Yeah baby!
Saturday Apr 5, 2008
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Spinach Chin:
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Chris Byrd's a hell of a guy. Love to see Glen Johnson vs. Byrd after Johsnon whips Dawson.
Saturday Apr 5, 2008
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pete steward:
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Estrada is Poor Fat mans Chris Byrd. 262lbs at the 2004 games? And now 239lbs??? And this is his best condition? Drop another 20 and he may chance in this weakest of boxing divisions.
Sunday Apr 6, 2008
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Radam G:
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Milton "Pete" Steward, you ought to make a comeback at heavy -- the "weakest of boxing divisions." You will knock off these jelly bellies heavyweights -- and whatever else is in those pop bellies -- and become the oldest dude to win the heavyweight title. If you get one of those china-chin heavys, that wouldn't be a problem either. At least, you will be able to get one of those alphabet-soup belts. Holla!
Sunday Apr 6, 2008
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Aaron:
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A cruiserweight these days is basically an in-shape heavyweight. The next great heavyweight champ (and I don't think it's David Haye) will tear through and dominate the Cruiser ranks, and then start stepping straight into Heavyweight title shots. The great heavyweight has to be a big man but definitely fit along the lines of Ali in his Prime, a guy around 212-220 who has footwork, technical skill and some knockout power.
Monday Apr 7, 2008
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Smiley C:
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Aaron, bloke, you are darn right. A cruiserweight is definitely an in-shape heavyweight. The powers that be have made a rolly-polly mockery out of the one great heavyweight division, men from about 185lbs to 215lbs in prime condition. If it were no cruiserweight division, the cruiser would be up in the heavyweight division spanking arse! Fo' sure!
Monday Apr 7, 2008
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Playing Matchmaker: Williams/Cotto, Pavlik/Abraham Winners Meet
"I wouldn't mind paying 50 dollars for a Paul Williams /Miguel Cotto fight with Margarito/Clottey in the undercard. Or Jermain Taylor/Paul Williams with a fight between Kelly Pavlik/Arthur Abraham on the same night. A set up like that would be good for boxing 'cause the fans would see four good fighters in one night and possibly see the two winners fight in the near future.Too bad boxing doesn't think about the fans the way fans think about boxing." ---TSS reader Arturo plays matchmaker
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