TELEMUNDO DEPORTES PREMIERES SEASON 2 OF QUE MOMENTO

MIAMI, Fla. – December 19, 2018 – Telemundo Deportes premieres season 2 of Que Momento (What a Moment) December 23 at 11 p.m. ET on Telemundo. The new season debuts with an in-depth look at three-time former welterweight world champion Antonio Margarito, his controversial “loaded” gloves and the rivalry with Miguel Cotto following the 2008 WBA welterweight title fight.

Que Momento will take viewers back to July 26, 2008 when Margarito defeated Cotto in an 11th round TKO victory that replaced Cotto as The Ring Magazine’s No.1 ranked welterweight, and gave fans one of the most unforgettable bouts of all time. Hosted by five-time Emmy winner Andrés Cantor, the episode includes analysis and interviews with boxing personalities who witnessed the bout and closely followed the story, including both Cotto and Margarito’s trainers. The show also features interviews with other boxers that faced them in the ring, including three-time World Champion Saul “Canelo” Alvarez and seven-time World Champion Shane Mosley.

The one-hour special recounts how Cotto and Margarito came to face off in a fight that would alter the course of their careers. After Margarito, Cotto was slated to take on Oscar De La Hoya in a $25 million matchup, but the fight was off the table when Cotto lost, and Oscar opted for a fight with Manny Pacquiao. Margarito would go on make his first defense of the welterweight crown against Shane Mosley in July, 2009, in a bout that was marked by controversy. Prior to the fight, it was discovered that a plaster-like substance on illegal pads was found inside Margarito’s wraps. After his hands were rewrapped, Margarito would go on to lose to Mosley by TKO in the 9th round. Following the bout, both Margarito and his trainer were suspended by the California State athletic commission and the boxing world started to suspect that Margarito had used the same illegal substance in his wraps against Cotto.

The rematch between the two rivals didn’t come until December, 2011, at Madison Square Garden, where Cotto defeated Margarito in a 10-round TKO.

Que Momento was born from Cantor’s signature phrase “Que Momento,” which he uses to describe the most exciting moment in a soccer match. The quarterly special takes an in-depth journalistic look at some of the greatest and most memorable moments in sports history. The new season will feature memorable moments from baseball, soccer and women in sports. The show will return in March of 2019.




Antonio Margarito to face Ramon Alvarez

A Press Conference was held at the Casino De Sol Resort Hotel with three-time welterweight world champion Antonio Margarito Vs Abel Perry.
Former world champion, Antonio Margarito will face Ramon Alvarez on August 13 at the Rosarito Convention Center in Rosarito, Mexico, according to Dan Rafael of espn.com.

“I felt a little rusty before the Paez fight after being out for so long, but now we are on pace,” Margarito said. “I like the fight against Ramon Alvarez, and the styles will provide an exciting fight for the fans. I’m happy. Ramon and me will be in the ring fighting, and nobody else will be able to help him or me.”

“I have always wanted the fight with Margarito, and now, thanks to Fernando Beltran, it will happen,” Alvarez said. “It is an opportunity for my career, and I have no doubt that I will win. I will go out there and give everything as I always do. [Margarito] is a warrior in the ring. He’s very strong and has power, but I have faith in my talent and my preparation. Defeating Margarito will lead me to the [junior middleweight] world title and help me in achieving my dream.”

Alvarez is the brother of Canelo Alvarez




Margarito decisions Paez Jr.

In his first fight in four-plus year, former world champion Antonio Margarito had to squeak by with a 10-round unanimous decision over Jorge Paez Jr in Mexico City

In round six, a tired Margarito was sent to the canvas by a hard flurry of punches by Paez Jr.

Margarito, 154 lbs of Tijuana, MX won by scores of 97-93, 96-93 and 95-94 and is now 39-8. Paez Jr., 154 lbs of Mexicali, MX is now 39-8-2.

Giovanni Delgado won a 10-round split decision over former world title challenger Cesar Jaurez in a Featherweight bout.

Delgado, 125 lbs of Mexico City won cards by 96-95 and 95-93 tallies while Juarez, 125 lbs of Mexico City took a card via 95-94.

Delgado is now 16-4. Juarez is 17-5.




MARGARITO RETURNS AGAINST PAEZ JR. THIS SATURDAY NIGHT!

A Press Conference was held at the Casino De Sol Resort Hotel with three-time welterweight world champion Antonio Margarito Vs Abel Perry.
Los Angeles, CA (February 29, 2016) – Four years removed from his last appearance in a ring, former four time (WBO 147 LB./ IBF 147LB./WBA 147 LB./ Ring Magazine World Welterweight champion), Antonio ”The Tijuana Tornado” Margarito, 38-8, (27KOs) has been given a clean bill of eye health, surgically repaired and good to go, now looks forward to resuming his career this Saturday night at the Arena Ciudad De Mexico, Mexico City in a Super Welterweight bout against the skilled Jorge Paez Jr. 39-7-2, (23KOs) which will be televised through BeIn Sports En Espanol and beIN SPORTS CONNECT in the United States and through AZTECA 7 in Mexico.

Margarito who originally suffered the eye injury in his 2010 showdown against Manny Pacquiao steps back with renewed vigor in the fight card presented by Zanfer Promotions. In Paez Jr., ”The Tijuana Tornado” will pit wits against a fighter who has held the WBC Silver Super welterweight title with a win in a rematch against Omar Chavez back in 2012, and last year challenged Jose Benavidez with the WBA Super lightweight belt at stake.

Despite his high octane fighting style and grueling fights, Margarito feels he has much left in the tank, being away from the ring for four years, but always staying in shape, going to the gym, one can make the case the former champion is closer to his prime than past it, something he is looking forward to prove with an impressive outing this Saturday night.

Margarito’s ultimate goal, as mentioned before is another crack at a world title, something which will get him closer to, adding Paez’s name to his long list of opponent’s, be it champions or highly rated contenders at one time, such as David Kamau, Frankie Randall, Antonio Diaz, Danny Perez, Andrew ”Six Heads” Lewis, Hercules Kyvelos, Sebastian Lujan, Kermit ”Killer”Cintron, Manuel ”Shotgun” Gomez, Joshua Clottey, Golden Johnson, Miguel Cotto and Roberto ”La Amenaza” Garcia and WBC Super welterweight and Middleweight world champion Sergio ”Maravilla” Martinez.

Top Rank’s Bob Arum, who promoted Margarito throughout his career has stated to different News outlets that should the former champion look good and impress against the wily, quick-fisted Paez Jr., he will work towards getting him licensed back once and promote him in the U.S.




Margarito to end retirement against Paez Jr. on March 5th in Mexico

A Press Conference was held at the Casino De Sol Resort Hotel with three-time welterweight world champion Antonio Margarito Vs Abel Perry.
According to Dan Rafael of espn.com, former Welterweight champion Antonio Margarito will end his 4-year retirement when he takes on Jorge Paez Jr. on March 5th in Mexico.

“Let’s see how he does with Paez first before we make a big effort to get him licensed in the United States,” said Margarito’s promoter Bob Arum told ESPN.com. “Paez is a good test for a guy who’s been out of action as long as Margarito has been.”




HBO SPORTS® TO REPLAY JULIO CESAR CHAVEZ JR. VS. SERGIO MARTINEZ 2012 & MIGUEL COTTO VS. ANTONIO MARGARITO 2 2011 ON HBO2 AS A SPECIAL PREVIEW TO THE UPCOMING COTTO VS. MARTINEZ PAY-PER-VIEW EVENT

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May 23, 2014 – Leading up to the most anticipated fight of 2014 between Miguel Cotto and Sergio Martinez – set for Saturday, June 7 and presented live by HBO Pay-Per-View® – HBO Sports will present the exclusive replay of two riveting showdowns that highlight the remarkable skill and will of these competitors.

On Friday, May 30 at 11:15 p.m. (ET/PT) and Saturday, May 31 at 10:00 a.m. (ET/PT), HBO2 will replay Chavez Jr. vs. Martinez & Cotto vs. Margarito 2 back-to-back. In a thrilling high-stakes battle in Las Vegas, Sergio Martinez scored a unanimous decision victory over the undefeated Julio Cesar Chavez Jr., dominating him for 11 of the 12 rounds, stamping his mark as one of sport’s elite champions. Meanwhile, in a much anticipated rematch that took place at Madison Square Garden, Miguel Cotto dismantled Antonio Margarito, avenging an earlier loss with a 9th round TKO.

Both fights will also be available to HBO On Demand® subscribers and can be seen 24 hours a day beginning Monday, May 26.

The Cotto vs. Martinez world middleweight title fight takes place Saturday, June 7 from New York’s famed Madison Square Garden. The event will be produced and distributed live by HBO Pay-Per-View beginning at 9:00 p.m. ET/ 6:00 p.m. PT.




Antonio Margarito denies rumors of a possible return to the ring or financial emas problems

A Press Conference was held at the Casino De Sol Resort Hotel with three-time welterweight world champion Antonio Margarito Vs Abel Perry.
LOS ANGELES, CA.-Surprised by several recent articles announcing a return to boxing course due to financial problems, former heavyweight boxing champion, Antonio Margarito has been reported that there is absolutely no truth about a possible return, or who suffers from difficulties industry due to their divorce.
 
The Mexican fighter has been out of the ring since 2011, after losing the rematch with Miguel Cotto. Margarito announced his retirement in June last year. Currently, the “Tijuana Tornado” is in Los Angeles, California.
 
“I was surprised to hear several unsubstantiated rumors regarding my current situation, including news about the supposed return to boxing and supposedly a divorce settlement that has left me in financial hardship and the need to return to boxing. The news of my return of my financial situation and information about an agreement, are unfounded. Yet some tabloid media has gone beyond that by spreading rumors that no one took the trouble to investigate thoroughly, “said Margarito.
 
“I am the first to admit that my time in boxing is a thing of the past, and as a man who has his feet firmly on the ground also know that I have to be jealous to protect my property, because it will be very difficult to find another profession that could produce what he earned in the ring, “he added.
 
“However, there is some damage to my family that can be done by spreading lies and half-truths. We have officially separated from my wife Michelle for more than two years. She has formed her new life and is in a new relationship and pregnant. since then, I’ve made a new life, and I have a baby with my girlfriend Lorena Vidales.’s divorce settlement was not finalized as we are civilized people, respect life from each other and during this time we have been negotiating a divorce settlement, “said Margarito.
 
