Sharkie’s Machine
By Frank Gonzalez Jr.
December 17th, 2006
“Jose Hernandez Upsets Jason Litzau With KO In
Eighth”
Saturday night at the Miccosukee Gaming Resort
in Miami Florida, rising Featherweight prospect,
Jason “The American Boy” Litzau (20-1, 18 KO’s)
stepped into the ring undefeated and left with
his first L. That loss came by way of an eighth
round knockout, compliments of a big right hand
from Jose Hernandez, who improved his record to
22-3, with 14 KO’s.
Early in the first round, Litzau was leading the
fight, peppering Hernandez with jabs and
combination punching. Hernandez landed a clean
right cross that knocked Litzau to the canvas.
Litzau beat the count and before he could say
hello, Hernandez was all over him, looking for
the finish line. Litzau barely survived the
round.
In the second round, Hernandez sought to
capitalize on the damage he did in the first but
Litzau showed some heart and boxing skills and
managed to escape most of Hernandez punches with
good athleticism. Litzau managed to score more
and defend better in round two.
In the third, it was a brawl early on but Litzau
was finding his legs and jabbing his way out of
harms way and into the drivers seat. Hernandez
rarely touched the moving, jabbing Litzau.
Litzau recaptured the momentum he had before the
first round knockdown and was easily out boxing
Hernandez and landing with regularity. Though
Hernandez managed to get inside where he wanted
to be, he didn’t do enough when he got close and
Litzau was making the slowing Hernandez pay.
Litzau was in charge in round five. Hernandez
was looked slower and sapped of his power. There
were a couple of head butts, as Hernandez tried
to get on the inside. Litzau complained.
In the sixth, they brawled at center ring and
after a wild encounter, Hernandez’ nose was
bleeding. Litzau kept sticking, moving and
landing at will. Hernandez pressed, ever
forward, ever less effective.
Litzau was showing better stamina and resilience
by the seventh, jabbing and throwing combos.
Hernandez managed to land a couple of right
hands that seemed to stun Litzau just a bit but
not enough to win the round.
Early in the eighth, Hernandez came alive and
landed a big right that stunned Litzau again.
Litzau took it and kept boxing but again,
Hernandez landed an overhand right, after which,
Litzau was woozy. Then came another right.
Litzau kept boxing but Hernandez could smell the
blood as he rushed Litzau into the ropes and
wailed on him. Weakened, Litzau falls after
Hernandez landed yet another overhand right that
snapped his head to one side and his body fell
backwards onto the canvas. The referee, Frank
Santore Jr. counted but Jason Litzau was done
for the night.
Jose Hernandez corner picked him up and carried
him round the ring. With his face swollen and
eyes blackened, his mouth looked to be asking
the audience, “Huh, Huh?” as if to ask, what do
you think of THAT?
I think Hernandez is a scrappy fighter with good
natural instincts. He has some talent and if
committed, could be a quality prospect on the
rise himself after taking down the unbeaten,
flashbulb friendly Jason Litzau on HBO.
A rematch against Litzau might be the best way
for Hernandez to capitalize on his newly found
recognition. I had Litzau winning every round
except for the first and last. It would also be
a wise course for Litzau to bravely seek
redemption over the man who put the only blemish
on his record. If Jason keeps his left arm up a
little higher next time, he might be less
vulnerable to the potency of Hernandez’ right.
* * *
The main event featured rising Middleweight
contender, Edison Miranda (27-1-0, 24 KO’s)
landing a solid right to the upper temple area
of Willie Gibbs (20-2-0, 16 KO’s) and
consequently scoring a knockout. The KO was
somewhat technical though, because after the ref
counted, Gibbs stood up ready to fight—only he
waited until the referee had already counted to
ten. Is it possible that Gibbs didn’t realize he
had to be on his feet before the ref counts to
ten? As a pro fighter, he had to know what the
protocol is in that situation, so it wasn’t
exactly a controversial call.
For those who were hoping to see Miranda exhibit
his fighting skills against another up and
coming fighter, they got about 15 seconds of
action altogether as the first half of the first
round was a real snoozer, with neither guy doing
much at all up until Miranda landed the big shot
to Gibbs’ head.
There was talk of Miranda fighting Jermain
Taylor during the post fight interview. Hey, why
not? If Kassim Ouma could bypass all the top
contenders at Middleweight and get a shot at
Taylor’s titles then why not Miranda? At least
Miranda is a legitimate Middleweight.
* * *
Comments can be emailed to Frank Gonzalez Jr.