LAS VEGAS -- The fight went almost exactly as Marco Barrera and his
corner planned.
The fighter from Mexico City, taking advantage of his opponent's unorthodox
style, constantly landed straight shots to the head on his way to a unanimous
12-round decision over Prince Naseem Hamed in their featherweight bout Saturday
night.
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| Marco Barrera hammers Prince Naseem Hamed with a straight right in the sixth round.(AP) | |
"My people prepared me well. We didn't want to charge him and get
careless," said Barrera, who at 5-feet-7 is 4 inches taller than Hamed and
often was able to keep him at arms' length.
"I was never hurt. He didn't hit as hard as people have said."
There were no knockdowns in the non-title bout, but Barrera, moving up from
super bantamweight to 126 pounds, dominated most of the way.
He rocked the previously unbeaten Hamed twice in the first round, buckled
his knees in the fourth, then had him wobbly at the finish.
Each time he was in trouble, however, Hamed was able to either move away or
clinch before Barrera could finish him.
"He was the pure winner of this fight," Hamed said. "The guy fought
better than I did, and that's it plain and simple.
"But I'll be back. I hope I'm going to get a rematch."
Barrera improved to 53-3, with 38 knockouts. Hamed, from Sheffield, England,
is 35-1, with 31 knockouts.
Barrera, who noted before the bout that he had more knockouts than Hamed had
fights, shrewdly exploited his edge in experience and the lack of defense by
Hamed, who held his hands at waist level most of the fight.
Judges Duane Ford and Patricia Jarman-Manning each scored it 115-112 for
Barrera, and Chuck Giampa gave him the nod 116-111.
There also was a bit of wrestling, with Barrera taking Hamed down to the
canvas in the second round, then putting a sort of full nelson on him and
slamming his face into the corner in the 12th. Barrera had a point taken away
for the incident in the last round.
Although Barrera was never in trouble, his nose was puffy and bleeding
mildly by the third round, apparently the result of a right jab thrown by
Hamed. But in the fourth, the Mexican fighter rocked Hamed again, landing a
left hook that buckled Hamed's knees momentarily.
Barrera stunned Hamed twice in the opening round, the first time about 1½
minutes into the round and the second time just before the bell.
There was a gap of more than an hour between the end of the last prelim and
the start of the featured bout because most of the fights on the undercard
ended in quick knockouts.
Hamed also caused a short delay when, displeased with the way his right hand
was wrapped, had the glove removed and the hand rewrapped. Then his elaborate
entrance took another eight minutes.
Known for his flashy entrances, Hamed first stood high in the MGM Grand
arena, fireworks spewing around him, then was lowered to the arena floor in a
sort of trapeze.
He wore his usual leopardskin-patterned trunks and matching shoes.
By contrast, Barrera wore blue and silver trunks and strode rather quickly
up the aisle and over the ropes.
On the undercard, U.S. Olympic bronze medal winners Jermain Taylor and
Clarence Vinson both won their four-rounders.
Taylor (2-0, two knockouts) stopped Kenny Stubbs at 3:28 of the second round
of their middleweight match. Vinson (2-0) won his second by decision,
outpointing Bryan Garcia in their bantamweight bout.
Michael Bennett, the 2000 amateur world champion, stopped Billy Zumbrun at
2:49 of the first round in their heavyweight bout also scheduled for four
rounds. Bennett has stopped all three of his foes as a pro.
In a super middleweight match scheduled for 10 rounds, Omar Sheika stopped
Stephan Ouellet at 1:46 of the second round.
AP NEWS
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