A
full house bought tickets to see Saul
Alvarez fight Matthew Hatton, who was hoping
to get out of former champion Ricky Hatton’s
shadow, his brother. Hatton
began jabbing over the first minute of the
fight but Alvarez didn’t seem fazed as he
hit Hatton with some solid shots of his own.
As the round progressed, it became obvious
that Alvarez had the heavier hands and this
was going to be a long night for Hatton.
Alvarez punches had thud quality and his
boxing skills combined with his power gave
Hatton trouble, whose punches had little
impact on Alvarez whereas Alvarez punches
busted up Hatton nose in those early rounds.
In
the fourth round, Hatton kept flicking his
punches but halfway throughout the round, a
body shot almost split Hatton in half and
from there, Alvarez simply let loose with
combinations as Hatton retreated.
Hatton walked back to his corner
slowly and a cut over the left eye, a cut
produced by the vicious shots delivered by
Alvarez.
The fifth and sixth rounds repeated the
pattern of the other rounds as Alvarez
simply beat Hatton around the ring and
Hatton lack of power punches did little to
ward off the young Mexican fighter.
In the seventh round,
Alvarez lost a point deduction for hitting
on the break but this simply made Alvarez
even madder as he attacked with four or five
punch combinations. Hatton managed to
connect on a left hook but all this did was
interrupt another combination. (As for the
point deduction, Alvarez felt that Hatton
hit off the break first and retaliated).
In
the ninth round, Hatton actually challenged
Alvarez to “fight him” and for the first
time, Alvarez looked tired as Hatton landed
the more blows, even though when Alvarez
struck back, he forced Hatton to retreat. In
a round that Hatton was winning over the
first half of the round, Alvarez turned the
round around with nasty shots to dominate
the last half of the round. In
what started out as Hatton best round, ended
the way other rounds ended with Alvarez
simply pounding Hatton.
In
the tenth round, Alvarez showed that he was
not about take too much s**t when Hatton
nailed him with a low blow, Alvarez
countered with a nasty left hook when they
were both tied up.
Alvarez showed that at an early age, he
would not be intimidated.
As
the championship rounds approached, Hatton
fought hard to win but he lacked Alvarez
power or skills. He did
not fight a fight of survival but fought to
win and showed a tough chin with the many of
hard shots he got nailed with. In the final
round, Alvarez simply clubbed Hatton who
covered up most of the round but Hatton
occasionally struck back with combinations
of his own.
With time running out, Alvarez nailed Hatton
with solid left hook to the body followed by
a clubbing right on Hatton ear and nearly
stopped Hatton. Hatton fought back with
intensity over the last fifteen seconds but
like most of the fight, Hatton punches had
no effect on Alvarez.
Alvarez won an easy decision with all judges
scoring 119-108 in a fight easy to score.
The twenty year old Alvarez showed
skills and potential to be a superstar.
As for Hatton, he was overwhelmed by
a better fighter but he showed heart, but he
simply doesn’t have his brother's skills or
power. On this night,
heart could not overcome skills.
In
the opening bout, former champion Daniel
Ponce de Leon came up in weight to challenge
prospect Adrian Broner and in the first
round, there was not much to say other than
both fighters were feeling each other out.
Broner gave De Leon little to truly judge as
Broner showed reluctance to engage.
Halfway through the second round, the
fans started to boo and hiss as both
fighters moved around the ring.
De Leon went to the body over the
last minute of the second round for the only
true blows of the round.
In
the third round, De Leon picked up the pace
as he consistently got off first as he
started to nail his younger opponent, first
to the body then to the head as Broner
fought defensively while throwing just one
punch at a time.
Broner landed a few more shots in the fourth
round including a nice counter right over a
De Leon right hand jab and for the first
time in the fight, he started to put two
punches together and continued this into the
fifth round as he started to maneuver De
Leon in position for his quick combination.
In
the sixth and seventh round, Broner started
to pursue De Leon, who appeared comfortable
retreating most of those rounds; allowing
Broner to pot shot him.
At the end of the seventh round, De Leon
connected on some solid lefts over the last
minute before Broner nailed De Leon with
four straight rights but De Leon nailed
Broner with one solid left as the bell rang
to end the round.
De
Leon started to pressure his younger
opponent in the eighth round to regain the
momentum as he nailed Broner with some solid
shots to the body and then to the head. This
continued in the ninth round as De Leon was
more active and at the end of the round,
both fighters unleashed combinations.
Going into the final round, it was one of
those final do or die rounds with the fight
being close. HBO's unofficial scorer Harold
Lederman had De Leon up by one point and
there was little to disagree. (Two of the
judges had the fight as close but with
Broner having the slight edge).
De
Leon began the round by throwing punches and
nailing Broner with solid shots but Broner
proved economical with his punches and he
was able to nail De Leon with some solid
rights over the second half of the round;
making the round hard to judge.
The judges had the fight 96-94, 96-94 and
99-91 in favor of Broner.
The 96-94 score was a realistic view
of the fight since many rounds were close.
Broner was more accurate with his punches
but De Leon was the busier fighter. I had
the fight a draw but Harold Lederman had the
fight 96-94 in De Leon favor.
(The judge who had the bout 99-91
must have missed the first three rounds
which De Leon won and his tally did not
reflect what occurred in the ring).
Adrian Broner won a close decision
but a decision that could have gone the
other way. He showed a
wiliness to allow De Leon to set the pace in
good portion of the fight. When he was the
aggressive fighter, his hand speed allowed
him to dominate but when he allowed De
Leon's attack, he played defense.
It nearly cost him the fight.
De Leon was a good test
for the young fighter and he passed the
test, barely.