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Sunday Dec 13, 2009


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Malignaggi Wins Rematch; Victor Ortiz Beats Diaz

By George Kimball

CHICAGO-It happens from time to time. Occasionally a boxer can so raise his game that he has the fight of his life against an opponent who by rights should not only be tougher but more gifted. Sometimes this performance goes for naught, simply because it seems such an aberration that judges can't quite believe what their own eyes seeing -- and that, more than anything else, would appear to explain the scorecards of Raul Caiz and David Sutherland down in Houston back in August. Fortunately for Paulie Malignaggi, there was a third judge seated at ringside that night, and before he went to bed Saturday night, if he ever went to bed at all, we trust that Malignaggi got down on his hands and knees and thanked the Almighty for Gale Van Hoy, because if it weren't for him and his 118-110 scorecard, there's no way in the world Paulie would have gotten the chance to do what he did here.

 

 

In many respects rematches can be fairly predictable.  It is rarer still that you'll see an underdog who has come up short the first time raise his game yet again and, essentially, come up with the fight of his life twice in a row. But Malignaggi is clearly cut from a different cloth than most boxers, and while he was still performing before an audience of (mostly) Juan Diaz fans Saturday night at the University of Illinois-Chicago Pavilion, he staged a virtuoso performance that three neutral judges weren't about to deny him.

 

 

On paper, Malignaggi's only natural edge over Diaz would be in hand speed, but this time around he not only out-quicked the Baby Bull, but repeatedly frustrated him with a crafty game plan and an improved defense, and on those occasions when he deigned to stop and slug with the slugger, more than held his own in that department as well. Although it wasn't much of one, Malignaggi was credited with the only knockdown of the night, and didn't come close to going down himself. And if he got wobbled once or twice, he wobbled Diaz on at least half a dozen occasions.

 

 

Malignaggi set the tone as he out-boxed Diaz early, and by taking the first two rounds staked himself to a lead he would never relinquish. By the midpoint of the 12-round fray he had Diaz cut along the right eyebrow, and while that wound never really became a factor, neither was Diaz exactly encouraged by the sight of his own blood.

 

 

Mainly, though, the bout turned on Malignaggi's ability to establish a distance from which he could torment Diaz with his jab -- and from which Diaz found it extremely difficult to connect with his own.

 

 

If Malignaggi's punches are usually more annoying than genuinely troublesome, but on at least one occasion a jab from Paulie seemed to stagger Diaz, and while the Baby Bull did his level best to turn it into a slugfest, he didn't always like what happened when he did.

 

 

Malignaggi seemed so in command, in fact, that the only real danger was that his mugging and woofing -- at one point late in the fight he turned to engage the HBO broadcast table in conversation even as he dodged Diaz' furious charge -- might infuriate a couple of judges enough to turn them into Van Hoys.

 

 

The two were at close quarters in the tenth when Malignaggi lashed out with a chopping right hand that sends Diaz spinning ass over teakettle. He never did hit the deck, but his effort to stay upright either his glove hit the canvas, or came close enough to doing so that referee Geno Rodriguez thought that it had, and when the Illinois referee administered a count, it put the fight pretty much out of reach.

 

 

Rather than protect what seemed to be a rock-solid lead, Malignaggi even accommodated Diaz by engaging him toe-to-toe down the stretch. The principal result of that was that the blood was pouring from Diaz' cut at the bell.

 

 

In the end Mauro DiFiore (Illinois), Tom Miller (Ohio) and Mike Pernick (Florida) returned identical 116-111 scorecards. (TSS' scorecard had it 115-112; how Gale Van Hoy scored it from his living room back in Texas remains unlearned.)

 

 

"All I needed," said Malignaggi after the verdict was returned, "was a fair shake."

 

 

Diaz, followed by his corner men, barged straight out of the ring and into the locker room afterward, while Malignaggi, who just four months earlier had acknowledged what seemed the most likely result of the Houston fight when he said "I'm an opponent now," was talking about fighting Juan Manuel Marquez and Ricky Hatton.