“With what we’re going to share, I hope to help us live, if not a life of luxury, if in a comfortable lifestyle. However, when people start talking about” An agreement Millionaire “Michelle exposes and my children – who live in Tijuana, Mexico, to become victims of blackmail and even kidnappings.’s why I wanted to make this public statement on the situation, “said Margarito.
 
“I accepted and still accept any criticism about my boxing career and have always been grateful to the press that covered my career, but this is not strictly a case related to the box and I think that boxing has been used by some journalists to trample my private life, showing no respect for other people who have nothing to do with boxing and could be damaged by misinformation, “he said Margarito.




Cintron Has 147 Good Reasons Not to Give Up

Kermit_Cintron
Kermit Cintron won a world title at welterweight. Take away two suspicious losses to the disgraced cheater Antonio Margarito and he’s never lost as a welterweight. He has almost insurmountable physical gifts of height and superior strength as a welterweight.

And so, after losing three of four in a disastrous 18-month stretch, what’s he going to do to get his career back on track?

He’s going back to welterweight.

“I feel that it’s always been my weight,” explained the former champion. “I took my last couple fights at I54 lbs. because they were good opportunities, but you know I was always a better fighter at 147. I didn’t gain the weight of a true 154 pounder. I went up to 153 lbs. on fight night, while the guys I was fighting went up to 170 to 175 lbs. I feel that 147-lbs is where I belong. I’m already on weight and I have a week left. It was never a problem to make welterweight.”

“EL Asesino” Cintron (33-5-1, 28 KOs) will face Chicago attraction Adrian “EL Tigre” Granados (11-2-1, 7 KOs) in the ESPN Friday Night Fights televised 10-round co-main event presented by 8 Count Productions, Round 3 Productions and Warriors Boxing on Friday, March 22, 2013 at Chicago’s UIC Pavilion.

In the main event, Windy City favorite Donovan “Da Bomb” George will battle former world title challenger David “The Destroyer” Lopez of Nogales, Mexico in a 10-round middleweight bout

Cintron says he did a lot of soul-searching after his last fight, a TKO5 loss to Canelo Alvarez in November 2011.

“I didn’t want to think about boxing after the Canelo fight. I just wanted to go home and spend time with my kids. My family is important to me and I think that going away for camps eight or nine weeks at a time was getting to me. I was focusing too much on what my kids were doing, wondering if they were ok. After a while, my kids started asking when I’m fighting again? They said ‘we want to see you on TV.’ My kids still want me fight, so here I am.”

Cintron, from Reading, Pennsylvania, says he decided to go back to what got him to the lofty heights of boxing despite a very minimal amateur career.

“I’m training at home around family and Milton Santiago is my new trainer. I’ve known him since I was eight years old. If I wanted to come back, the only person I had in mind to train me was Milton. He’s the true coach that brought me to the gym when I was in school. So I’m going back to my roots, back to basics, and that’s what I did. We’ve been working together the past six months. I have my own boxing gym called the Kermit Cintron Boxing Gym in Reading, Pennsylvania where Milton trains me. On the days I need to spar, I go to Philly and get some good sparring in.”

Cintron says reports of his decline as a fighter and tumble from the ranks of serious contender are irresponsible.

“That’s how the media is. All they do is a lot of talking. I really ignore those comments from people. I’m not a shot fighter. I had a rough year, that’s it. You’ll see. I have lots left. I have dedicated myself to the sport once again. I’m feeling great and I’ve improved. You guys will see.

Having signed with a new promoter, Leon Margules of Warriors Boxing, Cintron says he’s rejuvenated and eager to get back where he belongs: as a top 147-lb fighter.

“I just want to fight. I’m excited to come back after 16 months off. I’m excited and rejuvenated and ready to go.”

###

Presented by 8 Count Productions, Round 3 Productions, Warriors Boxing and Blue Wave Boxing, advance tickets to ESPN Friday Night Fights are priced at $150, $100, $50 and $30 and can be purchased through Ticketmaster (Ticketmaster.com, 1-800-745-3000 ), the 8 Count Productions Offices, 312-226-5800 or the UIC Pavilion Box Office, 312-413-5740.

Doors will open on the night of the event at 7pm CT with the first bout scheduled for 8:00pm CT.

The UIC Pavilion is located at 525 S. Racine, at the corner of Harrison and Racine on the campus of the University of Illinois-Chicago.

A full undercard featuring many of Chicago’s best prospects and fan favorites will be announced shortly for this event.




Portrait of 2012’s most excellent week, part 1

MostExcellent
The moment Mexican Juan Manuel Marquez took Filipino Manny Pacquiao’s consciousness with a right cross on Dec. 8 brought a series of instants affecting as can be experienced in professional sport. One of those instants brought a deep, royal blue sense of Marquez’s vindication, reminiscent in its way of Antonio Margarito’s victory over Miguel Cotto at MGM Grand in 2008. Reminiscent, conjecture says, in a few ways.

There was a difference between the two moments, though, a difference uncaptured by television, that boasting, refracting medium that lies to congregants flatteringly enough they later find no irony in remanding events’ eyewitnesses to tapes of what television told them to see. Television, that extraordinary phenomenon, continues to affect boxing more than it covers it.

The difference between Marquez and Margarito lay in their reactions. Margarito, who had longer to process Cotto’s demise, was euphoric, dropping to his knees, blessing himself, spinning joyfully in his cornermen’s arms. Marquez was not surprised as anyone else. He’d the benefit of feeling the punch on his right knuckle, of course, but it was not entirely that. He was not containing a euphoria as he paced with his black gloves on the red waistband of his trunks, inching nearer Pacquiao to admire what he’d done, or when he ran across the ring – to a neutral corner, mind you – and mounted a turnbuckle to savor his vindication; he was acting out a conqueror’s script.

What happened on television was a single camera that showed Pacquiao regaining consciousness sooner than what happened at ringside, where split screens above the ring showed Marquez fixated on a proper celebration, ensuring his white Rexona sponsor’s cap was straightened, while Pacquiao’s wife sobbed, silently screamed and tried to swim to her facedown husband, promoter Bob Arum consoling her while looking inconsolable. It happened much slower at ringside; there was no one shouting about keystones or anticipating fifth fights: there was confusion marinated in fright, tempered by a need to record what transpired.

But memory is a funny thing, and what I remember best from those moments is Marquez’s unflinching seizure of them, while the Filipino journalist on my right worried Pacquiao might never stir. It was a confirmation of this: Were Marquez offered a choice in the last moment of the sixth round, told if he threw that right hand it might kill Pacquiao but if he didn’t he might lose another close decision, Marquez would throw the punch. Whatever other prizefighters tell you about themselves during promotions, know this: A willingness to kill in the ring makes Marquez unique.

Six days later in Houston, the mood was much lighter. It was the weighin for an inconsequential coronation: a crowning of Filipino Nonito Donaire as 2012’s fighter of the year, and a crowning payday for Mexican Jorge Arce. Donaire was a safer athlete to cover than Marquez.

Arce did some chemical experimentation in camp to make his upper body more muscular, in the laboratory of Marquez’s own scientist, but at worse, one suspected, the enhanced physique might extend Arce’s consciousness a round. The left hook Donaire doused Arce’s spirit with at Toyota Center was comparatively merciful. Arce went down, but there was little fright, as one sensed Donaire would drop on his knees and administer CPR if his friend were in genuine peril.

Somehow, strangely, illogically, knowing a man rendered another unconscious in an act of temporarily suspended affection, as Donaire did Arce, made it feel safer than what congealed indifference Marquez showed Pacquiao’s plight in Las Vegas.

*

The moment Mexican Juan Manuel Marquez took Filipino Manny Pacquiao’s consciousness with a right cross on Dec. 8 made their tetralogy a unique event in boxing history. In its asymmetry – Pacquiao dropped Marquez five times but will be remembered as the rivalry’s collapsed form on the blue mat – and its excellence, it entered our sport’s annals as something that may be approached or someday bettered but never matched: a rivalry whose first three fights were excellent enough to merit a fourth but inferior to the fourth.

What happened in the seven days that began Dec. 8th was unique and excellent, too, in this way: The fight of the year and the fighter of the year happened in a week together but 1,500 miles apart. Marquez-Pacquiao IV will be remembered as 2012’s best fight because of its superior composition of three elements, violence and craft and consequence – the winner was covered in his own blood when he made his opponent sleep with the same counter right hand he landed the round before, spinning Pacquiao sideways in the fifth, and with that right hand in round 6 Marquez brought the conclusion of an era.

Nonito Donaire will be declared 2012’s best prizefighter because of a superior composition of these three elements: Activity, craft and consequence. Donaire fought twice as often as his peers, and he fought actual opponents in actual weight classes, gaming none of them with the scale, and by subjecting himself to VADA testing he put the lie to most athletes’ claims and exerted pressure on everyone including his own team.

*

The moment Mexican Juan Manuel Marquez took Filipino Manny Pacquiao’s consciousness with a right cross on Dec. 8, Marquez had been the slower man in the fourth fight as he’d been in the first and second and third. He was able to offset Pacquiao’s unique attack with “inteligencia” – a word Marquez uttered in every interview he conducted after their second fight before their third after their third and before their fourth.

Marquez and his trainer Nacho Beristain welcomed the more conventional Pacquiao they saw in fight three; so long as Pacquiao’s punches came from familiar angles, no matter their speed or forcefulness, Marquez and Beristain did not fear them for the same reason a major league hitter does not fear a 120-mph fastball twice thrown over the plate at belt level. One doesn’t get in the major leagues without being able to hit a fastball, no matter its velocity, and one doesn’t get out of a Mexico City gym without being able to sustain any punch he sees coming.

The scariest moment of Dec. 8, then, was not the Pacquiao left hand that knocked Marquez onto the knuckles of his left glove but instead the crazily executed, left-foot-off-the-mat, right-hand chop Pacquiao landed a few seconds after he put Marquez on the canvas. That was the punch that stiffened Marquez’s right leg and sent him in frantic retreat till the ropes’ touching his back made him swing at Pacquiao savagely because that is what Marquez does when cornered.

After the fight there was an odd little moment when Marquez and Beristain, no sore winners they, alternately led the MGM Grand media center in a rendition of “Happy Birthday” for Bob Arum and a heartfelt hug for the elderly promoter and rival whom Beristain flatly accused of ruining the sport while they shared a Mandalay Bay dais after Pacquiao-Marquez II in 2008.

