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Erik Morales vs. Marcos Maidana

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Action Heroes
DateApril 9, 2011
VenueUnited States MGM Grand Garden Arena, Las Vegas, Nevada, United States
Title(s) on the linevacant WBA interim light welterweight title
Tale of the tape
Boxer Mexico Erik Morales Argentina Marcos Maidana
Nickname El Terrible El Chino
Hometown Tijuana, Baja California, Mexico Santa Fe, Argentina
Pre-fight record 51-6 (35 KO) 29-2-0 (27 KO)
Height 5 ft 8 in (173 cm) 5 ft 7 in (170 cm)
Weight 140 lb (64 kg) 140 lb (64 kg)
Recognition 3-division champion former WBA interim light welterweight champion
Result
Maidana defeated Morales via Majority decision. (114-114, 116-112, 116-112)

Erik Morales vs. Marcos Maidana, billed as Action Heroes, was a boxing light welterweight fight for the Interim WBA Light Welterweight championship.[1] The bout took place on April 9 at MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas, Nevada, United States.

Morales, a Mexican legend and a five time world champion at three different weight classes, made his mark in the Junior Welterweight division by obtaining the WBC Silver light welterweight title in September 2010 and defending it in December of the same year. Following his last bout, he expressed his desire to fight Juan Manuel Marquez,[2] however Marquez turned this fight down and then the matchup was made with Maidana through Golden Boy Promotions.

Maidana was coming from a twelve-round decision loss against then title-holder Amir Khan in December 2010, his second shot at a world title. This was his chance to start back on the road to another full title shot.

Background

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Erik Morales

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Morales officially ended his retirement on March 27, 2010 by returning and defeating José Alfaro. Morales' precision and stamina overcame Alfaro; easily defeating him via unanimous decision.[3] In his second fight after returning to the ring Erik Morales fought Willie Limond. Limond started strong in the first three rounds being very quick, elusive, and staying away from Morales' reach. Morales threw body shots to slow his opponent down and fought very conservative until Limond started getting tired. The fight was stopped as Limond could not carry on and won the WBC Silver World Light Welterweight title.[4] He then defended his title against tough challenger Francisco Lorenzo and won by unanimous decision.[5]

Marcos Maidana

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In his first shot at a major world title, Maidana lost via points decision to the rugged Andriy Kotelnik somewhat controversially, a result that had a lot of observers questioning the judges.[6] After that he went on to win the WBA Interim belt by stopping prospect Victor Ortiz, both of them exchanging knockdowns.[7] He made three successful defenses before challenging reigning champion Amir Khan, 2 of which were by knockouts.[8] In an anticipated match between two exciting junior-welterweights there was bound to be fireworks. Khan defeated Maidana by unanimous decision, and the championship fight received a lot of recognition as 2010's Fight of the Year.[9]

Undercard

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Televised

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Guerrero defeated Katsidis via unanimous decision. (117-108, 118-106, 118-107)
Malignaggi defeated Cotto via unanimous decision. (99-91, 97-93, 99-91)
Ishida defeated Kirkland via technical knockout. The fight was stopped at 1:53 of round one.

Preliminary card

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Garcia defeated Campbell via unanimous decision. (99-91, 98-92, 100-90)
Zewski defeated Coronel via split decision. (60-54, 60-54 ,59-55)
Chakhkiev defeated Jolly via technical knockout in the third round.

Fight earnings

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  • Erik Morales $250,000[10] vs. Marcos Maidana $500,000

The Fight

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In the first round, Maidana came out with ferocity as expected and proceeded to batter his older opponent around the ring. He landed multiple power punches, including an uppercut that opened a huge swelling over Morales' left eye which worsened over the course of the fight, and when the Mexican walked back to his corner having taken a large amount of punishment in the opening three minutes most observers felt their predictions were being fulfilled. The one-sided nature of the bout continued for the next couple of rounds, but then at the end of the third round Morales begin to fight back and landed a hard combination to the head of Maidana and the tide began to turn.

From the fourth round onwards and although he was effectively fighting with one eye, Morales gave as good as he got and was landing the cleaner more effective shots, albeit occasionally being swarmed by the sheer number of punches being landed in return by the relentless Maidana. The fight became a see-saw affair and then, in the eighth round, Morales hit Maidana with a huge left hook that almost stopped the Argentinian. The next couple of rounds continued in this fashion, with Maidana using his strength and stamina to bully Morales and the Mexican using his sharper punching and ring intelligence to land effective counters and combinations. The fight was fast turning into a modern classic.

In the "championship rounds" (the eleventh and twelfth), Morales seemed to tire and Maidana took advantage, overwhelming him with his strength and punishing the ageing warrior continually to the head and body. Maidana finished the fight much the stronger of the two and his late surge gave him the win on the scorecards, 116-112 twice with the third judge scoring the fight a draw, 114-114.

With this victory, Maidana put himself firmly back in the title picture, being awarded the interim WBA championship and putting himself back up with the division's elite in Khan and Timothy Bradley. The true glory on the night however went to Morales, who turned back the clock with an outstanding performance against the odds and against a host of seeming disadvantages, and possibly winning the fight in the eyes of some observers. Morales asked for a rematch in the near future and Maidana also seemed keen in the post-fight interviews, possibly for July 30 if the matchup can be arranged. No-one will be complaining if the rematch were to take place and it was anywhere near as good as their first meeting.

References

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  1. ^ Rafael, Dan (February 10, 2011). "April 9: Erik Morales vs. Marcos Maidana". ESPN. Retrieved March 19, 2011.
  2. ^ Vester, Mark. "Erik Morales: I Want Juan Manuel Marquez". BoxingScene. Retrieved March 19, 2011.
  3. ^ Vester, Mark (March 28, 2010). "Erik Morales decisions Jose Alfaro over twelve rounds". BoxingScene. Retrieved March 19, 2011.
  4. ^ Blears, James (September 12, 2010). "Erik Morales stops Willie Limond in six-rounds in Mexico". BoxingScene. Retrieved March 19, 2011.
  5. ^ Slater, James (December 19, 2010). "Erik Morales Out-Points Game Francisco Lorenzo, Wants Marquez Next!". EastsideBoxing. Retrieved March 19, 2011.
  6. ^ Schmidt, Erik (February 8, 2009). "Kotelnik Defeats Maidana In a War". Boxing News 24. Retrieved March 19, 2011.
  7. ^ Scott, Christ (June 28, 2009). "Can Victor Ortiz rebound? Does he want to?". BadLeftHook. Retrieved March 19, 2011.
  8. ^ Rafael, Dan (September 15, 2010). "Amir Khan, Marcos Maidana finally fight". ESPN. Retrieved March 19, 2011.
  9. ^ Obrien, Richard (December 23, 2010). "Khan-Maidana championship fight is SI.com's 2010 Fight of the Year". SportsIllustrated. Archived from the original on December 26, 2010. Retrieved March 19, 2011.
  10. ^ Rafael, Dan (2011-04-10). "Maidana beats Morales in dramatic bout". ESPN. Retrieved 2011-04-10.
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Preceded by Marcos Maidana's bouts
April 9, 2011
Succeeded by
KO4 Petr Petrov
Preceded by Erik Morales' bouts
April 9, 2011
Succeeded by