 

 

He may not get either -- it would seem far more likely that they might fight each other, and that's if Hatton fights again at all -- but what he will earn by this performance is a few more high-profile HBO fights, and possibly even a crack at another world title.

 

 

"The key to this fight was staying committed to my game plan," said the former junior welterweight champion, now 27-3. "The idea was to utilize my strengths, and by keeping Diaz on the defensive so he couldn't  set up to use his power."

 

 

Although he allowed himself to be drawn into more close-quarters exchanges than would have seemed prudent, Malignaggi noted that "I took his punches pretty well, even when he hit me flush."

 

 

Diaz, 26-3 after the loss, was described by Malignaggi as "a class act and a great fighter."

 

 

Less than six months after his surprise KO at the hands of Argentina's Marcos Maidana, former prospect of the year Victor Ortiz bounced back with an impressive performance that went into the books as a 7th-round TKO when his fellow Mexican Antonio Diaz (45-6-1) failed to answer the bell for that stanza.

 

 

Ortiz (25-2-1) had patiently opened up in a counterpunching mode, but was plainly annoyed when, in the second round, Diaz grabbed him in a clinch but then decided to keep punching anyway. When Ortiz wound up on the deck, although referee Gerald Scott ruled no knockdown, he got up mean, and before the round was over Diaz was sporting a gash to the bridge of his nose.

 

 

The third round brought the fight's only knockdown. As Diaz waded in to throw a one-two combination, Ortiz waved a pawing right and then drilled him with a counter straight left up the middle.

 

 

Ortiz, who for the first couple of rounds had shown his jab mainly as a decoy, began to throw it in earnest at this stage of the fight, establishing a tone of dominance that would endure through the balance of the night. In he fifth Diaz was cut above the left eye from what Scott ruled a butt, but even had the issue gone to the scorecards, Ortiz was comfortably in front.

 

 

In the sixth the blood was flowing copiously that Scott called time and invited the ringside physician up for a look-see. The doctor allowed it to continue, but over in Diaz' corner they seemed to wish he hadn't. When the bell rang for the seventh, trainer Romulo Quirarte signaled that his man wasn't coming out.

 

 

"I respect my corner's decision," said Diaz, who certainly didn't argue with it. Ortiz, who had out-landed him 97-37 while it lasted, had a whopping 23-6 connect edge over the last three minutes they fought.

 

 

It was another nice scalp for Ortiz.  Diaz hasn't a lot of tread left on the tire, but this is a guy who nine and a half years ago scored back-to-back wins over Omar Weis and Mickey Ward to earn himself a title shot against Shane Mosley, and while he didn't do so well in that one, Diaz has been in with the big boys.

 

 

"I actually felt pretty rusty at first," said Ortiz. "But as the fight went on I started feeling a little more comfortable, and was able to use my jab more."

 

 

And he has, from all indications, managed to put the Maidana loss behind him.

 

 

"These things happen for a reason," said Ortiz. "It's time to move on."

 

 

The co-feature had been preceded by a ceremonial 10-count as part of a tribute to the late Francisco Rodriguez, a popular local favorite and 5-time Chicago Golden Gloves champion who died as the result of injuries incurred against Teon Kennedy in a bout at Philadelphia's Blue Horizon three weeks ago.

 

 

Former WBO 140-pound champ Randall Bailey knocked down Germaine Sanders in the first, second, and fifth rounds but was unable to put the elderly Chicagoan away and had to settle for a unanimous decision (Mike Fitzgerald 78-71, Jerry Jakubco 79-70, Patrick Morley 77-72) in their eight-round prelim. All three knockdowns came with right hands, but Bailey explained later "I hurt my [right] hand on his head" in administering the last one and had difficulty pulling the trigger thereafter. Bailey is now 40-7, Sanders 27-8.

 

 

Fighting for just the second time since his March upset at the hands of Harry Joe Yorgey and with his illustrious father watching from a ringside seat, 30-year old junior middle Ronald Hearns scored a 6th-round TKO of Kenyan Shadrack Kipruto (10-12) to advance his own pro record to 23-1.