Arum’s appearance, six days later, at a Houston mall, where he briefly posed for pictures with Donaire and Arce, was perfunctory – like everyone else’s.

***

Editor’s note: Part 2 will be posted Wednesday.

***

Bart Barry can be reached at bart.barrys.email (at) gmail.com




Perry frustrated with Margarito’s untimely Retirement

Big Bear Lake, CA (June 11, 2012) – When junior middleweight Abel “Truth Serum” Perry received word that he’d be facing Antonio Margarito May 26, the Colorado City native was confident that a victory over the former three-time welterweight champion would lead to the kind of opportunity he’s dreamed of since day one.

With many ups and downs during his 6 ½ year pro career, Perry, 18-5 (9 KO’s), won five straight bouts and believed that May 26 would be his sixth. This was until Margarito injured his Achilles 12 days before fight night and the bout was postponed until July.

“Everything was rescheduled for July 7 to my knowledge and I actually saw on the internet that the fight was going to take place on the 21st,” said Perry. “To be honest, I assumed he wasn’t training because he looked heavy in recent photos.”

He also viewed the delay as something that would only benefit him leading up to the fight of his life.

“I was actually grateful for the postponement because many of my fights came on short notice or without a proper training camp. For the Margarito bout, my manager Bobby Dobbs sent me to a training camp in Big Bear Lake, CA where I was working with Carson Jones and Gennady Golovkin. I was sparring world class guys and the extra time would only give me a bigger advantage. This was the perfect situation.”

To his unpleasant surprise, Margarito announced his retirement on June 8, canceling the fight altogether while leaving Perry without the career-changing opportunity.

“It left a sour taste in my mouth. I felt wronged because they changed the date multiple times and I committed so much time preparing for this fight, while I could’ve been looking for another fight. Everybody was writing me off and they expected Margarito to run right through me. If he’s retiring because he doesn’t have what it takes to fight top guys any longer and I’m supposedly a “safe opponent,” why not face me in a farewell fight?”

“This was a major letdown and Margarito handled this like anything but a professional,” stated Dobbs. “My fighter was in camp getting ready to pull off the upset, only for Margarito to cancel the bout after agreeing to reschedule it. I understand that he’s taken a ton of punishment during his career and didn’t want to fight again, but since this is the case, why even sign to face Abel?”

While Dobbs explores other suitable options, Perry will remain at Big Bear as a sparring partner for Jones and Golovkin.

Fans can interact with Abel by going to http://www.facebook.com/abelperry or HDboxing.net.




Margarito retires


LAS VEGAS — Antonio Margarito is retiring.

Margarito announced the decision Thursday on his Facebook page.

“After much thought and extended conversations with my family and team, we have all agreed that the time to hang up my gloves and begin a new chapter in life has arrived,’’ Margarito wrote in a nine-paragraph statement. “I always told my family and team that I would walk away from boxing when I felt I could no longer compete at the level I believed I needed to be, in order to be successful. Although the passion and drive are still there, I have to accept that my time to walk away has arrived.’’

Margarito is the third fighter to retire within the last week. Winky Wright and Shane Mosley retired on Sunday. The former welterweight champion had been considering the decision for several days. He wasn’t sure whether he wanted to fight in a ceremonial farewell bout for his Mexican fans. His promoter, Top Rank’s Bob Arum, said he heard last week that he wanted to walk away from the sport.

“He should be remembered as a real warrior, a guy who was afraid of nobody, whose athletic skills were limited, but never quit,’’ said Arum, who defended Margarito in the controversy about whether he knew his former trainer had tried to put altered wraps on his hands before a loss to Mosley in 2009. “I think he’s a great guy. I wish him luck with whatever he’s going to do.
Margarito had been scheduled for a fight on July 20 at Casino Del Sol in Tucson against Abel Perry of Colorado Springs in his first bout since a 10th-round TKO loss in December to Miguel Cotto, who left Margarito’s surgically-repaired right eye badly bloodied and swollen during a dramatic rematch at New York’s Madison Square Garden.

The bout against Perry, which Margarito saw as a potential step toward a middleweight fight with fellow Mexican Julio Cesar Chavez Jr., had been postponed from May 26 to July 7 and then July 20 because of a reported injury to an Achilles tendon that Margarito sustained while training in Tijuana, his hometown.

There were also fears that his problematic right eye might sustain further damage, especially against Chavez, a 160-pound champion who reportedly has been as heavy as 180 pounds at opening bell for his last few fights. That could have given Chavez a powerful advantage of at least 20 pounds against Margarito, who has fought at 154 since 2008.

Margarito underwent surgery to correct the vision after the orbital bone was fractured in his 2010 loss to Pacquiao. But scarred skin surrounding the eye was vulnerable to further cuts, said his manager Sergio Diaz. In the Cotto rematch, those cuts led to a stoppage that Margarito and Diaz believed was premature.

Questions about the condition of the eye led to doubts about whether the New York State Athletic Commission would license him for Cotto. It finally did on Nov. 22, 12 days before the fight.

Margarito underwent surgery to correct the vision after the Pacquiao loss, but scarred skin surrounding the eye was vulnerable to further cuts. Those cuts led to the stoppage against Cotto. Arum had his family opthamologist do the surgery to correct any problems in the eye itself.

“The eye is 100 percent,’’ Arum said in a media room for the Pacquiao-Tim Bradley fight Saturday at the MGM Grand.

There was speculation that Margarito was considering retirement on May 26 when he accompanied his brother-in-law, Hanzel Martinez, to Tucson for a victory over Felipe Rivas for a minor bantamweight title, also at Casino Del Sol. Margarito did not make himself available for comment. His former trainer Robert Garcia, who was in Martinez’ corner, said he had spoken to Margarito, but had not been working with him. Garcia then hinted that retirement was a possibility. He said that “Margarito had a lot to think about.’’

Margarito earned about $22 million over a 46 fights (38-8, 27 KOs). His career as a tough, stubborn brawler took a controversial turn in January 2009 when altered hand wraps were found before losing to Mosley at Staples Center in Los Angeles. The California State Athletic Commission banned his trainer, Javier Capetillo, and revoked his license.

Margarito, re-licensed in Texas for the Pacquiao fight at Cowboys Stadium in Arlington, has always said he didn’t know that Capetillo tried to tape his hands with the wraps – which reportedly included plaster-like inserts. There was never any evidence of altered wraps in any bout before they were discovered by Mosley trainer Naazim Richardson. Nevertheless, it was suspected that Margarito used altered wraps in his 2008 upset of Cotto, who got his revenge in the rematch.

“I’ve always strongly believed in his innocence,’’ Arum said. “So, I’m happy that I helped make him financially secure with the Pacquiao fight and then the Cotto fight. We feel like we did our responsibility for Margarito. ‘’

ShowDown Promotions still plans to stage a card at Casino Del Sol in late July, possibly with Top Rank junior-welterweight prospect Jose Benavidez Jr. of Phoenix. If not July 20, the card might be scheduled for July 27.




Margarito watches and waits as his brother-in law wins on a card full of blood, guts and controversy


TUCSON – There was no comeback from Antonio Margarito. That will have to wait. But there was a split decision, a couple of split lips, controversy and a tentative comeback from a leading prospect whose fight with fragile hands continues.

Margarito could only watch Saturday night, first from a seat and then from a corner behind trainer Roberto Garcia at Casino Del Sol’s outdoor arena where the former welterweight champion is expected to fight on July 20 in his first bout since his dramatic loss to Miguel Cotto in December.

Margarito, who had been scheduled to fight Abel Perry Saturday night, was there for his brother-in-law, Hanzel Martinez (18-0, 15 KOs), who won a minor World Boxing Council bantamweight title when Felipe Rivas (13-10-1, 7 KOs) suddenly quit before the seventh.

Rivas, who agreed to the fight only two days before opening bell, scored a third-round knockdown and was leading on the scorecards when he abruptly checked out. Rivas said he decided he couldn’t continue because of the difference in weight.

“The pounds were just too much,’’ Rivas, a Mexican, said through an interpreter.

Rivas weighed in on Friday at 116.2 pounds. Martinez’ official weight was 118.

Rivas, whose compact punches left Martinez bleeding from the nose and lip, said he knew he was winning.

“But it wasn’t worth for me to continue in a fight like this,’’ said Rivas, who is from the border town of Nogales, about 60 miles south of Tucson.

Martinez’ corner believed that Rivas, penalized a point in the third for spitting his bloodied mouthpiece at Martinez, just ducked the inevitable. Martinez, who appeared to get stronger in the sixth, would have scored a knockout within the next two rounds, said Garcia and Sergio Diaz of ShowDown Promotions.

The in-laws, it turns out, fight the same way. Both Margarito and Martinez are notorious slow starters.

Diaz said he hopes to have Martinez back at Casino Del Sol on a card scheduled for July 20, when Margarito’s comeback has been re-scheduled for a second time. It was postponed the first time, from May 26 to July 7, because of a strain to an Achilles tendon suffered while training in Tijuana about a week after the fight with Perry was formally announced. It was re-scheduled again, this time to July 20, to accommodate TV Azteca, which has other bouts scheduled for July 7.

“Tony’s been running and is in good shape,’’ said Diaz, who said Perry is still Margarito’s opponent.

However, It’s not clear who will train Margarito, who was in Martinez’ dressing room and not immediately available for comment. Garcia was in Margarito’s corner for losses to Cotto and Manny Pacquiao. Some have urged Margarito to retire because of damage suffered to his right eye, which was surgically-repaired after the orbital bone was fractured by Pacquiao. Margarito said in March that he hopes for a shot at fellow Mexican Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. in September.

“He’s still working out in Tijuana,’’ Garcia said. “This is not just about me. He has lot of thinking to do.’’

In a main event put together after Margarito’s injury in early May, Mexican super-welterweight Jesus Soto Karass (25-7-3, 16 KOs) battled to a split decision over Said El Harrack (1-2-1, 4 KOs) of Henderson, Nev.

“It was tough fight,’’ said Soto Karass, who rocked El Harrack, a Moroccan, with uppercuts to the stomach. “That guy is a good fighter. My body assault won it for me.’’

