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BYRD, DOWN EARLY, SAPS McCLINE TNT FOR WIN
In the realm of athletics, David facing Goliath has traveled
the ultimate in drama but rarely has the dialogue surpassed the
way Chris Byrd kept Jameel McCline away from his IBF heavyweight
crown on a squeaky split-decision Saturday night in Madison Square
Garden.
As if their families being close friends wasn’t enough
human interest, Byrd, 214, spotted the hulking McCline 56 pounds
and overcame a second round knockdown with a late domination
that put the whip cream on Don King’s Battle For Supremacy
in New York before a crowd of 12,777.
Making his third title defense, Byrd repeatedly proved there
is no better chin in the division nor a boxer-puncher who can
move adversaries in directions of his choice. In the count down
to the first bell, the 34-year-old Flint native now fighting
in Las Vegas, told the media keeping McCline, 270, from trapping
him on the ropes with his bulk would be paramount.
McCline, out of Port Jefferson, NY, was faster out of the gate,
but the agile southpaw took the big guy’s’ heaviest
artillery and was still clear-eyed and standing at the bell.
Byrd liked to tell his admirers when he got knocked down, he
always got up. And he proved it late in the second round when
McCline capped a five-punch salvo with a hard right to the head. “He
me right behind the ear. It was a perfect punch.
“
I got my eye back in the third round. I didn’t see it happen
but he hit me right behind the ear. It was a perfect punch. The
way I fought back, I feel like I really had to dig down deep,
I definitely did enough to win the fight and prove I am a true
champion.”
When dapper Michael Buffer read the first judges; scoring on
the 12-round bout, it was 114-112, McCline. Then the decision
arrived for Byrd on tabs of 115-112 and 114-113.
McCline dominated the first five rounds, but Byrd began to pick
it up in the fourth, keeping his gloves high and using them to
smother McCline’s flurries while digging inside off the
ropes.
McCline, later admitting Byrd’s turn around took him off
his game plan, adding that “Chris has very fast
hands and that was the difference.”
Byrd, lifting his resume to 38-2-1, 27 KOs, is not a knockout
puncher in the true since of the word, but he engaged McCline
in some heavy punching on and off the ropes.”
In Byrd’s previous outing Apr.17 in New York his second
defense with Andrew Golota finished in a controversial 12-round
draw, and this heated conflict might have finished he same way
if Byrd hadn’t staggered the wearying challenger in the
late rounds.
“This fight was not everything I had imagined it would
be because I expected to go home with the title. It looked like
I fell apart a little towards the end and that might have cost
me.”
Byrd will take sometime off to be with his family during the “Yuletide” holidays,
but “I don’t care who I fight early next year---be
it world champion , or top contender. But it is up to Don King
to make the match, he is the promoter.”
RUIZ LUCKY TO KEEP TITLE ON SPLIT IN BRAWL
Ringsters got what they expected when John Ruiz “defended” his
WBA heavyweight crown against the sometimes unpredictable Andrew
Golota ---the former
retaining the belt on split decision over 12 ugly rounds.
Ruiz, 32, out of Chelsea, MA., was back with his same old grab
and clutch of’ rough-rousing from the opening bell to the
frustrating finish in a scenario where Golota,34, Chicago, Ill.
rarely lost his temper no matter how crude Ruiz’s antics.
Bad vibes surfaced in the first round when Ruiz started his
patented head-down charges, culminating
with a headlock that smothered Golota’s punching room and
the fighters came out of a tight-clinch punching after the bell.
When referee Randy Neumann finally broke the duo, Norman “Stony” Stone,
Ruiz’s trainer, ran across the ring and threw a punch at
Golota’s cornerman.
Golota. 238, had his best offensive round in the second when
he dropped Ruiz twice, the first time with a short right and
again with a half-push. Ruiz charged Golota into the ropes again
and then the pair banged heads without incident.
Ruiz,with his raw-boned approach to the sport, was penalized
one point for hitting low in the fourth. Twice during the middle
rounds, the tape came loose on Ruiz’s right glove and Stone
got into a beef with Neumann over procedure. The New York State
Athletic Commission ordered the New England conditioner to leave
the ring apron and return his fighters’ dressing room for
continuing in a dispute with the referee.
Ruiz ditched the unothodox aspect of offensive in the late rounds
and wasn’t bulldoging as much. The WBA two-time champion
caught Golota with four punches in the ninth round, leaving a
cut over his right eye. Golota countered in the 10th round, backing
up Ruiz with several right hands and jolted him with a good right
at the bell.