 

 

Hearns appeared to wobble Kipruto several times in the second, and just before the conclusion of the round, stiffened him with a left and then dropped him with a short, cuffing right thrown over the top.  Hearns dominated the intervening action, but it wasn't until the sixth that he put the Kenyan down again. When he did -- with a hard left hook -- Kipruto hit the canvas with such force that referee Pete Podgorski didn't even think about counting but waved it off at 2:33 of the round..

 

 

Highly touted Texas junior welter Omar Figueroa celebrated his final hours as a teenager (he would turn 20 the next day) when referee Celistino Cruz rescued outclassed Bahamian opponent Anthony Woods at 1:46 of the second. It was the 8th KO in as many pro fights for Figueroa, who still has yet to see a fourth round. Woods slips to 6-13.

 

 

Two other Texas 19 year-olds posted wins on the Chicago under card. One of them, Houstonian Jermell Charlo, interrupted a spirited battle of unbeaten welterweights with stunning (literally) second-round knockout of Abdon Lozano. Lozano, who had gone down in the opening seconds, battled his way back and was confidently swarming ahead, winging punches with both hands, when Charlo, purely in self-defense, threw a short left uppercut as he tried to keep him off him. The punch caught Lozano off balance and flipped him over backward, but he landed hard, the back of his head smashing off the canvas, and was unable to respond before Cruz had reached the count of 10 at 2:11 of the round. Charlo is now 10-0, Lozano 6-1.

 

 

The other Houston junior welter Hylon Williams Jr., posted 80-72 tallies on the scores of all three judges (Ted Gimza, William Lerch, Bulmarow Camuzano Jr,) for a unanimous decision over Mexican journeyman Humberto Tapia (14-12-1) to make his record 12-0.

 

 

Welterweight Jimmy Herrera had a memorable, if brief, pro debut, requiring just 28 seconds to stop fellow Chicagoan Gustavo Palacios (2-7), Herrera put his more experienced foe down with a furious flurry that brought the crowd to its feet, and although Palacios made it to his feet, referee John O'Brien had seen enough.

 

 

Brooklyn-based former Dominican Olympian Argenis Mendez improved to 15-1 with a unanimous, if not exactly overwhelming, decision (80-72 Fitzgerald and Morley; 78-72 Jakubco) over Kenya's Morris Chule (7-8-1).

 

 

In a 10-tounder just before the televised portion of the card, Cuban middleweight Erislandy Lara stayed perfect at 9-0 with a one-sided decision over Chicago-based Mexican Luciano Perez (17-01-1). Perez was tough as nails and very willing, but simply out of his depth; his face looked like it had been through a meat grinder by the end. Robert Heckel scored it 100-90, John McCarthy and Gary Kruse 99-91.

 

 

A pair of heavyweight bouts had opened the show.  Dominick Guinn (32-6-1) won an uninspired but unanimous decision over Arizonan Charles Davis (19-18-2). McCarthy scored in a shutout at 60-54, while Heckel and Kruse had it 58-56. Earlier, Guinn's Sugar Land (Tex.) neighbor Darlington Agha (2-0) was awarded a second-round TKO when his opponent Terry Adams quit, only a second after the bell had rung to begin round two.

 

 

* * *

 

At IUC Pavilion

 

Chicago, Illinois

 

December 12, 2009

 

 

JUNIOR WELTERS:  Paulie Malignaggi, 138 1/2, Brooklyn, NY dec. Juan Diaz, 138 1/2, Houston, Texas (12)

 

 

Hylon Williams Jr., 137, Houston dec. Humberto Tapia, 137, Tijuana, Mexico (8)

 

 

Omar Figueroa, 138 1/2, Weslaco, Tex. TKO'd Anthony Woods, 137 1/2, Nassau, Bahamas (2)

 

 

HEAVYWEIGHTS: Dominick Guinn, 239, Hot Springs, Ark. dec. Charles Davis, 214, Tucson, Ariz. (6)

 

 

Darlington Agha, 239, Sugar Land, Tex. TKO'd Terry Adams, 209, Huntsville, Ala. (2)

 