Before Soto Karrass-El Harrack and the Martinez-Rivas controversy, Phoenix prospect Jose Benavidez Jr.’s tested his right wrist for the first time since undergoing surgery for a misplaced bone in January. Benavidez (15-0, 12 KOs) was cautious early, throwing only three right hands in the first round en route to a unanimous decision over Josh Sosa (10-3, 5 KOs). Benavidez relied on a powerful jab, head to body and body to head, throughout most of the next five rounds, until rocking Sosa with rights in the bout’s final moments.

There was no further pain in the right hand or wrist, Benavidez said. However, there was swelling and bruising on the middle knuckle of the left. Benavidez has had problems with both hands. The 20-year-old junior-welterweight will have a physician look at the left hand sometime within the next week, his dad-and-trainer, Jose Benavidez Sr. said.

Best of the undercard

Super-lightweight Abel Ramos (4-0, 3 KOs) of Arizona City displayed a prospect’s power with a second-round stoppage of Cassius Clay (0-4,), a Las Vegas fighter who has the legend’s original name and a photo of himself as an infant in the arms of the heavyweight champ better known as Muhammad Ali.

In the first, Ramos threw an overhand right that lifted Clay up and dropped him on to the canvas as though he had fallen off a one-meter diving board. At 1:54 of the second, Ramos threw another right. Clay spit out his mouthpiece in a gesture that needed no interpretation. He was finished.

The rest
· Lightweight Javier Garcia (8-2-1, 7 KOs), of trainer Robert Garcia’s gym in Oxnard, Calif., scored four knockdowns, forcing Juan Jaramillo (8-11-2, 3 KOs) of Salem, Ore., to quit after the fifth round.

· Lightweight Eric Flores (3-1-1, 1 KO) of Los Angeles scored a unanimous decision over Rudolfo Gamez (1-2) of Tucson.

· Lightweight Andrey Klimov (14-0, 7 KOs) stayed unbeaten with a unanimous decision over Alejandro Rodriguez (13-6, 6 KOs) of Mexico.

· Phoenix super-middleweight Andrew Hernandez (4-0-1 scored a unanimous decision over Katrell Strauss (2-2, 1 KO) of Denver.

Photo by Phil Soto / Top Rank




Margarito’s comeback postponed to July 7 because of a foot injury


Antonio Margarito’s comeback against Abel Perry of Colorado Springs has been postponed from May 26 to July 7 at Casino Del Sol in Tucson because of a foot injury sustained Thursday while training in Tijuana, Gerry Truax of Showdown Promotions said.

Truax said Margarito hurt an Achilles tendon. Physicians told the three-time former welterweight champion to rest the tendon for three weeks, said Truax, who said he reserved Casino Del Sol for July 7 for Margarito’s first fight since a loss to Miguel Cotto in December in New York.

The May 26 card, a Top Rank and Showdown promotion, is still scheduled. A Top Rank spokesperson said a new main event for May 26 will be announced sometime next week.

Margarito, who was at a news conference Monday at Casino Del Sol, is hoping for a shot at fellow Mexican Julio Cesar Chavez Jr., the World Boxing Council’s middleweight champion. He plans to fight Perry at 160 pounds.

Photo by Chris Farina / Top Rank




Margarito says he’d make a better fight with Chavez than Martinez would


TUCSON – Antonio Margarito said Monday that a fight between him and fellow Mexican Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. would be more exciting than a speculated bout between Chavez and Argentina’s Sergio Martinez for the middleweight title.

“Between two Mexicans, I think it would be better,’’ Margarito said after his bout against Abel Perry on May 26 at Casino del Sol was formally announced during a news conference at the southern Arizona property.

Margarito wasn’t trying to eliminate Martinez as a potential fight for Chavez, the son of a Mexican legend.

“I’m not saying it shouldn’t be Maravilla,’’ Margarito said in a reference to Martinez’ nickname. “I’m not saying that at all. I’m just saying that I’m here too.’’

The controversial Margarito emerged as a possibility for Chavez, since his management put together the May 26 bout, Margarito’s first since a loss in December to Miguel Cotto. Another factor fueling the speculation is that Top Rank represents both Margarito and Chavez, who faces Andy Lee on June 16 at the Sun Bowl in El Paso, Tex.

Margarito, a former welterweight champion, will fight Perry at middleweight, 160 pounds. Margarito predicts that he will feel stronger at the heavier weight. He said he was at 172 pounds Monday.

Margarito is training for the first time in Tijuana, his hometown. Javier Cortez is working as his trainer. Raul Robles is working as his conditioning coach. Trainer Robert Garcia, who was in his corner for loss to Manny Pacquiao and Cotto, is not expected to join him in Tijuana. However, Margarito co-manager Sergio Diaz said Garcia will in his corner at opening bell for Perry, a Colorado Springs fighter who has won his last five fights, four by stoppage.

Phoenix junior-welterweight prospect Jose Benavidez Jr. is also scheduled for the Casino Del Sol card. His opponent has yet to be determined.

Benavidez expects his right wrist to be fully recovered in time for his first fight since a victory in November on the undercard of Manny Pacquiao’s disputed decision over Juan Manuel Marquez. Benavidez underwent surgery on the wrist in late January.

He has returned to trainer Freddie Roach’s Wild Card Gym in Hollywood, Calif., after working out for several weeks at Central Boxing in downtown Phoenix. He said he has resumed sparring.

“Went eight rounds twice over the last couple of days,’’ Benavidez said. “The wrist is getting better. In three or four, weeks it’ll be all the way back.’’

Photo by Phil Soto/Top Rank




Margarito has a formal agreement to fight in Tucson on May 26


Antonio Margarito’s management has an agreement for the former welterweight champion to fight on May 26 at Casino del Sol in Tucson, Gerry Truax of Showdown Promotions said Wednesday.

Talks with Casino del Sol have been underway since March 23 when 15 Rounds first reported the possibility of a Margarito fight in southern Arizona in his first bout since a bloody loss to Miguel Cotto last December. June 15 was an alternate date.

An opponent has yet to be determined, Truax said.

Margarito (38-8, 27 KOs) is trying to keep himself in line for a shot at Julio Cesar Chavez Jr., who is expected to face middleweight champion Sergio Martinez if he beats Andy Lee on June 16 in El Paso, Tex.

The controversial Margarito is coming off successive loss to Cotto and Manny Pacquiao, who fractured the bone surrounding his right eye in 2010. Margarito underwent surgery on the eye before the loss to Cotto. Cotto targeted the eye in a dramatic rematch that ended after nine rounds on advice from the ringside physician, who said blood and swelling had begun to limit Margarito’s vision. Margarito insisted that he could have continued.

Margarito manager Sergio Diaz said the skin surrounding the eye is vulnerable to further cuts because of the many blows he has absorbed. The eye will continue to be a target. Diaz said Margarito, 34, will probably have to take on a more defensive style if he wants to extend his career.




Margarito fighting to stay in line for Chavez if Jr. doesn’t fight Martinez


Staying in line means staying busy and that’s all Antonio Margarito can do in a dogged, controversial pursuit of another big payday.

Margarito told 15Rounds.com in Tucson last week that he wants to fight Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. in September. But speculation, fueled by Bob Arum’s comments to RingTV.com. has Chavez fighting Sergio Martinez instead. Nobody has to tell Margarito that Chavez-Martinez is the bigger fight. Nobody has to tell him that big fights don’t get made for more reasons than anybody wants to recount, either. Without mentioning the oh-so-familiar suspects, let’s just say that bouts between fighters represented by rival promoters these days qualify as a minor miracle.

If Arum, Chavez’ promoter, can’t make a deal with Martinez promoter Lou DiBella, it would be easy for him to stay in-house. Arum promotes Margarito, too. As the first alternate, Margarito gives Arum a marketable option, especially among Mexican and Mexican-American fans.

Many might still dislike Jr. for suspicions that he was allowed to sidestep the game’s bruising dues because of his legendary dad, Julio Cesar Chavez, Sr. Many more dislike Margarito for the hand-wrap scandal that will be with him for as long as those scars surrounding his surgically-repaired right-eye. But the complaints are free advertising. Margarito’s reputation is notorious. The Chavez rep is pampered. Mix the two and you’ve got a formula for strong sales and big television ratings.

That’s why Margarito intends to fight a tune-up on May 26 or June 15 in southern Arizona at Casino Del Sol, where his brother-in-law, super-flyweight Hanzel Martinez, won a first-round stoppage on March 23 on a ShoBox-televised card. In a sure sign of interest among Mexican and Mexican-American fans, TV Azteca plans to televise Margarito’s next bout. But against whom?

One of the names mentioned on March 23 was Jesus Gonzales, popular in Phoenix, his hometown.

“Absolutely,’’ Gonzales said when asked if he would be interested. “That would be great opportunity.’’

But Gonzales’ chances at the bout aren’t great. He is coming off a loss in Montreal to Adonis Stevenson, who knocked him out in the first round. According to people who represent Margarito and Gonzales, Gonzales has been medically cleared to fight since the devastating loss. His promoter had asked him to undergo an MRI for head trauma.

Gonzales also plans to go down in weight — from super middle (168 pounds) to middle (160). Margarito said on March 23 that he is training and weighs about 165 pounds. He wants to fight for the 160-pound title held by Chavez, the World Boxing Council champion who has reportedly been at least 180 at opening bell for his last few fights.

Neither the weight nor Gonzales’ stunning loss in his last outing, however, appears to be the issue. Gonzales’ southpaw stance against the orthodox Margarito might be. The left-handed Gonzales has a better chance at hitting Margarito’s right eye, which was badly-bloodied in his December loss to Miguel Cotto in a rematch stopped after the 10th round.

Repeated blows have degraded the skin around the eye, which was badly damaged in 2010 by Manny Pacquiao, who fractured the orbital bone. It quickly tears and ruptures into the bloody mess that led to the ringside physician in New York to call a halt to the fight against Cotto, despite Margarito’s protestations. Cotto targeted an eye that will be target for as long as Margarito continues to fight.

Margarito might have to become more defensive, says his manager, Sergio Diaz. At best, a change in style is problematic for an iron-chinned fighter known best for moving forward. Against a natural left-hander aiming for a problematic right eye, chances at pulling off that one get complicated, if not dangerous.

Dangerous enough to lose that valuable place in line for one more trip to the pay window.




Talks heat up for a Margarito fight in Arizona in May or June


TUCSON, Ariz. – Talks are underway for Antonio Margarito to fight in Arizona in May or June, Margarito and his manager, Sergio Diaz, said Friday.

