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| Castillo in action in Castillo/Corrales I. He couldn't get on track against Lujan, so hopefully he will call it a career. He gave us the fight of the decade, along with the late, great Corrales. |
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The Last Gasp For Jose Luis Castillo?
By Ralph Gonzalez
Former world title contender Sebastian Lujan made a strong case for Jose Luis Castillo’s retirement after completely dominating the former multi divisional champ over ten rounds at The Sycuan Casino located just outside of San Diego, California.
The fights were televised on ESPN2’s Wednesday night fights and promoted by Sycuan Ringside along with Zanfer promotions. An estimated crowd of about 1500 took in the action outdoors in perfect southern California weather.
The first round was quite active as Lujan came forward and gladly engaged his opponent. Castillo (56-9, 48 KO’s) looked somewhat listless as Lujan (30-5, 20 KO’s) initiated most of the action. In the second, a left hand from Castillo came out of nowhere and momentarily stunned Lujan. Lujan recovered and ended the round strong as he landed some straights that forced the former champion backwards.
Lujan came out even more confident in the third as he stood in front of Castillo and teed off with a variation of punches. The fourth was a continuation of the third as Lujan came forward and met Castillo with some back and forth action. Lujan wouldn’t give an inch as Castillo tried to match the iron chinned Argentinean punch for punch. Castillo tried to push the action in the fifth and was met with more hard counterpunches. Castillo ended the round bloodied and seemingly gassed. The sixth began and nice exchanges ensued with Lujan getting the better of them as the crowd urged “El Temible” to fight on. The seventh round came and Lujan kept the non stop punching going. It was more of Lujan moving forward and landing almost at will.
More punishment dished out by Lujan in the eighth as he trapped Castillo on the ropes and landed some nice rights and lefts. During the final round, Lujan continued to lay a systematic beating on the Mexican who spent way too much time on the ropes completely out of gas. Lujan’s left jab was an effective tool which he used throughout the fight and helped him set up some left hooks that hurt Castillo repeatedly to the very end. The unanimous decision was announced by ring announcer Jimmy Lennon Jr. with scores of 98-92, 99-91 (twice).
“I respect Castillo. He’s a great fighter. Tonight was my night,” said Lujan after the fight.
Lujan was brought in as welterweight champion Antonio Margarito’s sparring partner to mimic Miguel Cotto before Margarito’s tremendous victory over the Puerto Rican star.
Lightweight Luis Ramos (4-0, 4 KO’s) of Santa Ana, California faced off against Aaron Dominguez (5-2, 4 KO’s) of Hermosillo, Mexico in a six round bout. It was a good first round for Ramos as he displayed some quick hands and movement that befuddled Dominguez. Ramos put his combinations together in the second and landed well to the body. The third round came and Ramos’s speedy combinations kept landing. Dominguez had no answers for Ramos in the fourth as the Orange County based fighter took complete control. In the fifth, a beauty of a left hand dropped Dominguez, Ramos went for the kill and dropped his opponent one last time before the bell sounded. It was between rounds that Dominguez’s corner felt their man had enough and waved off the confrontation. The fight was called as a stoppage at the end of round five. Put Ramos on your “someone to watch” list.
Luis Carlos Abregu (23-0, 20 KO’s) of Salta, Argentina stopped Thomas Davis (12-7-2, 7 KO’s) of Knoxville, Tennessee in the second round of a welterweight clash. Abregu, who is one of Sycuan’s latest signees, landed several hard straight lefts in the first round that dropped Davis a few seconds before the round ended.
A brutal left hook to the head in round number two dropped and seemed to finish off Davis but referee Tony Crebs let matters continue (ED. NOTE: this ref was waaaay “too brave” for my liking…Davis was cooked) until Davis’ corner took pity on their man and stopped the action. The stoppage came at 58 seconds of the second stanza. Though still untested, Abregu offered an impressive display of raw power and aggression.
Carlos Molina (4-0, 1 KO) of Commerce, California stopped Ramon Flores (2-1-1) in the second round of a junior welterweight battle. Flores came out swinging wildly but Molina countered effectively in the first. More excellent countering by Molina in the second as he landed to the body and the head with the cool demeanor of a seasoned pro. A hard left hand to the head of Flores dropped him for a long count. He got up but his corner wisely threw in the towel. The end was announced as 2:47 of the second.
Manny “Suavecito” Roman (12, 5 KO’s) won a unanimous decision over Javier Lagos (15-11-2, 4 KO’s) in an eight round flyweight bout. The scores were 80-72 (three times).
A ten count and a moment of silence were given for Walter Woodworth who passed away at the age of 82 on Saturday July 26th. Mr. Woodworth served his country honorably in World War II and The Korean war. He boxed for the Navy, was married for 62 years and was also the father of Sycuan Ringside Promotions Vice President, Scott Woodworth. Our condolences to the Woodworth family.
In the crowd: former world champion Joan Guzman, former lightweight champion Julio Diaz, contender Alfredo “Perro” Angulo and Junior Welterweight prospect Jorge Paez Jr.
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andy from newcastle:
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Castillo Corrales I will be one of my top three favourite fights forever I think (along with Hagler Hearns and Benn Eubanks I, even though I was desperate for the Dark Destroyer to win). And Castillo will in my mind (sit back and watch the hate flow, but if you were there, or you are Mexican, then you know he was robbed) be the first and only fighter to beat PBF (until he comes out of retirement). But it is time to call it a day. Thanks for being part of one of the greatest boxing memories I'll ever have. Toonoy
Thursday Jul 31, 2008 08:57:27 AM
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aaron, uk,:
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Sad to see the end of such a top class career, but please end it now. Castillo VS Corrales 1, WOW!!!