In the 11th and 12th rounds, both warriors had their moments
with jabs but Golota appeared to prevail in the final three-minutes
with a stinging jab.
“I was very disappointed when I saw the officials throw
Stoney out. We’ve been together for a long time, so I knew
I had to get in there and work. On the knockdowns in the second
round,” Ruiz reflected as his resume rose to 41-5-2, 28
KOs.
“I thought I win the fight. I am confused,” said
the personable native of Warsaw, Poland, whose record dipped
to 38-5-1, 31 KOs.
“ROCK’ WANTS TITLE HE LOST TO LENNOX BACK
Hasim “The Rock” Rahman hasn’t been this exciting
since 2001 when he won and lost the world heavyweight championship
to Lennox Lewis---seven months apart.
The 32-year-old Baltimore Bomber moved back into contention
when he struck like thunder to win the WBC/WBA/IBF heavyweight
eliminator by erasing Kali Meehan at the end of four rounds in
what was slated for 12-rounds.
This was a shorter trip Rahman, just four full rounds. He needed
five rounds when he chilled Lewis Apr.22, 2001 in Johannesburg
and four rounds when Lennox got it all back together to regain
the title Nov.17, 2001 in Las Vegas.
Rahman wasn’t exaggerating when he promised to be “aggressive
against Meehan, 34, a heavy-handed 236 pound, born in New Zealand,
living now Australia.
“I didn’t disappoint anybody, did I?. I was going
12 rounds, but I decided to step it up and now it doesn’t
matter who we fight. I was totally focused in the gym. I’d
like to fight Vitali Klitschko. Meehan is a good young fighter
with a good defense. And i wasn’t able to get the kind
of shots I wanted at him.”
Rahman didn’t anticipate the full skills of Meehan after
watching the WBA/IBF Asia Pacific champion lose
a squeaker 12-round decision Sept. 4 against WBO heavyweight
king Lamon Brewster in Las Vegas. Meehan’s credentials
reads 29-2, 23 KOs.
Rahman was quick showing he wasn’t going to let the “Checkmate” from
Down Under enhance his resume.
In round one, the former heavyweight champion rocked Meehan
with three combinations, spiced by four left hooks to the head.
Meehan spent most of the second heat backed up against the ropes
trying to get some relief with his gloves as shields. There were
no knockdowns but the pile-driving Rahman was raking Meehan’s
muscles with six and seven punch volleys, leaving the valiant
ring-man bending to get out of harm’s way. As the fourth
round ended, Mark Jansson, Meehan’s trainer, declared there
would be no fifth heat. Certainly, not for this courageous athlete
who was hopelessly outclassed......
HOLYFIELD: FIGHTING FROM HERE TO ETERNITY
Who would believe this scenario of a four-time former world
heavyweight champion opening a boxing card last Saturday against
a journeyman on Don King’s Battle for Supremacy in Madison
Square Garden?
If you have to do a double take, that’s okay because we
are talking about Evander Holyfield who lost a 12-round unanimous
to Larry Donald for something called the NABC heavyweight championship.
The erstwhile “Real Deal” from Atlanta has been
holding the boxing masses at bay on when he will ever retire
from the once Sweet Science.
Now 42, Holyfield’s double victories over Mike Tyson and
the classic heavyweight trilogy with Riddick Bowe in the 70-80s
are enough for the Hall of Fame even if those were the only fights
he ever had.
Even after seeing his record slide to 38-8-2, 32 KOs. here’s
a weary warrior with lumps under his eyes in reflection: “It
was a tough fight. I did my best and I thought I improved. I
might have bit more than I can chew. Larry’s style is difficult.
I might have had the wrong fight at the wrong time. In life you
have setbacks, but I have never given up on anytime.” said
the ring legend.
“In my mind I can’t realistically think that it
is over. But I have to look at the possibility that this is a
permanent problem. If this is going to happen every fight, I
can’t continue to do it. I think any time I go in the ring,
people know that I’m not going in there boasting I’m
better than anybody. They know I’m going in there for a
goal. I have a goal to be world heavyweight champion. It’s
not because I need the money, it’s not because I have a
bad attitude
and I can’t do anything about it. It’s just the fact
that I have to finish the right way ---as world heavyweight champion.
And a respectable Larry Donald: “I thank God, Don King
and HBO for giving me a chance to fight for this title. Evander
Holyfield is still a great champion. I did what I had to do to
win.”
(Jack Welsh is a syndicated columnist headquartered in Las Vegas
and also a regular contributor to Ringsports.com and other leading
sports publications.
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