“We’re talking about May 26,’’ Margarito said through an interpreter after his brother-in-law, super-flyweight Hanzel Martinez, threw a powerful right hand for a first-round stoppage of Jose Miguel Tamayo at Casino Del Sol.

Margarito manager Sergio Diaz said June 15 also is under consideration, possibly at Casino Del Sol’s outdoor stadium. Friday night’s card was staged in one of the casino’s ballrooms.

“May or June is fine,’’ said Margarito, who last fought in December in a dramatic loss to Miguel Cotto in New York.

Margarito, whose surgically-repaired right eye was badly bloodied by Cotto, said he is pointing to a fight in September with World Boxing Council middleweight champion Julio Cesar Chavez, Jr.

Margarito said he currently training and his weight is at 165 pounds.




Margarito promises to fight on, but says he would retire if he lost to Chavez Jr.


TUCSON — The long hair and large dark glasses were there. They identify Antonio Margarito wherever he goes these days. On Wednesday, he was in Tucson at a Casino Del Sol news conference for a March 23 ShoBox card promoted by his company, Showdown, and Top Rank.

That hair and those glasses almost have become a costume in Margarito’s role as one of boxing’s bad guys. I’m not sure it’s a part in the bloody theater that he ever wanted, or expected. But it’s there because of controversies as hard to heal as the battered skin around his right eye. He’s a target for well-aimed punches and pointed questions. Yet, he accepts it all with stubborn consistency and moves forward as he always has, in the ring and outside of it.

The bad-boy portrayal was belied for a few hours in Tucson by a patient, approachable personality who is as comfortable as ever in his own skin, despite the scars. He sat with fans, writers, security guards, waiters and anybody else seeking an autograph or an answer. The bad guy was just a regular guy, which I think has always been his real role since long-ago days when he entered the ring at an open-air mercado in Phoenix with an old-shower-curtain for a robe. He is as unassuming now as he was then. But that might not be enough in a dangerous business that often demands a star become his own boss by assuming control of what he sees and what surrounds him.

Believe what you want about the right eye damaged by Manny Pacquiao and bloodied by Miguel Cotto. Believe what you want about whether Margarito knew his gloves were loaded in the handwrap controversy that started before his loss to Shane Mosley. I’m not sure I do. The eye is hidden behind those glasses. Handwrap-gate is hidden in a cloud of allegation. But know this: Margarito has never changed his own story about any of it. Despite my skepticism, I admire him for that.

He arrived in Tucson with the same mindset he had when he left New York in November after his dramatic rematch to Cotto was stopped in the 10th by the ringside physician. Margarito continues to say that the doctor acted prematurely, because of the pre-fight controversy about whether New York would even license him. He doesn’t have any immediate plans to quit, despite mounting talk in Mexico and the U.S. that it’s time. Vision in the surgically-repaired right eye is good, he says, although weakened tissue around the eye is vulnerable to further cuts. He wants to fight fellow-Mexican Julio Cesar Chavez Jr., despite questions about whether the Mexico City-based World Boxing Council would sanction the bout. His future, he says, would be determined by the Chavez bout.

“People are opinionated and, sure, they are welcome to those opinions,’’ Margarito said in Spanish translated by Gerry Truax, Showdown’s Arizona promoter for a card featuring unbeaten super-featherweight Diego Magdaleno (21-0, 7 KOs) of Las Vegas in defense of his North American Boxing Federation title against Miguel Beltran Jr. (26-1, 17 KOs) of Mexico. “I still feel strong. I’d be a good fight for an up-and-coming contender such as Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. Chavez hasn’t fought anybody at my level. I think that’s a good fight for me.

“If he winds up beating me, then it’s time to retire.’’

No matter what the WBC decides or whether Sergio Martinez emerges as a more viable challenge for the young Chavez, Top Rank and Sergio Diaz of Showdown first want Margarito to fight a tune-up.

“Get a win,’’ Top Rank matchmaker Bruce Trampler said.

A tune-up might restore some confidence and, more important, test the problematic eye. In a post-fight examination after the junior-middleweight loss to Cotto, Diaz said physicians determined that the vision is good. But the skin around it is not. Diaz said doctors recommend that Margarito ice it down before opening bell. He also said Margarito might have to adjust his ring style. Instead of the forward-moving machine with the indestructible chin, Margarito might have to become more defensive. He has to protect the eye from punches that will cut and unleash the carnage that will force another stoppage.

But that begs a question: Can Margarito change that style? I’m not sure he can any more than he can change what he has said about all of the many controversies that, fair or not, have become part of his portrayal. He is proud of his career and how he foresees his place in history.

“I am indebted for life to my fans,’’ he said when asked how he wants to be remembered. “I’m loved wherever I go. People remind me that I’m a three-time world champion. That’s how I expect to be remembered. For that and that I always gave everything for my fans. I never left anything in doubt.’’

Questions are still there. Always will be. But about Margarito’s consistency, there’s no doubt. No doubt, either, about a regular guy’s loyalty for regular fans.

AZ NOTES
During the Tucson news conference, Magdaleno, who will fight for the only the second time outside of Nevada in 22 bouts, calls Beltran “a brawler with a raging-bull mentality’’ Magdaleno hopes for a shot at a major title some time in 2012.

Phoenix super-middleweight Jesus Gonzales heads to Montreal on Feb. 13 for a tough bout on Feb. 18 against Adonis Stevenson at the Bell Centre. In the corner opposite of Gonzales, there will be Stevenson trainer Emanuel Steward, who once called Gonzales the potential star of the 2004 Olympic team. At the time, Steward was projected to be the U.S. coach. Before the Athens Games, however, Gonzales went pro and Steward withdrew as the American coach.




Cotto and Margarito, and a treatment of semi-satisfaction


The narrative of Cotto-Margarito II will say Miguel Cotto, inspired by tens of thousands of his countrymen within Madison Square Garden, gained a richly satisfying vengeance on Mexican Antonio Margarito in 2011, confirming everything he believed about Margarito’s criminality in their 2008 match and restoring Puerto Rican pride across the land. Ah, sweet revenge.

That narrative will have plenty of technical accuracies but will be, in its general fabric, something quite different from what happened. It will extirpate the anxious moments fans, and Cotto, endured through the match and sue posterity to change its semi-satisfying conclusion for what great imagery is conjured by: Cotto, TKO-10.

That was the official mark Saturday. After Margarito’s surgically repaired right eye swelled shut in the middle part of the fight, a ringside physician could abide no more of its closure before round 10 and waved the match off, one Cotto was winning by wide margins on all three official scorecards. Cotto was relieved and content. Margarito was defiant. It was a result whose satisfaction will grow with the years, one imagines, because right now it’s less than Cotto’s fans hoped for.

Before anyone rebuts that assertion, straining his voice to declare full satisfaction, he should ask himself: On Friday afternoon, if someone told me Margarito would be smiling and whooping at Cotto in Saturday’s final round, before giving an obstinate postfight interview and leaving the ring under his own power, would I have told that person “Completely satisfied in every way, thank you”?

How this fight is remembered, though, does tell us something about the way a known result affects subsequent reviews. For three years, knowing Cotto ultimately succumbed to Margarito in the 11th round of their first meeting, we have watched the precise combinations Cotto landed in that fight’s opening 15 minutes and told ourselves they were not effective as they appeared. Margarito walked through them; look, he’s nodding and smiling the whole way! And knowing the probability Margarito had hardening pads over his middle knuckles, we have also imagined Margarito’s every awkward right cross as ruinous to Cotto’s head and heart.

When we revisit Saturday’s rematch, we’ll play a similar trick on ourselves, admiring Cotto’s precise combinations, and forgetting the tension we felt as Cotto opened his eyes and bleeding mouth, wide, in the sixth round and hurriedly retreated the length of the canvas, post to post.

If the absence of a plaster-like substance on Margarito’s knuckles made a difference, its difference was not large as Cotto’s change in tactics. Though he never did manage to show Margarito a well-leveraged left hook to the body, not once in their 20 rounds together really, Cotto did do one thing much better in the rematch: He got on Margarito’s chest.

Margarito is a wild-swinging confusion of long limbs when he is comfortable and significantly less than that when he is not. Cotto’s trainer, Pedro Diaz, caught this while studying tapes of Margarito’s match with Shane Mosley and told Cotto to put his forehead under Margarito’s chin and push him backwards to the ropes – off of which Margarito fights worse than a novice. Cotto was able to lean on Margarito and endure the Mexican’s cuffing right hands, because without a running start Margarito doesn’t hit very hard at all.

Or maybe the knuckle pads were the difference. Ask someone who was at ringside.

At the risk of offending egalitarian sensibilities, sensibilities that tell an American his perspective is usually better than anyone else’s, it’s worth mentioning that a guy at ringside always has a better bead on a fight than a guy at home. There are elements to home viewing that are superior, yes – sometimes you’re even able to hear between-rounds corner instructions over network sales pitches – but you do not have the same feel for a fight that you would at ringside.

The punches sound different, with television microphones somehow flattening their acoustics and making them all equal. The crowd is an altered entity. From ringside, you are able to see the arena and all its moving parts in a panorama that, while noisy, lends you a deeper perspective on the event’s mood. The benefits of being in a press box are often overstated, but the benefits of being within 75 feet of gloved combat cannot be.

Does this mean every ringside scorecard is correct? No. There’s a herding element to ringside scoring – the way consensus-seekers fan out among press-row tables, telling you others’ scores before asking your own – that compromises what is later published. But when a ringside writer tells you his general sense of a result or crowd, give him the benefit of every doubt, no matter what you saw through television’s narrowing eye.

The ringside consensus seems to be that Saturday night was a joy for Puerto Rican fans who turned out to see Cotto gain vengeance. Is it possible a deep sense of relief is being misinterpreted as euphoria? It is. If Miguel Cotto didn’t think Antonio Margarito’s punches were nearly so hard this time as they were in their first fight, he did a hell of an impersonation of a guy who did.

But then, there is something about a larger man with a maniacal grin on his face and cornrows chasing after you that will always be unsettling – Margarito racingracngracing after Cotto, whooping, his feet a messwards back, his overright hand throwing, his heading bob a target, his up leftercut sailing.

There is something equally undoing, though, in Cotto’s cold precision, left hands followed by rights, all landing flush till victory.