Thursday Jul 31, 2008 09:39:04 AM
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donputo69:
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great career for jose....YOU WAS THE FIRST BOXER TO DEFEAT SCAREWEATHER in many boxing fans views....but i think is time to hang'em up....holla back....
Thursday Jul 31, 2008 09:50:30 AM
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rudy:
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Exactly aaron, tough to see great fighters at the tail end of their careers. He was just in there going thru the motions trying to avoid the big shots. Was outsized, put up a mediocre effort, but no where near the fighter he used to be. If he decides to continue to fight, he needs to get Arum to put him on those Latin Fury PPV undercards to get some gimmes and a paycheck.
Thursday Jul 31, 2008 09:53:00 AM
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aaron, uk,:
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Guys I just dont want him to end up being one of those old former champions who are used by promoters as cannon fodder for their young prospects, knowing the name alone makes business sense. Also here in the UK, a fighter whos had the career hes had can make an awful lot of money just making appearances at functions etc after they have retired. Is it not a similar situation in other places. Although I suspect its that Mexican competitiveness rather than cash that is stopping him from calling it a day...
Thursday Jul 31, 2008 03:16:06 PM
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ECM-PR:
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I agree that it is time for JLC to hang up the gloves. He's had a great career. Hopefully he will not make the same mistake many other boxing legends have made to continue fighting until suffering brain damage. He fought the best fight I have ever seen against Corrales and I also strongly agree that he was robbed in the first fight against Mayweather. Buena suerte Castillo.
Thursday Jul 31, 2008 05:56:41 PM
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Isaiah:
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Time for Castillo to stop before it's too late. He should have done much better against Hatton, and at this point, Castillo's pride is too much for his own good. At least the people with brains around here know that Castillo beat Mayweather and the ones who deny it know it's true. Mayweather undefeated? I don't think so! I'm sure someone will say, but Mayweather got the desision in both fights, not in my book.
Thursday Jul 31, 2008 06:28:32 PM
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aaron, uk,:
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I thought Mayweather did enough for the decision but it was very,very, close unlike the second fight. However I agree a prime Castillo would have done much better with Hatton, infact I would go as far as to say he would have scored a ko with his accuracy and power and Hattons leaky defence.
Thursday Jul 31, 2008 06:49:18 PM
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Eastar:
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Castillo hasn't been the same since he lost to Mayweather Jr (twice) so his career been over a long time ago, even before losing to Ricky Hatton. Holla, fruitypoos.
Friday Aug 1, 2008 02:52:10 AM
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Anonymous user:
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Off the subject a bit, I just read that Sugar Ray Robinson's record at Welterweight was 128 wins, 1 loss, 2 draws, 84 knockouts. This was from a guy who fought anyone. The article was about Henry Armstrong who's record at welterweight was also awesome and not to mention that he held three world titles from different weight classes at the same time. Noone else has ever done this. The closest we have nowadays is Joe Calzaghe who is the world super middleweight and light heavyweight champ right now. My point is, at Welterweight, name one good welterweight fighter Mayweather beat besides Zab Judah. Keep in mind it's hard to include Carlos Baldomir since Mayweather did that purely for the title. Baldomir's best ever was 2006 and he could never be that good again at any other time. My point being, if Mayweather is as great as some act like he is, why won't he clean up the welterweight division of imposters Margarito, Paul Williams, and Miguel Cotto? At 31 years old and supposed to be the best figther alive, Mayweather could do this before retiring for good. Heck, if he's so great, he could beat all three in 2009. Now that would really make out his legacy! Castillo beat Mayweather both times! Ha! Call me crazy! The truth is, Welterweight is the best division in boxing still, the contenders are not imposters, Mayweather knows anyone of the top guys would beat him down. Mayweather is scared to death! Sugar Ray Robinson or Leonard, Henry Armstrong, Willie Pep, Roberto Duran, etc. Gayweather couldn't carry their jockstraps. If Mayweather is the best of all time, I guess I just made up these other far superior warriors. Hey Mayweather fans! Oscar de la Hoya has a golden ticket for him to beat down land. How about this, won't get saved by the judges this time so retire,(exscuse me, quit) like a scared little girl. Always remeber, Cotto didn't quit, he was beat down, Mayweather was the one who quit.
Friday Aug 1, 2008 06:57:00 AM
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959 Santa:
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Castillo has the look of a shot fighter. Castillo can't pull the trigger anymore. Lujan worked Castillo over pretty good.
Friday Aug 1, 2008 07:54:56 AM
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aaron, uk,:
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Anonymous Sugar Ray Robinson lost 19 times by the end of his 200 fight career not once. He was only ever knocked out once.
Friday Aug 1, 2008 10:57:19 AM
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aaron, uk,:
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My bad you meant just at welter..
Friday Aug 1, 2008 02:36:03 PM
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aaron, uk,:
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Is this the same Lujan who nearly got his ear punched off his head by Margarito?
Friday Aug 1, 2008 06:06:47 PM
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Isaiah:
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Sorry, forgot to put in my name. The Anonymous was me. I think I made my point. Yeah, I meant just at Welter aaron.
Saturday Aug 2, 2008 08:34:58 AM
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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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