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Saturday Mar 14, 2009

Khan was smart, and sharp, holding his hands high, and showing all that work with Freddie Roach has paid off handsomely. Who should Khan fight next?

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Cautious, Sharp Khan Beats Legend Barrera

By Ronan Keenan

Marco Antonio Barrera had intentions of surpassing his idol Julio Cesar Chavez by one-day becoming the first Mexican fighter to win world titles in four weight divisions. But on Saturday he emulated Chavez by having his status as a world-class fighter shattered by a lightning-fisted foe that took advantage of his dulled reflexes and bloodied vision.

In the same manner that a blood-spattered Chavez was overwhelmed by Oscar De La Hoya in 1996, Barrera was admonished by the 22-year-old Amir Khan, with the Mexican warrior peering through a crimson mask while being engulfed by rapid combinations.

An accidental first round clash of heads opened a severe wound on the 35-year-old Barrera’s left temple and the cut bled profusely until the ringside physician halted the bout in the fifth round. The nature of the stoppage meant the lightweight contest was determined by the three judges who voted unanimously for Khan by scores of 50-44 and 50-45 (twice) in front of a crowd approaching 20,000 at the MEN Arena in Manchester.

Even before the cut occurred, Khan’s physical advantages were telling. His unequivocal swiftness and naturally bigger frame posed Barrera problems from the opening bell and when the gash appeared, the event became an opportunity for Khan to demonstrate the newfound defensive discipline he has acquired from his LA training camps with Freddie Roach.

Khan was eager to eradicate the recklessness that saw him knocked out by Breidis Prescott six months ago and floored by lesser foes earlier in his burgeoning career. Each time he unleashed a combination at the stationary Barrera, he would immediately draw back his hands and retreat to a safe distance. 

“Freddie has just changed me as a fighter,” said Khan, 20-1 (15 KOs). “This was make-or-break for me. I trained to hit and move, be sharp, be careful and be patient.”

Khan was probably a little too cautious at times, as it seemed that a sustained barrage of sweeping blows would probably have drawn the referee’s intervention. But the Briton cannot be reprimanded by taking a risk-averse approach given the apparent fragility of his punch resistance. 

Khan’s promoter Frank Warren, who himself has been accused of overly-protecting his brightest fighters, made this matchup because he knew that all the advantages lay with his protégé.   

“I believe in Amir and I’m pleased he kept his discipline and composure and showed he could box,” stated a relieved Frank Warren, who was standing at ringside warning at Khan to “move, jab, jab!” after just 20 seconds of the fight.

In addition to his physical superiority, Khan was aided by the direction of Roach, who twice guided Manny Pacquiao to victories over Barrera, and the knowledge that the Mexican’s preparations for Saturday’s fight were disturbed after he incurred a deep cut in a supposed tune-up bout on January 31st.

Barrera’s only opportunity at victory would come if he could rattle the neophyte and expose the psychological frailties that must still be lingering in his psyche after the 54-second demolition by Prescott. But the solubility of Khan’s chin was never tested, save for a glancing left hook that brushed Khan’s head in the second round.

Resolve was never going to be enough for Barrera, as the disparity in height and reach meant he could never broach Khan’s newly tightened guard. But the three-weight world titlist displayed the admirable quality in abundance, defying the blood that was evidently dropping into his eye by telling the doctor that it was not disturbing his vision during an inspection in the fourth round.

Built in the mould of Chavez, a great fighter like Barrera will never seek an avenue for exiting an obviously fruitless endeavour such as Saturday’s bout, nor will he admit defeat when the outcome is not concussively conclusive.

“They should have stopped the fight in the first round because the cut was so big. I would have won this fight if I had two eyes,” claimed Barrera, 65-7 (43 KOs). “I couldn’t see with the blood. I didn’t feel his punches.”

Barrera arrived in the UK with a 40-strong entourage and had no intention of disappointing them. When he entered the ring he stood firm in the one spot in his corner, complete with a stern expression that contrasted the relaxed demeanour he has adopted ahead of many of his biggest fights. 

But from bout’s onset he was immediately forced into retreat as Khan’s reach and speed seemed to bemuse Barrera. The collision of heads visibly shook Barrera and the severity of the cut was instantly apparent. Khan escaped with a minor nick above his left eye and wasted little time in bullying Barrera towards the ropes. 

Khan’s improved movement and higher guard were maintained throughout, and while he put little weight into his punches, their velocity was enough to perplex his opponent. 

The profuse bleeding from Barrera’s forehead could have signalled an earlier end to the contest, but given the magnitude of the event in the UK and a pay-per-view audience, the referee and physician allowed it to continue until 2:36 of the fifth. 