So goes the seasoning of memories that shape a narrative hardening into fact.

Bart Barry can be reached at bart.barrys.email (at) gmail.com




Cotto Exacts Revenge, Stops Margarito in Ten!


It took him eight professional years to finally get the ‘fight’ that would have defined his career. And it took him three more years to finally get the win he desperately needed. Scoring the sweetest victory of his storied boxing career, Miguel Cotto can finally say that he defeated Antonio Margarito. For the Tijuana native himself, there was a chance for vindication or perhaps exoneration, but the man could only prove one thing in the ring. That he is a true warrior.

This was three years later from their epic classic that took place in Las Vegas, and the wear and tear were apparent on both guys. Still, fans in attendance got a sense that there was something special brewing whenever these two stood across from one another. Margarito entered the ring as the villain, not even slightly overwhelmed by the loud jeer of boos from the Madison Garden crowd. Cotto was the crowd favorite, backed by his avid Puerto Rican and New York fans that cheered tumultuously. One can’t remember the last time the building roared to this effect, probably not since Felix Trinidad downed William Joppy a decade earlier.

From the opening bell, it was clear what the Caguas, PR native’s strategy was. Plaster or no plaster, Cotto respected his rival’s fistic power and fought with more caution than he did in their first battle. It was the simple, stick and move, hit-and-not get hit type of a game plan. For Margarito, all he needed to do was replicate his predictable method of constantly pressuring and cornering Cotto in hopes to wear him down late.

Both fighters were older and slower, but their efforts were highly spirited. In the first three rounds, Cotto was able to side step and land fluid combinations. Margarito ate shots coming in, but was closing the distance as he aimed for his mobile foe to the body. The fifth saw back and forth action, as Margarito poured on and chased Cotto across to ring, digging shots to the midsection and smothering punches to make it a rough fight. Cotto didn’t succumb to pressure and dished back with much cleaner shots.

Perhaps it was obvious from how their first encounter unfolded, but Cotto knew he needed to pitch a perfect game to win this fight. Margarito’s injured eye was reinjured early on, and from the sixth round, there were concerns whether he could continue to fight. The pace picked up in rounds seven and eighth, but more in favor of Cotto, who was using all of his guile and dexterity to pepper his less dimensional foe. Margarito would not fold and often smiled and taunted, but his face told a different story.

In between rounds eight and nine, the doctors at ringside carefully examined Margarito’s right eye. They barely allowed him to continue. Margarito pounded his gloves to psyche himself and his opponent to engage toe-to-toe, but Cotto was smart and stuck with the game plan.

Again, the ringside physician and the ref assessed the Mexican’s condition after the ninth round and after a long plead to continue from Margarito and his corner, referee Steve Smoger did the right and humane thing and called this bout to a halt.

There was a huge sigh of relief from Cotto, who just scored the biggest win of his decorated boxing career. Margarito lost, but fought with a ton of heart and dignity. There was a look of disappointment, but hardly any dejection. He fought like a proud champion and left it all in the ring.

With the W, Cotto retains his WBA version of the jr. middleweight title and improves to 37-2, 30KOs. Margarito is now 38-8, 27KOs.

RIOS LETHARGIC IN STOPPING MURRAY

Things didn’t exactly go smoothly for Oxnard, CA’s Brandon Rios (29-0-1, 21KO) in his first significant trip to New York. First, he lost his WBA title on the scale after failing to make the 135 pound limit. In addition, his opponent, John Murray (31-2, 18KOs) from England didn’t cut him any slack either, providing a difficult challenge for the former lightweight sensation. It wasn’t the usual spirited and lively fought performance by Rios, who appeared sluggish in the first two rounds. Rios got the ball rolling in the third however, stunning his opponent with consecutive uppercuts on the inside and doing nice work to the body. Murray fought back valiantly and troubled his unbeaten foe in the next two rounds. By the fifth, exhaustion clearly showed in Rios, who was obviously in a very tough fight. It didn’t deter him from trying his best which was probably a good thing on the scorecards as he pressed on did his best to effectively win rounds with aggression. Murray was undaunted, but became a bloody mess in the sixth after eating a series of hard uppercuts from his younger counterpart. While Rios looked to be the more tired of the two, he still demonstrated superior technique and work rate that might have benefited him on the official scorecards. Murray was effective in spurts, attacking Rios’ midsection, but lacked the power to inflict real damage. In the eleventh, Rios’ uppercuts finally overwhelmed. Badly staggered, Murray deemed unable to continue, who was stopped on his feet at the 2:06 mark. With the win, Rios remains unbeaten, but is no longer a world title holder.

RODRIGUEZ OUTCLASSES WOLAK

They say boxing, rather than slugging it out is the smarter way to win. That’s what Delvin Rodriguez needed to do this time around to get the official W over his rival Pawel Wolak. It wasn’t the violent jr. middleweight slugfest that their first meeting proved to be, but Rodriguez and Wolak didn’t go too far to find one another, engaging in a closely contested battle over twelve rounds. Both combatants weren’t shy to walk up and down the stairs, landing effective shots to the body and head. Rodriguez appeared to find his comfort zone in the third, connecting with a well timed uppercut to the chin. Wolak did not phase, but like their first encounter, his eye began to redden. Things started to heat up in the fifth as Rodriguez was able to tag his Polish opponent with head snapping upper cuts, but Wolak soon returned the favor in retaliation. Most rounds were hard fought, but Rodriguez seemingly held the edge in terms of technique, cleaner shots, and overall ring generalship. Wolak charged in on the seventh, chasing his opponent and smothering him against the ropes, but Rodriguez was able to clinch and neutralize with shots on the inside. The Danbury, CT native was more relaxed in the eighth, throwing fluid combinations and swiftly moving in and out to avoid damage. Rodriguez relentlessly battered his bloodied foe in the tenth and final around, staggering him with a series of uppercuts and left hooks. Wolak (29-2-1, 19KOs) displayed a ton of heart and was able to survive the onslaught. Official scorecards read 98-91, 98-92, and 100-90 in favor of Rodriguez, who improves to 26-5-3, 14KOs.

JONES DECISIONS LUJAN IN A SNOOZER

Welterweight contender Mike Jones kept extended his unbeaten run to 26-0 (19KOs) by denying the challenge of former Margarito opponent Sebastian Lujan (38-6-2, 24KOs) of Argentina over twelve uneventful rounds. A right hand to the top of the head nearly dropped the Argentinean in the first round. From there on, it was Jones who was outworking his shorter foe with superior reach, landing jabs and occasionally finding his target with right hands. Lujan was able to evade a lot of punches by using his unorthodox stance to juke and jive, but wasn’t effective offensively. In end of the eleventh, Lujan let his guard down and lured Jones to land at will. Scores were 118-110, 119-109 (2x) in favor of the Philadelphian.

Fan favorite Sean Monaghan (11-0, 8KOs) wasted very little time in taking care of business with an impressive stoppage win over Adrian, MI’s Santos Martinez at 2:56 of the second round in cruiserweight action. All it took was a left hook to the body in round two for Long Beach, NY’s Monaghan to quickly dispose of Martinez (2-3, 2KOs) who failed to show any reason for the ref to allow him to continue after getting up from the knockdown.

Unbeaten light heavyweight Chicago prospect Mike Lee (8-0, 5KOs) won an easy fourth round TKO over Denver, CO’s Allen Medina (9-20-1, 1KO). After three one sided rounds, Lee unleashed a series of punches that dropped Medina, prompting the referee to step in to call a halt to the bout.




Cotto – Margarito II weigh in Photo Gallery

15rounds.com Claudia Bocanegra was scale-side for the weigh in for Saturday night’s showdown between Miguel Cotto and Antonio Margarito.

SEN. LUGAR SPEAKS ON RESOURCING STABILITY OPERATIONS, RECONSTRUCTION AT NATIONAL DEFENSE UNIVERSITY

US Fed News Service, Including US State News March 23, 2006 Sen. Richard G. Lugar, R-Ind., made the following speech:

Following is today’s speech by Senate Foreign Relations Committee Chairman Dick Lugar to the Symposium on “Resourcing Stability Operations and Reconstruction: Past, Present and Future” at the Industrial College of the Armed Forces, National Defense University. The full text: website national defense university

I am honored to join you today to address the issue of stabilization and reconstruction operations. I am pleased that the Industrial College of the Armed Forces is taking on this important issue as part of the Army’s Eisenhower National Security Series. The Senate Foreign Relations Committee has given much thought to this topic during the last few years, and we have benefited from the insights of many of today’s participants.

International crises are inevitable, and in most cases, U.S. national security interests will be threatened by sustained instability. The war on terrorism necessitates that we not leave nations crumbling and ungoverned. We have already seen how terrorists can exploit nations afflicted by lawlessness and desperate circumstances. They seek out such places to establish training camps, recruit new members, and tap into a global black market in weapons.

In this international atmosphere, the United States must have the right structures, personnel, and resources in place when an emergency occurs. A delay in our response of a few weeks, or even days, can mean the difference between success and failure. Clearly we need a full range of tools to prevail. My own focus has been on boosting the civilian side of our stabilization and reconstruction capabilities, while encouraging improved mechanisms for civilian and military agencies to work together on these missions.

Building a Stabilization and Reconstruction Capacity Over the years, our government has cobbled together plans, people, and projects to respond to post-conflict situations in the Balkans, in Afghanistan, in Iraq, and elsewhere. The efforts of those engaged have been valiant, but these emergencies have been complex and time sensitive. In my judgment, our ad hoc approach has been inadequate to deal quickly and efficiently with complex emergencies. In turn, our lack of preparation for immediate stabilization contingencies has made our subsequent reconstruction efforts more difficult and expensive.

In the Fall of 2003, I began to explore the possibility of legislation that would bolster U.S. post-conflict stabilization and reconstruction capabilities. My own perceptions of shortcomings in this area were reinforced when I discovered a State Department report on its goals and activities that barely mentioned the mission of stabilization and reconstruction efforts.

My thinking was also stimulated by the work being done on the issue at a number of important organizations and think tanks, including the RAND Corporation, the Center for Strategic and International Studies, the U.S. Institute of Peace, and the National Defense University. Thoughtful scholarship and analysis were being devoted to the problem, and much of it supported the objective of improving the capacity of U.S. civilian agencies to deal with overseas emergencies.

