Erik Morales vs. Zahir Raheem
Erik Morales vs. Zahir Raheem, billed as Double Trouble, was a professional boxing match contested on September 10, 2005.[1] BackgroundAfter their exciting bout in March 2005, Erik Morales and Manny Pacquiao were co-featured on a card at the Staples Center, Los Angeles, California, what what was regarded as tune-up bouts before an inevitable rematch. Pacquiao was to face Héctor Velázquez at super featherweight while Erik Morales would make his debut at lightweight against Zahir Raheem.[2][3][4] The fightsPacquiao vs. Velázquez
Velázquez gave Pacquiao a hard time in the first two rounds of their bout before getting caught by Pacquiao's superior speed and power getting stopped in the sixth round.[6] AftermathVelázquez later on fought Pacquiao's brother, Bobby, and won via disqualification.[7] Morales vs. RaheemIn the main event, former 3-division champion Erik Morales faced 1996 Olympian Zahir Raheem[8] Morales was a heavy favourite and the matchup was viewed as warmup for his already scheduled rematch against Manny Pacquiao. However, Raheem would frustrate Morales with constant lateral movement. Raheem rocked Morales in the 5th round and built a lead on the scorecards, but Morales rallied in the 11th round and staggered him with a right hand as Raheem's glove touched the canvas, but it was not scored a knockdown by referee Jon Schorle.[9] The final scores were 118–110, 116–112 and 115–112 in favor of Raheem giving him a unanimous decision victory.[10] HBO's unofficial scorer, Harold Lederman, scored the bout 118–110 for Raheem, the same score as his daughter Julie Lederman one of the three official judges. According to CompuBox Raheem landed 111 out of 282 punches (39%) against Morales landing only 62 out of 353 (18%). AftermathSpeaking after the bout Raheem said "I beat a legend tonight, I made all the sacrifices coming into this fight, I believed in myself and I fought a smart fight. All I needed was a chance to prove myself. None of the elite fighters ever gave me a shot, before Morales stepped up. Now the sky's the limit." When asked if fighting at lightweight was perhaps too heavy for him, Morales replied: "I did feel a little out of whack but I have to look at the tape before I decide to go back down [to 130 pounds]." UndercardConfirmed bouts:[11] Broadcasting
References
|
Portal di Ensiklopedia Dunia