“[Khan] followed the game-plan perfectly,” said Roach. “He’ll be my next world champion for sure.”

The circumstances of the bout may have flattered Khan’s ability, but they did little to mask the dept of Barrera’s decline. 

 

In the chief-support bout, Ola Afolabi turned in a display of crafty, unconventional boxing to score an upset with a stunning knockout of Enzo Maccarinelli.  A wild counter right hand to the jaw poleaxed the 1/20 favorite Maccarinelli in the ninth round of the cruiserweight contest. 

The Freddie Roach-trained Afolabi has a reputation for taking a lax approach to prizefighting, having amassed just 18 bouts in his seven year professional career. And he appeared to take that attitude into the ring, resembling an even lazier version of his old sparring partner James Toney, a fighter not exactly renowned for a diligent work ethic

But Afolabi, 14-1-3 (6 KOs) appears to have adopted many of Toney’s slick defensive moves, frustrating the heavy-hitting Maccarinelli with deft upper-body movement. The LA-based Londoner was inactive for much of the contest, habitually leaning on the ropes, but whenever he landed cleanly on Maccarinelli the Welshman would momentarily freeze, as if taken aback by Afolabi’s power. 

Maccarinelli appeared to grow increasingly frustrated by Afolabi’s quirky movement and abandoned the jab in favor of wide hooks and uppercuts. But as the fight progressed Maccarinelli grew visibly wearier, leaving himself open for Afolabi’s right hook. 

Maccarinelli, 29-3 (22 KOs), was considering his future after the bout and having suffered devastating knockouts to David Haye and journeyman Lee Swaby, his days as a contender have probably ended. 

Conversely, Afolabi has crashed the 200-pound title scene and possesses the natural talent to contend with any top-level fighter. Maintaining focus will be another challenge, though.  
 

Roman “Rocky” Martinez utilized his powerful left hand to rip the WBO version of the super-featherweight title from Nicky Cook.  A crushing left uppercut landed squarely on Cook’s jaw in the fourth round, sending the Briton crumpling to the canvas. Cook, 29-2 (16 KOs), looked shaken and barely beat the count, but a subsequent left hook from Martinez saw him collapse to the floor, prompting the referee to stop the contest at 2:20 of the round.

Cook, whose only previous defeat was to featherweight titlist Steve Luevano, seemed the better-rounded fighter over the first three rounds, mixing his attack to the head and body and rattling Martinez with a sharp left hook near the end of the second. 

But the Puerto Rican remained composed and methodically stalked his foe, with the constant threat of his heavy left hand forcing Cook into retreat in the fourth. The 26-year-old Martinez, 22-0-1 (13 KOs), has been brought along slowly by his handlers, but against Cook he showed a marked improvement in poise and technique, waiting for openings before unleashing his power punches.  He already holds points victories over Francisco Lorenzo and Jose Luis Soto Karass, and figures to develop into a major player in the 130-pound division.   

