Sharkie’s Machine
By Frank Gonzalez Jr.
February 14th
2009
“Sergio Gabriel Martinez
Robbed by Ged O’ Connor and
Peter Trematerra After Clearly Beating Kermit
Cintron”
How do you
outbox your opponent all night, score a knockdown, where your opponent got to
continue after being counted out and then with nary a mark on your face after 12
rounds, have the fight ruled a Majority Draw? This wasn’t in
Montreal and the referee wasn’t
Marlon B. Wright.
Saturday
night at the
BankAtlantic
Center in Sunrise Florida,
Jr. Middleweight contender Kermit Cintron (30-2-1, 27 KO’s) faced Argentine
rising star, Sergio Gabriel Martinez (44-1-2, 24 KO’s) in a fight for the WBC’s
154 pound Interim title. Geez…how many titles does it take to completely water
down the quality of boxing?
I scored
this fight 118-110 in favor of
Martinez, who scored a knockdown in
the seventh and easily won a wide majority of the rounds in a fight where
Cintron gave a new meaning to the term, ‘the art of fighting without fighting.’
This
Cintron-Martinez fight started out with an overly cautious first round that
featured a lot of nothing, which pissed off the fans in the stands, who booed
frequently at the lack of action. After seeing an all out action fight between
Alfredo Angulo and Cosme Rivera, that ended in a TKO 5 win for Angulo, the
Cintron vs. Martinez fight felt like a very long intermission.
In this
fight, Cintron lacked an effective offense. His footwork was terrible and he
never cut off the ring to force exchanges with
Martinez, who danced all around him,
making him look like a statue with a pulse for nine of 12 rounds. I had to
wonder how it was that his corner didn’t instruct him to cut off the ring.
In the
seventh round, during an exchange at center ring,
Martinez landed a sharp left followed
by a sneaky right that staggered Cintron into the ropes. With no interference
from the ref,
Martinez jumped all over Cintron, who
was going down anyway from the two shots that staggered him. Cintron didn’t seem
to beat the count, where he was almost up at the count of ten.
The ref appeared to have counted Cintron out but Cintron protested that he was
head-butted, but the ref, Frank Santore Jr., answered that he didn’t see any
head butt.
Martinez was already celebrating his
victory when suddenly, the fight was still on. The referee had waved the fight
off after Cintron appeared to not beat the count but was coaxed into allowing it
to continue. I haven’t seen that before.
Martinez beamed with confidence as he
continued into the eighth round and toyed with Cintron, dropping his guard and
taunting Cintron to do something, anything. We were all waiting…
I had
Cintron winning (maybe) three out of 12 rounds in a fight so bad I could have
mistaken it for an undercard on a Pay-Per-View event. Cintron fights with the
dexterity of a stone and frankly, if he doesn’t remake himself into a boxer with
a more crowd pleasing style, this fight against
Martinez may mark the end Cintron’s
marketability - which seems to be the ONLY thing that matters in today’s version
of what was once the greatest sport on Earth.
After 12
rounds were in the books, the official Judges cards resulted in a Majority Draw
with scores of 116-110 for Martinez and 113-113 twice by the other two
incompetent (or paid off) Judges who should lose whatever license they have to
ever officiate in a boxing match again.
It’s stuff
like THIS that turns casual boxing fans into non boxing fans. It's bad enough
this was a fairly low quality fight, they had to rob the winner too? What are
the promoters waiting for to fix this image problem that boxing is totally
corrupt? How does any sport allow incompetent officials to steal victory from
the winner in order to save the loser? It begs a lot of ugly questions.
Martinez is charismatic (marketable)
and has a fan friendly, energetic style. Only last year, he was still fighting
four-rounders. His win over Alex Bunema last October made him look great - but
mostly because Bunema isn’t very good anymore. Martinez
has good reflexes and likes to showoff a bit. It will be interesting to see what
he does if he ever faces any of the top guys in the division. Outside of Paul
Williams (36-1, 26 KO’s) and Sergiy Dzinziruk (36-0, 22 KO’s), Martinez probably
would give Daniel Santos and Vernon Forrest a good run for the money, but I
suspect Alfredo Angulo would knock him out cold. Time will tell.
* * *
Comments can be emailed to
Frank Gonzalez Jr.
2-14-2009