TUCSON, Ariz. – Maybe, it was a wake-up call. Maybe, it was just embarrassing. Whatever it was, it worked Friday night for Las Vegas super-featherweight Diego Magdaleno in front of a soldout crowd of 2,000 at Casino Del Sol.
Magdaleno got up from a surprising knockdown in the fourth round, seemingly angered and unmistakably determined to make amends.
Mission accomplished.
Magdaleno (22-0, 8 KOs) rocked Fernando Beltran Jr. (35-8-1, 19 KOs) with menacing purpose and head-rocking rapidity, finally forcing Beltran’s corner to surrender at 2:28 of the seventh round.
“I was upset at myself,’’ said Magdaleno, who retained his Northern American Boxing Federation title and improved his chances at getting a shot at a major crown. “I’m my own worst critic.’’
Magdaleno almost drove Beltran, a Mexican journeyman, through the ropes in the sixth. In the seventh, Beltran was on unsteady feet and appeared ready to collapse when his corner threw in the towel.
Magdelano hops his next step is a fight for either the International Boxing Federation title held by Takashiro Ao of Japan or the World Boxing Council’s version held by Juan Carlos Salgado.
“Either one,’’ Magdaleno said. “I’m ready for either guy.’’
Best of the undercard: Yordenis Ugas, a 2008 Olympic bronze medalist for Cuba at the Beijing Games, had all of the credentials and most of the hype. Johnny Garcia had most of the resilience and all of the toughness.
Resilience and toughness prevailed in a significant upset of Ugas (11-1, 5 KOs), a Top Rank prospect, who lost a split-decision to Garcia (12-0, 8 KOs), an unheralded super-lightweight from Holland, Mich. Garcia won because he got up. Ugas dropped him in the fifth with a left-right combination. The stunned look in Garcia’s eyes seemed to say he was finished. Looks are deceiving.
Garcia came roaring back. Surprised and perhaps fatigued, Ugas began to back-pedal and at one point in the sixth he almost fell through the ropes into the lap of a ringside judge. It could have been scored a knockdown. It wasn’t. In the end, however, it didn’t matter. Garcia already had made his point. Two judges scored it, 76-75, for Garcia. The third had it, 76-75 for Ugas.
The rest: Middleweight Abie Han (16-0, 10 KOs) of Mexico won a unanimous decision over Rahman Yusubov (13-6, 11 KOs) of Dallas; Mexican heavyweight Andy Ruiz Jr. (14-0, 8 KOs) won a unanimous decision over Homero Fonseca (9-5-3, 2 KOs); and Mexican super-flyweight Hanzel Martinez (17-0, 14 KOs), scored a first round stoppage of fellow Mexican Jose Miguel Tamayo (12-4-2, 11 KOs).