In late 2003, I organized a Policy Advisory Group made up of government officials and outside experts to give members of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee advice on how to strengthen U.S. capabilities for implementing these post-conflict missions. Several of the experts that participated in that Policy Advisory Group are in the audience today.

After several meetings and much study, members of the Committee came to the conclusion that we needed a well-organized and strongly led civilian counterpart to the military in post-conflict zones. The civilian side needed both operational capability and a significant surge capacity. It was our judgment that only a cabinet-level secretary could provide the necessary inter-agency clout and leadership to create and sustain the organization. In our judgment, the Secretary of State, working with USAID, was best positioned to lead this effort.

Building on our deliberations, I introduced S. 2127, the Stabilization and Reconstruction Civilian Management Act of 2004 with Senators Biden and Hagel. The Committee passed the bill unanimously in March 2004. The legislation envisioned a new office at the State Department with a joint State Department-USAID readiness response corps comprised of both reserve and active duty components. To maximize flexibility in a crisis, our legislation also authorized funding and provided important personnel authorities to the new office.

The State Department responded to this action by establishing the Office of the Coordinator of Reconstruction and Stabilization in July of 2004. This was an important breakthrough that demonstrated the State Department’s recognition of the role it could and should be playing. Together with other members of the Foreign Relations Committee, I have endeavored to provide support and encouragement to this new office.

Under the leadership of Carlos Pascual, the office has conducted a government-wide inventory of the civilian assets that might be available for stabilization and reconstruction tasks in post-conflict zones. It has undertaken the planning necessary to recruit, train, and organize a reserve corps of civilians for rapid deployment. It also is formulating inter-agency contingency plans – informed by our past experiences – for countries and regions of the world where the next crisis could suddenly arise.

In December 2005, the President signed a directive putting the Secretary of State in charge of inter-agency stabilization and reconstruction efforts. Last month, Secretary Rice promised to dedicate 15 of the 100 new positions she is requesting for Fiscal Year 2007 to the Reconstruction and Stabilization Office. This will increase staff to about 95 individuals.

Despite this good progress, significant gaps in our capabilities remain. While many of the measures called for in our legislation have been implemented, some are not yet on the State Department’s drawing board. For example, we envisioned a 250-person active duty corps, made up of both State Department and USAID employees. Such a corps could be rapidly deployed with the military for both initial assessments and operational purposes. They would be the first civilian team on the ground in post-conflict situations, well in advance of the establishment of an embassy. This active duty corps would be able to do a wide range of civilian jobs that are needed in a post-conflict or otherwise hostile environment.

Such a 250-person corps would be no larger than the typical army company. But it would be a force multiplier. It would be equipped with the authority and training to take broad operational responsibility for stabilization missions.

Establishment of such a corps is a modest investment when seen as part of the overall national security budget. Even in peace time, we maintain active duty military forces of almost 1.4 million men and women who train and plan for the possibility of war. Given how critical post conflict situations have been to American national security in the last decade, I believe it is reasonable to have a mere 250 civilians who are training for these situations and are capable of being deployed anywhere in the world, at any time they may be needed.

Our legislation also calls on the heads of other executive branch agencies to establish personnel exchange programs designed to enhance stabilization and reconstruction capacity. The Departments of Agriculture, Treasury, Commerce, Health and Human Services – indeed virtually all the civilian agencies – can make unique contributions to the overall effort.

Finding Necessary Resources The main roadblock to enhancing the State Department’s stabilization and reconstruction capacity has been resources. Our legislation envisioned $85 million annually for the new State Department office. This would fund both the reserve and active duty corps, as well as training, equipment, and travel. We also agreed that a $100 million crisis response fund should be available as a contingency for stabilization and reconstruction crises declared by the President. So far, however, only about $21 million has been provided for the operations of the State Department’s Reconstruction and Stabilization Office since it was established in 2004.

With Carlos Pascual at the helm, the office heroically stretched dollars by recruiting personnel on detail from other agencies, taking advantage of DOD-funded training, and getting the State Department to pay for the overhead of new office space from other sources. But such a hand-to-mouth existence has obvious disadvantages. Detailed personnel rarely stay long, and institutional memory becomes short. Relying on DOD funds puts the office in the passenger seat when it should have the resources to pursue uniquely civilian-oriented goals.

In addition, the stabilization contingency fund outlined in our legislation has not been appropriated. On the Senate side, we were able to secure $20 million for the fund in the FY 2006 Foreign Operations Appropriations Bill. The entire amount, however, was eliminated in the Conference Committee with the House. This means that the State Department will have to respond to a crisis as it always has, by scraping together funds from various bureaus. nationaldefenseuniversitynow.net national defense university

One stopgap measure that the Congress did pass in FY 2006 was the authority to transfer up to $100 million from the Pentagon to the State Department for boosting the civilian response to particular trouble spots. However, this was a one-year authority, and this money will not provide the resources necessary over the long term to improve the State Department’s capacity to be a capable partner in responding to complex emergencies.

The foreign affairs budget is always a tougher sell to Congress than the military budget. To President Bush’s credit, he has attempted to reverse the downward spiral in overall foreign affairs spending that took place in the 1990s. In that decade, both the executive and legislative branches rushed to cash in on the peace dividend. But President Bush has consistently requested increases for the 150 Account in his budgets. For the fiscal year 2007 budget, he requested a 10.3 percent increase over the CBO-determined baseline of fiscal year 2006.

But, if previous years are any example, the amount appropriated will fall far short of the amount requested. Last year, the President’s annual request for foreign affairs was cut by $2.1 billion. The Congress cut the fiscal 2005 annual request by a similar amount. According to a Congressional Research Service report that I requested, Congress has provided $5.8 billion less than the President has requested for foreign affairs in regular and supplemental spending bills since September 11, 2001.

Today, when we are in the midst of a global struggle of information and ideas, when anti-Western riots can be set off by the publication of a cartoon; when we are in the midst of a crisis with Iran that will decide whether the non-proliferation regime of the last half century will be abandoned; when we have entered our fourth year of attempting to stabilize Iraq; and when years of effort to move the Arab-Israeli peace process are at risk – even then, the reservoir of support for foreign affairs spending in Congress is shallow. Members of Congress may recognize the value of the work done by the State Department and some selected programs may be popular, but at the end of the day, the 150 Account is seldom defended against competing priorities.

As all this suggests, we have a long way to go on the civilian side of stability and reconstruction efforts. The Defense Department is keenly aware of the importance of having a capable civilian partner in such operations. We should consider setting up a multi-agency fund specifically for addressing stabilization and reconstruction planning and operations. Dispensing with the competitive inter-agency scramble for resources would not be easy, but the need for more coordination is clear.

If the problems on the civilian side of crisis management cannot be solved, I think we will begin to see a realignment of authorities between the Departments of Defense and State. Some would argue that this realignment has already begun. For example, the Department of Defense requested a DOD-operated worldwide train and equip program, and it was granted money and authority despite the fact that foreign assistance has long been under the purview of the Secretary of State. If we cannot think this through as a government, the United States may come to depend even more on our military for tasks and functions far beyond its current role. But I remain optimistic that we can build on the progress already made to create a robust civilian component to our stabilization and reconstruction capabilities.

I appreciate your invitation to speak on this important topic, and I look forward to the results of your deliberations.




VIDEO: Cotto-Margarito II Undercard Presser


PART 2

PART 3

PART 4

PART 5




Weigh in Drama as Scales beat Rios and loses WBA Belt

At todays’s weigh in for the big rematch between Miguel Cotto and Antonio Margarito, WBA Lightweight champion Brandon Rios was about a pound and a half over the mandated 135 pound limit and was forced to relinquish his belt. His opponent John Murray can beome champion with a victory over Rios on Saturday night’s mega card at Madison square Garden.

According to espn.com, Murray’s team threatened to call off the fight, but eventually extracted concessions from Rios. He will pay Murray $20,000 from his $325,000 purse, a nice increase for Murray, who is due $50,000 plus a piece of British television revenue.

Also, to prevent Rios from blowing up in weight overnight, Murray’s camp insisted that Rios not weigh more than 147 pounds at 9 a.m. ET Saturday. If he is over 147, the fight could be called off.

“I think that may play to my advantage, but I’m just going to concentrate on myself,” Murray said. “I’ll let him worry about himself. I’m just going to stay on my game and do my business. I’m not upset at all. I’m just focused on doing my business (Saturday) night.

“We had already prepared to take him into the deep waters. This is a great opportunity for a guy like me. Fights like this are the fights that I want. I want to be in the center of the ring, hammering away to see who is going to be left standing, him or me.”

“He’s been in a colder climate than he’s used to and that probably hurt him trying to make weight,” Carl Moretti of Top Rank, Rios’ promoter, said of the Southern California fighter. “He’s a big 135-pounder. He just couldn’t get down. The question is what happens Saturday night and in the future? I think it’s too soon to say that he’s done at 135 but he could be. We’ll have to talk about with him and his team, see if maybe he went about making weight the wrong way. But he looked drained, very drained.”




Cotto – Margarito II undercard Press Conference Photo Gallery

15rounds.com Photographer Claudia Bocanegra was on hand at BB King’s in New York City to capture the images of the press conference for the much anticipated undercard for Saturday night’s Pay Per View undercard that will Feature Brandon Rios taking on John Murray; Mike Jones and Sebastian Lujan and the rematch betwwen Pawel Wolak and Delvin Rodriguez plus Mike Lee and Glen Tapia




Cotto – Margarito II Final Press Conference Photo Gallery

Ace Photographer Claudia Bocanegra was on had at New York’a Madison Square Garden where bitter rivals Miguel Cotto and Antonio Margarito met the media for the final time before their much anticipated rematch that will take place this Saturday night at MSG and on Pay Per View




VIDEO: Antonio Margarito NYC Photo-Op 11.28.11




MARGARITO/RODRIGUEZ/WOLAK WORKOUT PHOTO GALLERY

15rounds.com Claudia Bocanegra was on hand an the Kingsway Gym in New York City for a workout that featured Antonio Margarito; Delvin Rodriguez and Pawel Wolak who will be in action this Saturday night on the big Pay Per View card from Madison Square Garden




VIDEO: MIKE JONES

Undefeated Welterweight Mike Jones talks to 15rounds.com Marc Abrams about his December 3rd showdown with Sebastian Lujan as part of the Miguel Cotto – Antonio Margarito II undercard




Margarito-Cotto II: Revenge served cold


Saturday’s rematch between Mexican Antonio Margarito and Puerto Rican Miguel Cotto is about revenge. It is not about establishing primacy at the kooky catchweight of 153 pounds or resolving some residual doubt from their first encounter. It is about satisfying the bloodlust Puerto Ricans feel because of the ruin Margarito brought to their guy’s career in 2008.