 

MIDDLEWEIGHTS: Erislandy Lara, 155 1/2, Guantanamo, Cuba dec.  Luciano Perez, 155 1/2, Michoacan, Mexico (8)

 

 

JUNIOR MIDDLES: Ronald Hearns, 154, Southfield, Mich. TKO'd Shadrack Kipruto, 154 1/2, Nairobi, Kenya (6)

 

 

WELTERWEIGHTS: Victor Ortiz, 144, Garden City, Kansas TKO'd Antonio Diaz, 144, Jiquilpan, Mexico (7)

 

 

Randall Bailey, 148, Miami, Fla. dec. Germaine Sanders, 146 1/2, Chicago, Ill. (8)

 

 

Jermell Charlo, 146 1/2, Houston, Tex, KO'd  Abdon Lozano, 146 1/2, Las Vegas, Nev. (2)

 

 

Jimmy Herrera, 146, Chicago, Ill. TKO'd  Gustavo Palacios, 148, Chicago (2)

 

 

JUNIOR LIGHTWEIGHTS:  Argenis Mendez, 130, San Juan de la Maguana, Dominican Rep. dec.  Morris Chule, 129 1/2, Nairobi, Kenya (8)

 

 

 

 

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MisterLee:  Cool! Floyd had a whole conversation with the HBO crew in then Henry Brusseles fight about his favorite NFL players, I guess Malignaggi can be in that tradition. I guess by Diaz's behavior he knew he lost, and i guess he knew he was screwed career wise. Where does he go? I would say back to lightweight, duke it out with Valero for sure! What is he doing in Jr. welter? His punch could barely carry in lightweight. Him and marquez should go back down to lightweight. ortiz, tho i haven't seen the fight, proves nothing in a tune up fight agst an aged fighter. If he rematches maidana or takes on bradley/amir khan i'll call him a man! Holler!
Sunday Dec 13, 2009 05:14:16 AM
brownsugar:  I knew Paulie would win because of his size and speed,. too much to overcome for Diaz who should stay at light weight,.. where he would still be a terror for most of the division,.. Diaz looked better schooled than the last time,.. but Shields kept telling him to rest and take rounds off,.. even though I picked Malignaggi,.. I was rooting for Diaz to win,.. Paulie got him hurt,.. and instead of finishing the fight,.. Paulie mugs for the cameras,.. as if feeding his need for attention is more important than getting his opponent out of there,...Paulie is confused,.. doesn't know if he wants to box,... or star in a broadway musical... still he displayed solid boxing skills... again....
Sunday Dec 13, 2009 07:30:36 AM
Deepwater:  nice boxing by Paulie M.its gonna be a nyc showdown between Paulie and Judah in the Garden one of these days. Paulie is a nice and humble guy in person believe it or not. I have watched him since the amatuer days and even though he doesnt have the one punch knockout power his boxing skills are a joy to watch. Also If Paulie was mugging for the cameras thats his business in the ring,we dont hear what is being said between the 2 when they are close.Paulie might have a reason to try and embarass and humilate him
Sunday Dec 13, 2009 08:23:18 AM
SALT lover:  It's good that a pretty good skilled fighter like Malignaggi was able to win the fight. This will be a very bad image for the State of Texas, as they clearly give their decisions to hometown heroes, and native fighters. Malignaggi was able to keep Diaz at bay, even though he was a little more flat footed than usual, and was willin' to trade shots, with a Diaz who simply doesn't pack hard punches. Now for Diaz, go back to 135lbs. Even if he would've beaten Malignaggi, still he doesn't have enough to compete with the bigger guys. And as for Malignaggi, a rematch for Hatton sounds good, or a fight with potential Hall of Famer Juan Manuel Marquez. Whoever Malignaggi fights, future looks pretty good for Malignaggi. Latezzzzzzzzz!!
Sunday Dec 13, 2009 11:09:27 AM
NOT CONVINCED:  To show disrespect to your opponent like you did is satirical. This is boxing no circus show. Show your skills and use your gloves to make a statement. You know what, I would rather like to see you being demolished in 12 bloody round. or I can live in this world without seeing you fight at all.
Sunday Dec 13, 2009 12:36:34 PM
