Sharkie’s Machine
By Frank Gonzalez Jr.
March 21, 2009
“Vitali Klitschko TKO's J.C. Gomez
in Nine”
Saturday afternoon, ESPN Classic and ESPN2 aired the Heavyweight Championship
fight between WBC titlist Vitali Klitschko (37-2, 36 KO’s)
against Juan Carlos Gomez (44-2, 35 KO’s). The fight took place
in a tiny ring at the Hanns Martin Schleyer Halle in
Stuttgart
Germany.
Klitschko has sparred with Gomez and they know each other a bit.
After being away from boxing for almost four years and then
coming back and administering a beating to former titlist Sam
Peter, Vitali Klitschko looked great. He made easy work of Peter,
who’s usually a very tough fight for anyone. Vitali didn’t expect
the southpaw Gomez to be an easy fight.
For a heavyweight fight, this one was fairly entertaining. The
first round was almost comical since it was little more than a
pawing contest that looked funny since Klitschko is orthodox and
Gomez fights southpaw. From way up in the cheap seats, it must’ve
looked like a two dimensional sword fight with jabs. Gomez
managed to land the cleaner punches in that first round.
Klitschko was fighting tall, letting Gomez come in, in hopes of
landing a big right. Instead, Gomez landed three clean lefts
before the round ended.
The second round saw Klitschko pick up the tempo. Both guys boxed
in a cautiously aggressive manner; pawing forward and trying to
land their power punches in close. Gomez landed a few but they
weren’t flush and he was starting to clinch more than might’ve
been helpful. Klitschko landed a straight right to the chin that
stung Gomez. Midway into the round, Klitschko looked a bit slow
but he still maintained command of the action by shooting his
three quarter jabs and throwing rights often enough to land a few
good ones that took a toll on Gomez.
As the fight continued, Klitschko landed more frequently and
though Gomez was able to land here and there, it was never enough
to change the momentum. At times, Klitschko moved backwards as
Gomez pressed with his jab, which was effective in terms of
moving Klitschko backward but ineffective in terms of landing
anything meaningful.
By the fourth, Klitschko was breathing with his mouth open but he
was still popping Gomez with clean shots to the face, one that
caused a bit of swelling over Gomez’ right eye. By the early
fifth round, a Klitschko right opened that swelling eye into a
streaming cut. Gomez kept coming forward. A series of full
extension jabs and rights by Klitschko near the end of the rounds
saw Gomez starting to fade. Klitschko increased his output in the
sixth and Gomez was taking some punishment. Gomez went down from
a slip that was ruled as such. The strings were getting looser
for Gomez, who would try to work his way inside and then, instead
of punch, he’d clinch and surrender his opportunities to score,
in favor of a little oxygen.
In the seventh, as was typical of each round, Gomez landed the
first few shots and then Klitschko went to work, landing a few
jabs followed by rights that were landing, often flush. Klitschko
suffered a cut on his head that saw a slim streak of blood run
down his face. Gomez landed a left and then Klitschko landed a
left and a big right that put Gomez down. Gomez was up at six.
Klitschko rallied, landing a few more rights until Gomez clinched
and Klitschko tried to get out of the clinch but the two big men
wrestled and fell to the canvas. When action resumed, Klitschko
landed a right left combo twice before the bell.
The eighth was more of the same, with Klitschko punching and
Gomez resigned to clinching. Klitschko dropped his left hand low,
stalking Gomez from outside and then moved left, away from
whatever power Gomez may have had left in his left hand. Gomez
looked disheartened as he nearly turned his back to Klitschko,
but to Gomez credit, he turned and fought like a man. Klitschko
popped Gomez with a pair of rights and a left that staggered
Gomez right before the bell.
In the ninth, Klitschko continued his assault, landing a left and
another big right. During one exchange, Klitschko landed a left
to the face. Gomez clinched. Gomez was cut on his other eye,
probably from the left to the face. The referee, Daniel Van de
Wiele took a point from Vitali for an intentional head butt. I
watched the replay a few times in slow motion and didn’t see a
head butt.
But it would matter not, because
seconds later, Klitschko landed a swinging right that put Gomez
down again. Gomez was up at seven. When action resumed,
Klitschko went for the finish, tagging Gomez into the ropes and
nearly through the ropes when the ref stopped the fight. The time
was 1:49 of round 9.
I didn’t expect Gomez would last nine rounds against the most
dangerous man at Heavyweight but he did give a fairly game
performance. Gomez gave Klitschko a tougher fight than Sam Peter
did and if he were a little more aggressive instead of cautious,
who knows how far this fight might’ve gone. Vitali showed a few
chinks in his armor in this fight but Gomez wasn’t inclined to
exploit them.
Congratulations to Vitali Klitschko, who retains his title and
leaves us all with the question; WHO will he fight next?
The most logical fight would be against WBA titlist Ruslan
Chagaev (25-0-1, 17 KO’s), who just fought in February and should
be available to Klitschko in a few months. I suspect Vitali wants
to take the easy road though and fight Nicolay Valuev (50-1, 34
KO’s), who Klitschko would likely beat within five rounds, if not
two. Valuev is one of the slowest fighters in all of boxing; he’s
seven feet tall but awkward and plodding. It would be a waste to
fight against Valuev. It just wouldn’t be entertaining. More
deserving would be Alexander Dimitrenko (29-0, 19 KO’s), a fellow
Ukrainian who is also six foot seven, just like Vitali. That
would be an interesting fight! What about Alexander Povetkin or
David Haye (22-1, 21 KO’s) Or, how about a wild card, like rising
star Chris Arreola (26-0, 23 KO’s)? (Truth is Arreola should
fight Haye to qualify to fight Vitali). Arreola is still a bit
green but he can take a punch and come back with barrages of
punches. In a word, he’s dangerous.
With brother Wladimir in possession of the IBF and WBO titles,
that leaves the WBA title the focus for WBC champ Vitali to ‘even
up’ the dream of being champion at the same time with his brother
without fighting each other. If both had two major titles
simultaneously, the dream would be complete. That dream can only
happen because there are no more unified Champions in boxing
today. If the brothers Klitschko ever did fight each other, I’d
lean towards Vitali to win because he’s the tougher of the two.
But Wladimir is the better technical fighter who might test his
brother’s jaw like none since Lennox Lewis did a few years ago.
It is a great “what if…” argument.
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