Floyd Mayweather Jr. vs. José Luis Castillo II
Floyd Mayweather Jr. vs. José Luis Castillo II was a professional boxing match contested on December 7, 2002 for the WBC and The Ring lightweight titles.[1] BackgroundMayweather and Castillo had fought eight months earlier with Mayweather prevailing with a unanimous decision. The decision was seen as controversial as Castillo had clearly outpunched Mayweather 203 to 157 and landed over 100 more power punches than Mayweather. The fight's promoter Bob Arum, while not necessarily saying Mayweather didn't win, called the called the scoring for the fight, with Mayweather having won comfortably by five points on one scorecard and four points on the other two, "ludicrous" and vowed that he would attempt to schedule a rematch on August 10 at the Staples Center in Los Angeles with the bout being carried on HBO pay-per-view rather than on cable.[2] However, Arum's plans were scuttled when Mayweather refused to fight in Los Angeles, claiming he could not trust the judges and did not want to fight in front of what expected to be a largely Mexican crowd that would be in favor of Castillo. As a result of Mayweather's refusal to fight in Los Angeles, the fight was rescheduled to take place in Nevada's Mandalay Bay Events Center on October 5 with the fight happening on a standard telecast of HBO World Championship Boxing rather than on HBO pay-per-view.[3][4] In preparation for the rematch with Mayweather, Castillo took a tune-up fight with Verdell Smith, defeating him by third-round knockout in his native Mexico in early August. While training for the fight in late September, Castillo developed a case of Achilles tendinitis, resulting in the fight being postponed until December 7. Though Castillo was expected to be healed by October 19, Arum opted to move the fight to December so as to avoid competition from the 2002 World Series.[5] Originally, the Mayweather–Castillo rematch was to be the main event of a boxing card that featured WBO heavyweight champion Wladimir Klitschko defending his title against Jameel McCline as the featured undercard bout. However, when Mayweather no-showed a press conference promoting the card three days before the event, Arum, having tired of Mayweather's antics, decided to flip the two fights with the Klitschko–McCline bout taking the main event slot, while the Mayweather–Castillo fight was moved to the undercard.[6] The fightsMayweather vs. Castillo IIAs in the first fight, Castillo pressed the action and served as the aggressor, but Mayweather, taking a more defensive approach, proved allusive as he frequently landed his jab and right leads to keep Castillo off balance and quickly moved away from, mostly avoiding any exchanges with him. While Castillo once again threw more punches, Mayweather's superior defensive skills held Castillo to only landing 137 of his 603 thrown punches for a paltry 23% success rate, while Mayweather connected with 162 of his 399 thrown punches and dominated with his jab, out landing Castillo 88 to 36. Unlike the previous fight, Mayweather finished strong as he only lost one round on one scorecard during the last five rounds. The three scorecards were closer than in the previous fight, with Mayweather winning by two scores of 115–113 and one score of 116–113 to take the fight by unanimous decision.[7] HBO unofficial scorer Harold Lederman scored the fight 115–113 in Mayweather's favor, as did his HBO colleague Larry Merchant. The Associated Press had Mayweather the winner 116–112. Klitschko vs. McClineThe new main event saw WBO heavyweight titleholder Wladimir Klitschko face No. 1 ranked contenter Jameel McCline.[8] The fightThe fight turned out to be tentative, with Klitschko winning almost every round using his jab and superior footwork.[9] At the end of the tenth round, Klitschko staggered McCline with a barrage of left hooks and overhand rights, and ultimately knocked him down with a left-right combination.[9] Before the start of the eleventh round, McCline's corner threw in the towel, giving Klitschko his 36th career win by stoppage.[9] At the time of the stoppage, the scorecards were 98–91, 99–90 (twice), all in favour of the champion.[9] CompuBox stats showed that Klitschko landed 181 of his 433 punches thrown (42%), and McCline landed 61 of 307 (20%).[8] Fight cardConfirmed bouts:[10]
^Note 1 For WBO Heavyweight title Broadcasting
References
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