The action was non-stop and brutal with Diaz putting maximum pressure on Marquez who was rocked and wobbled in the early rounds. There was no doubt in the opening seconds that it would be a fight to the finish. If the heat wasn't enough in the first three rounds, it became unbearable in the fourth and blisetering in the fifth as both fighters delivered sharp and powerful combinations.
Diaz kept marching forward, rarely being forced backward. Marquez backed to the ropes and blasted away from there with short rights and body shots. Blood began to ooze from Marquez right eye in the 5th and the cut men worked to close it. Marquez' corner told him he was winning, winning by a very little.
In the sixth, Marquez went back to the ropes and Diaz worked at a pace only slightily slower than the buzz saw speed of the first 5 rounds. Blood began to flow from Marquez again in the sixth. Marquez showed small signs of weakening but punched like a madman, sometimes throwing three shots with the left hand, uppercuts and hooks, landing clean blows.
It was an even battle as Shields told his fighter, Diaz, not to ease up on the pressure, not to let Marquez rest. The corner worked on Marquez's bloody face. Marquez is tough as he fights off the ropes and idiot Lederman with his nasty voice tells the world that Diaz is up 2 rounds at the 7th. Which I thought was bullshit.
Marquez worked more in the center ring and landed hard combinations but Diaz pushed him to the ropes and fought like a modified Joe Frazier, body shots and hooks and straight punches, jabs mostly. There's no pressure like Diaz pressure and Diaz' back is dry, no sweat, and Maruquez has to be tired at the end of the round.
What's happening here is that both fighter are great, beyond great. This is going to come down to a contest of body and will and Diaz seems just a tad freshers. Marquez corner tells him to work in the middle of the ring, not the ropes--"you're beating him in the middle", they say.
In the next round Diaz is astill the bull moving forward, catching and cutting Diaz with uppercuts from both hands. Marquez works miracles with multiple lefts as Diaz surges in the 8th and Marquez pivots out of the corner and lands a piston left.
There's blood all over both faces, blood in the ring. It's a bullfight and a dogfight combined Marquez works the middle,rocks Diaza with lefts, left hooks, Diaz wobbles, stumbles, goes down. The bell rings with everybody going crazy and Diaz' face smeared with blood.
"Listen Juan...you're not moving your head," says Diaz corner. "Use your feints on him now. Dont stand in front of this man."
The replay shows Marquez landing big uppercuts and left hooks as Diaz staggers.
Marquez makes a mid-fight stand and now the announcers begin to talk of Marquez being the bigger puncher. This is a reversal out of nowhere, out of hell. Has Diaz lost his way in the 9th?
Diaz pushes Marquez into the corner. Diaz can't miss with the left jabs but Marquez suddenly explodes with a 4 punch combination that drops Diaz to the canvas . He gets up but Marquez moves in like a Matador trying to kill the beast. He's a finisher, stepping in with the certainty of an executioner, advancing on angles, landing the kill shots. Diaz is down, hard down, on the canvas barely moving. It's over, an unbelievable KO in an unbelievable fight.
I'm speechless. Viva Mexico! Unbelievable!
Okay, seconds out. Welcome to Chronic Boxing. This site will showcase professional and amateur boxers. We'll talk about the well-known and the unknown. On the whole, some of the best fights I've seen are from people I never heard of, fighting their hearts out for a few dollars or nothing, for heart or pride.
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Saturday, February 28, 2009
Thursday, February 26, 2009
Which Boxer Had the Best Hook? - Associated Content
Which Boxer Had the Best Hook? - Associated ContentI kind of agree with commentator Rich Thomas. When I think of a hook from a "regular" fighter I think of a left hook. A right hook from a southpaw. Of course, I agree with that guy, Moeursalen, whomever he is...
Monday, February 23, 2009
Robert Guerrero Fight in San Jose
Interview with Two-Time Featherweight Champion Robert Guerrero
I spoke with former IBF featherweight champion Robert Guerrero about his upcoming bout on HBO, his future plans, his wife's health and how it feels to be fighting at 130 lbs.
http://www.associatedcontent.comarticle/1501550/interview_with_twotime_featherweight.html
I spoke with former IBF featherweight champion Robert Guerrero about his upcoming bout on HBO, his future plans, his wife's health and how it feels to be fighting at 130 lbs.
http://www.associatedcontent.comarticle/1501550/interview_with_twotime_featherweight.html
James Moore Lacing Up
Moore seems to have faded from the boxing scene and looked like a shadow of his former self during his last outing. Is he overmatched, or was it his recent marriage that affected him? I guess that's cruel...and misognyny, too...SAT Word!.... But I always liked the guy and hope he can make a comeback.
Tuesday, February 17, 2009
Boxing Profile: Riddick "Big Daddy" Bowe - Associated Content
Boxing Profile: Riddick "Big Daddy" Bowe - Associated ContentRiddick "Big Daddy" Bowe is a Brownsville Boy who was heavyweight champion once but who could forget the parachutist dropped into the Bowe-Holyfield fight?
Thursday, February 12, 2009
Boxing promoter Irish Ropes moving on without John Duddy
Boxing promoter Irish Ropes moving on without John DuddyA while back, Middleweight John Duddy took a sparring workout at Jesse Harris's then Lower Main Street Boxing Gym. Gentleman John seems to have struggled a bit more than he should have in his last outings and it will be interesting to see what he comes up with under new management. Here's the story, written by someone else.
Friday, February 6, 2009
Arce Vs. Darchinyan: The Sparks Are Flying Feb 7
Darchinyan's got the punch in this 115 pound battle but he's very unorthodox in his approach. Unless he gets to Arce early with power, he's going to make mistakes, and Arce will capitalize on them. Arce's nickname is "El Travieso"--that describes him to a "T." Travieso means "trouble." Jorge bristles with trouble, an enfant terrible of the boxing ring, and is inclined to enter the ring riding stallions with a lollipop in his mouth. My greatest nightmare is to have Ricardo Mayorga and Jorge Arce show up at my house for dinner unannounced. I'd need lots of Valium. Darchinyan toutes his win over Christian Mijares as the main reason he'll beat Arce. Remember that it was Mijares who upset Arces earlier on. But Arces doesn't like that sort of fan base calculation and isn't giving an iota of respect to the Armenian:
"Darchinyan's greatest strength is his mouth. I am not intimidated by the devil; why would I be intimidated by him? His biggest weakness is his chin. When he gets hit flush, he doesn't get up."
Thursday, February 5, 2009
Tuesday, February 3, 2009
Vic Darchinyan Vs. Jorge Arce Fight Preview - Associated Content
Vic Darchinyan Vs. Jorge Arce Fight Preview - Associated ContentFlyweight matchup set for Feb 7. I expect to see "El Travieso" live up to his nickname, which means "troublemaker," according to my Mexican-American-Italian bro-in-law. My colleague, Jake Emen, writer of this piece, thinks the Vic will win by TKO, mostly because Vic beat Christian Mijares who beat Jorge Arce. I don't believe in triangulations--styles make fights. Vic's definitely a hitter,though, but the Mexican Arce is a high-voltage current who is sure to light up Darcinyan's life.
Monday, February 2, 2009
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