Once you admit this fight appeals to nothing but a sense of vengeance, you can suspend other moral considerations. And once that’s done, all the Margarito-Cotto II pieces fall happily into place.

Tuesday afternoon the New York State Athletic Commission tossed a fig leaf of plausible deniability over a few of the other moral considerations that might otherwise flash us from Madison Square Garden during Saturday night’s pay-per-view event. After a sympathetic doctor was finally located to underwrite the condition of Margarito’s surgically repaired right eye and/or orbital bone, deniability was established: If Margarito is blinded by Cotto, why, it will be an accident like any other – the very sort of thing every fighter risks whenever he dons gloves.

At this moment (as opposed to the heartfelt recriminations sure to come if tragedy strikes), does anyone besides Margarito’s wife care if the worst happens to Margarito? No. Not even Margarito cares. Frankly, he’s about to make a pretty rational decision; he’s risking the sight in one eye to make millions of dollars. Who among us wouldn’t do the same in this economy?

Margarito should not be in this fight. After a plaster-like substance was found on pads placed over his knuckles before a 2009 match with Shane Mosley, Margarito was stretched by Mosley and banned from the sport. He earned a pay-per-view fight with Manny Pacquiao 22 months later by acquiring a phony light middleweight title and being a Mexican expected to draw countrymen to Cowboys Stadium, where he was summarily undone by a man structurally not 2/3 his size. He earned Saturday’s fight by having two surgeries.

Margarito’s only real qualification for facing Cotto is the ire he now causes Puerto Ricans. That ire comes from the universally held suspicion Margarito used the very same pads against Cotto he was about to use against Mosley. If you were in MGM Grand Garden Arena on July 26, 2008 and happened to look at the screen above the ring and see Cotto’s misshapen face, it was probably the first image that came in your mind when, five months later, you learned what happened in Margarito’s dressing room before his fight with Mosley.

If that is conjecture, it is conjecture of the most damning sort, something no amount of pettifogging by Margarito’s lawyers can undo. Witnesses to Margarito-Cotto I know what they saw, know how much it meant to them at the time, pro or con, and know what Margarito did to their memories is unforgivable.

Cotto has not been the same since his match with Margarito. He says he was criminally assaulted in their first fight. Whatever else Cotto might be, he is decidedly not a salesman; he would rather see Margarito in jail than across a boxing ring from him.

Because this fight is about Puerto Rican vengeance, it could not logically happen anywhere but Madison Square Garden, Cotto’s home field. When the NYSAC began its bluster routine a couple weeks back, there was talk about other venues in other states. But this fight was destined for New York or bust.

How do we know that? Miguel Cotto told us.

In an ill-advised Tuesday conference call, an event to have Cotto tell us only that he felt strong, Cotto was asked about the still-festering controversy concerning his fight’s venue. Cotto knew of no controversy; if the NYSAC didn’t license Margarito, Cotto would not fight him. Promoter Bob Arum then declared his own conference call “really not appropriate” and told his publicist to end it.

Which brings us to a note about media access: Beware of promoters bearing scoops.

Two weeks ago, during Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. fightweek festivities in Houston, a reporter from a prominent magazine misunderstood the access Arum granted him. He wrote about alternate Margarito-Cotto II venues in states far-flung as Colorado and Mississippi. He was aflutter with possible venue changes and proud to breakfast with Arum. But his only real role was to be Arum’s megaphone as the wily old promoter applied pressure to the politically appointed folks hovering round the NYSAC’s licensing decision.

One of the ironies of Margarito’s post-Mosley career is that Arum has been more comfortable playing villain than Margarito has. Margarito wears the dark glasses and makes fun of Cotto’s whining, sure, but it’s obvious to anyone who knows Margarito that he desperately wants to be liked, not hated. Margarito’s transformation from the beloved figure he was after beating Cotto to the infamous character he now plays makes as much sense to him as those agility drills he does on HBO’s “24/7” program, and twice as much sense as whatever he’s supposed to be accomplishing with that slip rope they keep stringing across the ring posts.

Margarito’s role Saturday is to be easy for Cotto to hit. Sans hardening agent on his middle knuckles, it is unlikely Margarito will punch with force enough to stop Cotto a second time. Cotto would certainly like to beat Margarito or even stop him – it would confirm everything Cotto believes happened to his career – but it is not what is most important to him.

What is most important to Cotto is not being stopped by Margarito a second time. Do not expect, then, some frenzied and grudge-induced attack in the center of the ring. Expect Cotto to move and box like a man who does not want to find his legs gone in round 9, would very much like to win, and hopes he might do to Margarito what Mosley did.

Expect, in other words, revenge served cold: Cotto, UD-12.

Bart Barry can be reached at bart.barrys.email (at) gmail.com




Q & A with Seanie Monaghan


Undefeated Light Heavyweight Seanie Monaghan returns to action on December 3rd as part of the big Miguel Cotto – Antonio Margarito rematch undercard. Monaghan (10-0, 7 KO’s) has become one of the most popular prospects in New York and will be stepping up the competition.

Seanie, tell the fans out there a little about yourself.
Where did you grow up? What was your family upbringing like? Who are your main influences in your life? How did you get into boxing and how was your Amateur experience?

My mother and father are from Ireland. My mother was pregnant with me when they moved here to NY where i was born. I’ve lived my whole life in Long Beach NY. I was surrounded by a very big Irish family, my Grandmother was one of 17 children so my family was huge. My dad and all my uncles we’re huge boxing fans, they loved Marvin Hagler, Mike Tyson and Barry McGuigen. They would let me stay up late when I was a little kid and watch all the big fights. I always loved boxing but I never stepped into a gym until I was 21 years old. I was getting into a lot of street fights and my friend Bobby Calabrese brought me to a Boxing gym in Freeport Long Island. Bobby got to see my first fight (which i won) but he was murdered shortly after. I fight in his memory. I didn’t have a very long amateur career. I made it to the finals of the Golden Gloves and lost a controversial decision, the next year I lost another close one in the semi finals and decided to go pro. My amateur record was 10 and 4.

What kind of style do you bring into the ring?
When I step in the ring its strictly business, I’m a power puncher with both hands and my goal is to get my guy outta there as soon as possible without being reckless. As a boxing fan, I appreciate the skill of defense but I’m always hoping to see a big Knockout, so that’s what I try to give my fans.

Tell us about your team.
I’m trained by Joe Higgins out of the Freeport Boxing Club, the same trainer I’ve had since my first amateur fight. He’s a former Marine/Fireman and he’s really making a name for himself as a coach on the pro and amateur scene. Joe was a coach on this years Pan America games and he gets me all the best sparring available in NY with all of his connections. My manager is a personal friend of mine named PJ Kavanagh, a business man/ bar owner. He’s doing an unbelievable job with my career. I’ve been on all the biggest undercards and had experiences guys wait a lifetime for. I’m 100% confident in my team. We’re all on the same page and all very excited about our future in boxing.

You are one of the most popular fighters in New York, what does that mean to have so much fan support?
Its an unbelievable boost to have the support that i have. My home town of Long Beach has showed me unbelievable support from day one. I had 300+ people come to my pro debut. Now its more than doubled and its not just long beach anymore. My last fight at MSG a woman from Canada asked me to sign an autograph for her son because she said i was his favorite figher! That was crazy.

December 3rd is one of the biggest events of the year and Madison Square Garden will be rocking that night. How excited are you to participate on such a big stage?
Not only is Dec 3rd the most anticipated fight of the year, but it’s the 7 year anniversary that my friend Bobby Calabrese was murdered. So for me its a Huge event. I’ve never been in better shape. I’m fighting in the big house at MSG and it’s going to be a great night. Its sold out at almost 20,000 people! I’m really excited to see the main event, my wife is from Puerto Rico so we’ll be there rooting for Cotto. I’m also dying to see that Pawel Wolack/ Delvin Rodriguez rematch.

Do you know who your opponent is? What is your strategy for this fight?

My opponent is a guy named Santos Martinez from Michigan, i saw him get KOd by an amateur rival of mine so i would like to KO him faster and better to prove a point, but I’m gonna go in there cool headed and do what I always do. Box smart and if the opportunity comes, get him outta there.

There is a great tradition of Irish fighters in New York, how much of the history of that do you follow?
My family is right off the boat, we’re as Irish as it gets. My family talks about boxing at our holiday dinners. I’ve got the chance to meet and become friendly with Andy Lee, James Moore, John Duddy and Kevin McBride. Just to say i’m friends with those guys is cool enough in my neighborhood but to make my own name and be mentioned alongside guys like that would be great. I’m getting there.

You just became a father for the first time. Does that inspire you to work even harder?
My son Absolutely inspires me. I love him more than i can even describe and i want to be able to provide for him and help everyone else in my family and my close friends. I have an opportunity to make it big in this sport, i just have to stay focused one fight at a time, one training camp at a time and its mine.

What do you think about the Marquez/ Pacquiao decision?
Everyone’s making it seem like such a scandal with the Pacquiao/Marquez thing. I watched the fight and thought Pacquiao won by a round or two. I would have been alright with a draw. Marquez boxed very well but I thought he was a little too defensive. Pacquiao looked ackward at times but he did out land Marquez and he was forcing the pace all night. Marquez knew how to avoid Mannys left hand so he fight was a chess match. It was very close, I wanna watch it again because everyone seems to disagree with me on this one.

Where do you see your career going in 2012?
2012 is going to be another busy and exciting year for me. I had a late start in boxing so i’m catching up. I had 8 fights in 2011, I learned a lot and I’ve progressed with my boxing skills each fight. There’s negotiations going on now for a shot at the Irish Light Heavyweight Tile against Irish Champ Ciaran Healy on St Paddy’s Day. They contacted us about the fight and that would be a dream come true for me and my big Irish family. We’d be bragging about that forever! But first things first I gotta handle my business Dec 3rd.

Anything you want to say to your fans in closing?
I would just like to thank everyone for the support and attention we’ve been getting. I’m very proud and satisfied with the work we put in for this fight and the results will be evident on Dec 3rd.