A 2011, seemingly forgettable because of controversial refereeing, has a chance to get off the mat this Saturday and be remembered as the Year of the Rematch.
There’s a buzz on both coasts, impossible to ignore for the rest of us in fly-over country.
At Madison Square Garden in New York, there are super-welterweights Miguel Cotto and Antonio Margarito in a blood feud ancient Rome would have liked. At the Honda Center in Anaheim, there is Abner Mares and Joseph Agbeko in a chance to resolve the low-blow controversy that has haunted Mares in the months since referee Russell Mora didn’t penalize him.
Take your pick. I’ll take both.
It’s no surprise that Cotto-Margarito is getting most of the attention on an HBO pay-per-view card that includes another intriguing encore, middleweights Pavel Wolak and Delvin Rodriquez in a rematch of their wild draw.
Bad blood since Margarito’s 2008 victory in 2009 has been boiling, because of Cotto’s belief that Margarito used the same altered hand wraps that were found before the Mexican’s next fight, a 2009 loss to Shane Mosley.
Cotto calls Margarito a criminal. Almost as if he enjoys the role, Margarito smiles beneath eyes hidden behind ever-present dark glasses and long hair that create a menacing mask. Then, there was the licensing mess in New York, where the state’s athletic commission worried about the condition of Margarito’s surgically-repaired right eye before finally saying OK.
Add a potentially vulnerable target to an evident quest for vengeance in what looks to be a last-stand between fighters past their prime, and there’s unmistakable danger. For some, that transforms the bout into irresistible drama. For others, it’s just obscene. Hide the kids.
For the articulate Mares, there is none of the intense anger or hand-wrap suspicions that are worthy of a new television series. Call it CSI Boxing. But the bantamweight bout is every bit as significant for a young fighter on the cusp of attaining real stardom. Put simply, he has to prove he isn’t a dirty fighter. Only he can.
“I hope to win the right way so people will give me the credit I deserve,’’ Mares said at a workout a few days before the Showtime-televised fight.
Mares is smart enough to know that credit for his majority decision in August over Agbeko has eluded him no matter what is said by him or his Golden Boy promoters.
“It was more than robbery, it was Brinks,’’ said Agbeko promoter Don King, who didn’t specifically blame Mares for what Mora did or didn’t do, but also left no doubt about who he thought escaped.
The winners: Boxing in a December comeback with Cotto in a mid-to-late round stoppage after sustained blows to Margarito’s right eye and Mares in a unanimous decision with a versatile array of punches, all above Agbeko’s belt.
A COUPLE OF COUNTERS
Two words for sports editors whose newspapers have cut back on boxing coverage because they’re offended by the sport: Penn State. One more word for those same editors: Syracuse.
In an interview with RingTV’s Lem Satterfield, Bob Arum talked about how he finally convinced Cotto to agree to a fight with Margarito, a business partner whom he calls criminal. “Ultimately, money talks,’’ Arum told Satterfield. “I couldn’t have made this fight on normal terms. Just money. That’s enough.” For Manny Pacquiao-Floyd Mayweather Jr., there’s much more than enough to believe it finally will happen in 2012.
ROACH AT THE MIKE
Freddie Roach’s honesty will get some air time Saturday as an analyst for the EPIX/EpixHD.com broadcast of the WBA belt-holder bout in Helsinki between heavyweights Alexander Povetkin of Russia and Cedric Boswell of Atlanta. I’m not sure about the fight. At 42, Boswell appears to be overmatched against the emerging and unbeaten Povetkin. But the tireless Roach makes it worth a look, or at least a listen.
Roach’s favorite ringside broadcaster?
“Jim Lampley, he’s a genius,’’ Roach said.
AZ NOTES
In a postponement, junior-welterweight prospect Jose Benavidez is scheduled for a bout on Feb 3 at Wild Horse Pass Resort & Casino in Chandler, a suburb of Phoenix, Benavidez’ hometown. The card, promoted by Showdown and Top Rank, had been scheduled for Jan. 7. Benavidez’ appearance on the card is still subject to how his right wrist recovers from an injury suffered in a victory on the undercard Nov. 12 of Manny Pacquiao’s controversial decision over Juan Manuel Marquez at Las Vegas’ MGM Grand. Benavidez, considered Top Rank’s brightest prospect, was scheduled to see the doctor on Saturday.
Once-beaten Phoenix super-middleweight Jesus Gonzales has taken to social media in an attempt to lure Kelly Pavlik into a fight. Gonzales has called out Pavlik on his Facebook page. But it’s still not clear what Pavlik’s plans are. He is expected to resume training in Oxnard, Calif., after Christmas. There’s talk about him fighting Julio Cesar Chavez, Jr. But it’s not clear whether he would fight a tune-up before then. If so, Gonzales hopes for a shot at him. Pavlik’s manager is Cameron Dunkin, Gonzales’ former manager. That could be a complication.