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#1 Pacfan P4P 2nd best behind Marquez:  Barrera needs to look hard and clear in front of a mirror and tell himself, "I'm done, I've paid my dues." Stop it with the indenial of feeling you still got what it takes. Listen to your body and not to your heart cause in boxing pain is felt to the body.
Saturday Mar 14, 2009 11:01:10 PM
Radam G aka Humble PRG:  Amir Khan is the game's next megastar. If you don't believe that, holla at the tons of money later that AK will pocket from the future beatdowns, and the moola yours truly will grab from the betting lines and betting cages. Holla! P.S. Gosh, that Rocky Martinez is awesome. Dude will be making serious noise and papers for years. It is Rican Time for him. He was droppin' it like it was hot. Didn't he knocked Cooke da double fudge out. Holla, double!!
Saturday Mar 14, 2009 11:07:01 PM
Radam G aka Humble PRG:  Enzo Maccarinelli is finish. Dude needs to be suspended from boxing for his own safety. His legs were wobbling from light jabs, and his head bobbled from every power punch. He was unsteady even from when his was tagging Afolabi. Man! Talkin' about shot fighter! Holla!
Saturday Mar 14, 2009 11:36:43 PM
the roast:  Goodbye to a sure fire hall of famer, Marco Antonio Barrera. The epic trilogy with erik morales will never be forgotten. That first fight is in my top five of all time. Listen to me Marco, I am a true fan of boxing for a long time and its time for you to walk away. Enjoy your life now with your family, you have nothing left to prove. Take time to smell the roses, life is short. You will live forever in the hearts of real fans.
Sunday Mar 15, 2009 12:58:23 AM
MisterLee:  Amir Khan still needs to bag 2-3 more impressive victories to seal me as a fan. I'm tired of fighters getting all the credit for one or two impressive victories. They need to show me they can fight with the best... ie- Joan Guzman, Edwin Valero, Juan Diaz, Nate Campbell (if he still fights at 135), or even JMM (AKA- "Canvas kisser" hahaha). But he looked good tonight and he should feel good he withstood some of the powershots from Barrera. I like his footwork and defense too, I like defense. mm.... SOG 2009!
Sunday Mar 15, 2009 02:22:26 AM
The Watcher:  Khan is worth about as much as that stuff we put at curbside for pick up and rymes with his name!. If he fights little guys or guys that can't reach him, are to slow and have no power then he will be OK. Kind of like the 1st 18 opponents that he fought. Nobody really expected for his MMA style chin to be tested by Barrera so lets not get excited. The dudes been dropped by guys with no punch and he had spaghetti legs from a jab? There are too many people out there that think this kid is special but as soon as he steps up, Zzzzzzzz is all we will here from Amir "Curbside" Khan. This wasn't an impressive victory it was a notice to Frank Warren that he will get another paycheck from Curbside Khan, Get It? And for Enzo come on man Afolabi? really? you got the Amir special by Afolabi? WoW, what are they putting across the pound in there tea? Sleeping aids?
Sunday Mar 15, 2009 03:56:50 AM
The Watcher:  NOTE: Was Roberto "Heart went Ghost" Gurrero lucky he didn't fight across the pound, Insted of stopping this fight they waited until it was able to go to the cards. They asked him if he was OK, come on man, a Warrior like Barrera will NEVER SAY I'm Robert Gurrero, I mean I cant see? Please. Doesn't anyone know this sport? don't get fooled people... Amir will look just like Enzo if he gets in with anyone his own weight that can ball up a fist..........
Sunday Mar 15, 2009 04:05:30 AM
silver fox:  Great fighter hall of fame for sure, Marco Antoino Barrera should retire before hes hurt or brain damage.
Sunday Mar 15, 2009 07:55:45 AM
Paulie:  Marco Antonio Barrera embarrassed himself and boxing last night. That was a putrid ending to an otherwise solid career. I knew it would end this way for him. He looked as bad as Oscar did against Pacquiao. Just an absolute shell of himself. Sad.
Sunday Mar 15, 2009 12:25:41 PM
DaveB:  I'm definitely not on the Amir Khan bandwagon. I don't even see that much in him being a changed fighter. If you look at the Prescott fight, he appeared to keep his hands up but about 20 seconds into the fight he said I'll do a little dance for you. Now he may have some good money bouts with the fan support of the UK fans if his opponents are carefully selected but I'm not big on this guy. Now Prescott on the other hand seems to be the real deal. That guy knows how to close the show. Only time will tell but that is the guy I would go with.
Sunday Mar 15, 2009 02:09:56 PM
andy from newcastle:  In the opening bout, the guy in the Turtle suit, Koed the guy in the Shark suit, just in case anyone is interested. It was the best bout of the night. Well, young (15) Cruz Barnett looked balanced and sharp, with fast hands and good counters. Toonoy
Sunday Mar 15, 2009 02:22:45 PM
Yuvie:  A good name victory for Khan. At least he's kept the nay sayers off his back for a while. It'd be nice to see him fight a guy like Joan Guzman next. That'd be a pretty good test for both fighters with neither being too heavy handed to knock out the other, it'll come down to whoever has the more pure skill. I like Khan as a person but I just haven't been too impressed, this was a decent, measuredperformance . It'll be interesting to see where Warren and Sky take Khan next.
Sunday Mar 15, 2009 02:44:28 PM
Rick:  I would like to thank Barrera for so many great fights...He made me proud of Mexican fighters. He always gave 100%. I, like so many others ,I am sure ,would say..its ok. You have nothing else to prove,you have done it all. Thank-you for so many great years. Your fan Rick
Sunday Mar 15, 2009 04:54:15 PM
Samuel Negron:  Amir Khan is a good fighter but he seems to have problems with tall fighters Marco antonio is only a 5'6" and it was hard to land a jab to a faster moving taller fighter. If you see the only lost he got was by someone his hight or taller. This class he will dominate but when he stars seeing taller guys with good boxing abilities the story will be different. But we know he is the new pretty boy in town so he will be cover, they will get him the right fighters. Marco A. was the best option an old fighter not at his prime. That was smart ,names not game to raise him quickcly. Good marketting.
Monday Mar 16, 2009 08:54:38 AM

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