The Watcher:  Paulie did it again and won a convincing fight, this time Diaz didn't have judges on his side and the right fighter won. Best of luck Paulie in the future, Ortiz seemed a little timid getting hit, I think he was scared to get hit, what do you guys think, I was switching between this fight and the Peterson vs. Bradley fight so I think I may have only seen 3 rounds.
Sunday Dec 13, 2009 01:18:31 PM
brownsugar:  @ Deepwater,.. if he really had reason to humiliate him,.. he'd of keep hitting him until he went down,.. not drop his hands to make faces,.more like Malignaggi was humiliating himself... most ridiculous thing I've seen since Nate Campbell pulled the same stunt and got KO'd while goofing in the ring,. although I have to give Malignaggi thanks for providing similar moments of comic relief thru out the contest...at least Paulie did get his redemption at last,.. now's there's talk of Malignaggi and Khan appearing on the same card in 2010 HBO card...
Sunday Dec 13, 2009 02:15:33 PM
MisterLee:  Dear Not Convinced, Please watch some old Roy Jones fight or Naseem Hamed, then tell me about circus. Holler!
Sunday Dec 13, 2009 09:29:11 PM
Anony:  GREAT ANALSIS BY MR. KIMBALL IN THE FIRST PARAGRAPH!!!... I didn't thought of it until now but it's true - Gale Van Hoy did Paulie a favor at the end. I haven't watch the fight but from what I see Paulie had full redemption and he deserved it. Reality is that JMM exposed "baby bull" who is still green and doesn't know how to fight any other way than going straight for a one-punch knockdown. Paulie in the other hand has all the experience and always seem to improve. For the record, I don't even like his annoying tone of voice or "pop-artist-wanna be-eccentricity" but he is really a great boxer. He reminds me a lot of Judah. Don't like his "crying and bitching" all the time but you can't deny he has special skills.
Monday Dec 14, 2009 07:27:51 AM
Anony:  ABOUT VICTOR ORTIZ.... I'm one of the handful people who supported Ortíz when he quit in his previous fight while almost the whole TSS universe complained and downplayed him. I really like him and what some people may interpret as a "lack of heart" I actually saw it as a very smart choice. I believe one day he will be at the top.
Monday Dec 14, 2009 07:43:25 AM
brownsugar:  @ Anony,.. "eccentricity",.. good use of the word,.. made me open my thesaurus,.. and better comments,.. you called it in a nutshell....
Monday Dec 14, 2009 05:09:09 PM
Aldana Jr:  I said VICIOUS VICTOR ORTIZ in 6 rounds I was a little wrong, 6 ROUNDS and a few seconds but VICIOUS VICTOR is BACK!!!!!
Monday Dec 14, 2009 10:39:00 PM
Isaiah:  Tell Paulie Malignaggi that Zuri Lawrence wants his punching power back. so does my 4 year old son. 5 knockouts in a career eh? I think I've seen Manny Pacquiao knock out 5 guys in an afternoon. I KEED, I KEED. Seriously, good win for Paulie. I heard Paulie trained for this fight by hitting eggs with all his might. He had to be careful though. You all didn't see how Paulie really hurt his hand by almost cracking the egg. This is a true story. One time, Paulie went into a senior citizen home and starting punching old people in the face and no one noticed. One guy just got out his fly swatter and broke poor Paulie's hand. I think the actual flies probaly felt heavier, but they didn't want to take any chances. Paulie tried to go swimming once, but just akwardly sat there on top of the waves as he wasn't heavy enough to go through them. When fighting Miguel Cotto, Paulie's corner made sure to keep weights in Paulie's shoes and a Chinese passport on him in case one of Cottos punches sent him flying to the other end of the earth. Thankfully, the fight was made at Junior Welter...
Tuesday Dec 15, 2009 01:12:30 AM
MisterLee:  Ortiz won a tune up fight fo' sure!
Tuesday Dec 15, 2009 10:30:45 PM

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