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Wednesday Jul 23, 2008


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Jeff Lacy Survives Epifanio, Barely

By David A. Avila

CABAZON-Colombia’s Epifanio Mendoza proved when given enough time to prepare, even a former world champion like Jeff “Left Hook” Lacy will find himself in a life and death-like struggle.

 

Mendoza (28-6-1, 24 KOs) nearly kayoed Lacy and dominated the second half of the fight and proved if given enough time to train properly and plan strategy he belongs among the elite super middleweights in the world on Wednesday.

 

Ask Lacy.

 

“I survived the storm cause I’m a warrior,” said Lacy (24-1, 17 KOs) who was hurt numerous times during the 10-round fight. “I took on someone who is a puncher.”

 

Lacy and Mendoza traded numbing blows throughout their encounter, but it was the Colombian boxer who won over the crowd by overcoming a strong start by the former world champion.

 

A left hook to the body by the Colombian opened up a lot of holes in Lacy’s defense. After the sixth round it was Mendoza doing most of the damage.

 

The judges scored it a majority decision for Lacy 95-95, 97-93 and 96-94 for the former champion.

 

Boos cascaded when the decision was announced.

 

“I won the fight,” said Mendoza. “This is embarrassing for the public. I commanded the fight from the sixth round on.”

 

Moreno Valley’s Kaliesha West (10-0, 2 KOs) met Elizabeth Cervantes (2-9) for the second time in her career and proved she had learned her weaknesses. A double left hook to the body and head followed by a right cross dropped the Mexican fighter for a technical knockout victory in 55 seconds. Cervantes had only been stopped before by Las Vegas Melinda Cooper.

 

Cervantes was a late replacement. The original opponent, Cynthia Talmadge, was not allowed to fight after failing an eye examination. The California State Athletic Commission canceled her as West’s opposition. Cervantes accepted the fight on Tuesday night. She had fought West a year ago and lost a four round decision.

 

In Wednesday’s fight, West saw an opening and unloaded a crisp and powerful three-punch combination for a quick knockout.

 

“I wasn’t even looking for the knockout,” said West, who gained her second knockout. “I’m more relaxed now so I’m punching harder and sitting down on my punches.”

 

 

 

 

 

Other bouts

 

Lightweight contender Jose Armando Santa Cruz started slowly against Mexico City’s Miguel Munguia (16-13-1, 13 KO)s), but after the first round he simply took over the fight and dominated. An added incentive was knowing former foe and lightweight champion Joel Casamayor was in the audience. A left hook to Munguia’s stomach ended the fight at 42 seconds of round five.

 

“I knew Casamayor was watching me,” said Santa Cruz (26-3, 15 KOs) who lost a highly controversial split decision to the Cuban fighter last year. “I did a good job but the judges didn’t see it that way.”

 

Santa Cruz seeks a rematch with Casamayor for the title.

 

Brooklyn prospect Daniel Jacobs (8-0, 8 KOs) did what former world champion Vernon Forrest and current WBO welterweight titleholder Paul Williams were unable to do... knock out Oxnard’s Sergio Rios (18-9, 16 KOs)  in one round. A right hand over Rios guard caught him on the jaw for a knockout at 2:46 of the first round.

 

Las Vegas heavyweight Henry Namauu (2-2) accepted a fight on 24-hour notice, jumped on a plane to take medicals at 6 a.m. the next morning in San Pedro, and with little sleep stepped in the ring to face hard-hitting Seth Mitchell (4-0, 4 KOs) of Maryland. He was knocked down twice and knocked out with a final right cross on the chin at 1:30, but proved his mettle in landing more than a few blows of his own. It was a gutsy effort by Namauu.

 

Puerto Rico’s Carlos Velasquez (8-0, 7 KOs) fired a right hand through David Vazquez’s (17-13-3, 10 KOs) guard for a second round knockout at 1:12 of the second round of a featherweight bout.

 

 

 


Contact David A. Avila @ TheSweetScience.com


Adrian:  Yes, I was dismayed at Lacy's performance; this guy is steadily not fighting upto his potential. If a fighter is blessed with tremendous physicality, I'd like to see him use it. I felt he allowed himself to get tied up too often and expended too much energy in that. He also needs to realize that normal people shave both sides of their face or neither side.
Thursday Jul 24, 2008
rudy:  Talk about a punch drunk fighter, Lacy looks nothing like he did pre-Calzaghe. Man, if he fights Taylor -- he'll get his arse handed to him.
Thursday Jul 24, 2008
the Watcher:  It's time Jeff to hang it up. You are only a shell of your former self & that isn't good enough in a non-forgiving sport like boxing. Don't go away mad just go away for your own health. What's up with Golden Boy matchmaking, how many guys got an opponent that only had a few days notice. That kid David Vazquez’s fights at 117 to 121 right around there hasn't even been in the gym in years and now is fighting. Come on man, K-West has fought this girl 3 times and yah! this girl got a 24 hour notice. This is why so many fighters don't make it to that next level because they are given bums after bums. Sorry its just the truth. No more girl fights please, its a buzz kill!
Thursday Jul 24, 2008
Saul:  Lacy lost this fight man, he looked terrible even in victory, he deliberately dropped epitafio
Thursday Jul 24, 2008
Mike:  Lacy sounded like a different guy in that ESPN interview versus the pre Calzaghe version. There are definite similarities to what happened to Davey Moore after Roberto Duran broke him down at Madison Square Garden. It would have been better for Jeff if Calzaghe knocked him out early. He took a sustained beating that messed him up mentally as well as physically. Even taking into account his shoulder injury he has not looked good in his last three fights. At best he should have gotten a draw last night, Mendoza deserved the decision.
Thursday Jul 24, 2008
Bulldog:  I gotta feel sorry for Lacy, abandoned by many after his loss to Calzaghe. A lot of Americans thought and still believe Calzaghe isnt that great, i disagree, hes the best SM in years. Lacy was carried by the Hype train, unfortunatley believing in it himself, theres a difference between confidence and hype. He isnt the fighter he was, but he can be if he overcomes those demons. Lacy still has the ability, just the mentality is not there, i hope he comes good again and proves he does have something good to offer boxing.
Thursday Jul 24, 2008
Shawn:  I feel the fight should have been a draw but I can live with Lacy winning. Lacy threw and connected with the cleaner punches despite getting rocked by Mendoza. Sitting ringside I did not see Lacy throw one body shot. If Lacy learns to invest in throwing body shots the way he throws them to the head he will be have a better chance of getting back to becoming a contender. Mendoza won many fans that night! I hope to see more of Mendoza in the future!
Saturday Jul 26, 2008

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