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Thursday Jul 24, 2008

Lynch makes some solid arguments. He may well be trying to convince himself, but he had me goin'... (ED. M)

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Devil's Advocate Special: Margarito Will Win

By Mike Lynch

Saturday night we all look forward to what is being built up as a strong contender for fight of the year. The ingredients are all there. Two iron-willed, offensive fighters. Both always coming forward and more than willing to swallow fists in order to inflict their own damage.

On top of that, we have a renewal of the great Mexican vs. Puerto Rican rivalry. It’s a rivalry that makes Yankees vs. Red Sox look like a game of marbles. This fight will be a war. It will be about pride. There will be no false bravado in this one.

However, this fight is missing one aspect of a great fight. In a truly perfect matchup, we have no idea who is going to win. Unfortunately, in the talk leading up to this fight, nearly everyone is picking the undefeated pride of Caguas, Puerto Rico, Miguel Cotto. Nearly every pundit rushes to credit Margarito before quickly dismissing the possibility of his victory.

And I tend to agree with most of these pundits. Cotto is a favorite for a reason: he’s never been beaten as a pro and he’s defeated bigger names (not necessarily better fighters). Why would the man we all saw get beat as recently as last year, and the man with the less impressive head count win?

I’ll tell you why. Allow me to play devil’s advocate, if you please…

Antonio Margarito will pull off the upset and defeat Miguel Cotto by 10th round KO.

Here is why:

First of all, the Tijuana Tornado stands at 5’11”, while Cotto is a 5’7” tank. Perhaps even more importantly, Margarito holds a 6-inch reach advantage. Cotto, meanwhile, has not faced an opponent as tall as Margarito since Cesar Bazan in 2003. Cotto won the vacant WBC International Light Welterweight title in the bout with an 11th round TKO, but Bazan is hardly a world-beater and certainly not Margarito.

Margarito, in fact, has not lost to anyone shorter than him in over 12 years. Sure, Paul Williams and Daniel Santos troubled him, but they’re both giant and left-handed, two things that Miguel Cotto is not (even though he will switch to a southpaw stance at times).

Theoretically, Antonio Margarito can control this fight as long as he punches regularly and with a purpose to prevent Cotto from getting inside. Cotto can and will walk through lazy punchers, but Margarito is the man that threw 1675 punches against Joshua Clottey, breaking a 13 year old Compubox record. And he’s no light puncher either. 

Even notorious fader Zab Judah managed to hurt Cotto as deep as the 7th round. How will Cotto handle bombs reigning down from on top of him from the likes of Antonio Margarito? Not well.

There is a reason that fighters like Sugar Shane Mosley, Ricardo Mayorga, and Floyd Mayweather Jr. avoided Margarito. The man is a match-up nightmare, plain and simple. He’s a big, bad man in the land of the welterweights. Paul Williams beat him by simply slapping him around for 12 rounds, utilizing a reach advantage that Cotto will not have. Cotto is stronger than Williams, but he will have a far more difficult time hitting Margarito without absorbing punishment.

And it’s no surprise that Margarito doesn’t lose to shorter orthodox fighters. No one has been able to weather his storm, period. Granted, he has never faced Miguel Cotto before. Cotto is a true ring warrior and could be able to swallow Margarito’s medicine with grin.

But the point is that Cotto has never faced a man of Margarito’s size and power. And it’s possible that Cotto is making the mistake that his predecessors were scared to make by stepping into the ring with the Tornado.

A fight like this often comes down to desire. For a pugilist like Cotto, he’s got bigger fish to fry. If he wins this bout, bigger fights beckon. With Mayweather gone, this one can make Cotto a true brand name. And this applies to Margarito as well, but Cotto is the undefeated scrapper in his athletic prime at 27 years old. Margarito has 3 years and 5 losses on Cotto. 

There is no bigger moment than the present for someone like Margarito, who was humbled by his loss to Williams. How badly did he want this fight? How much does he want to take down Cotto? He wanted it bad enough that he threw down his IBF belt without a second thought (and who can blame him?). He knew he was better than Cintron. Now he wants to show the world he’s better than Cotto.

TSS Universe: What are your thoughts? Is Margarito being overlooked a little too much? Or am I desperately trying to make the fight seem more competitive than it actually is? 


On top of that, we have a renewal of the great Mexican vs. Puerto Rican rivalry. It’s a rivalry that makes Yankees vs. Red Sox look like a game of marbles. This fight will be a war. It will be about pride. There will be no false bravado in this one.

However, this fight is missing one aspect of a great fight. In a truly perfect matchup, we have no idea who is going to win. Unfortunately, in the talk leading up to this fight, nearly everyone is picking the undefeated pride of Caguas, Puerto Rico, Miguel Cotto. Nearly every pundit rushes to credit Margarito before quickly dismissing the possibility of his victory.

And I tend to agree with most of these pundits. Cotto is a favorite for a reason: he’s never been beaten as a pro and he’s defeated bigger names (not necessarily better fighters). Why would the man we all saw get beat as recently as last year, and the man with the less impressive head count win?

I’ll tell you why. Allow me to play devil’s advocate, if you please…

Antonio Margarito will pull off the upset and defeat Miguel Cotto by 10th round KO.

Here is why:

First of all, the Tijuana Tornado stands at 5’11”, while Cotto is a 5’7” tank. Perhaps even more importantly, Margarito holds a 6-inch reach advantage. Cotto, meanwhile, has not faced an opponent as tall as Margarito since Cesar Bazan in 2003. Cotto won the vacant WBC International Light Welterweight title in the bout with an 11th round TKO, but Bazan is hardly a world-beater and certainly not Margarito.

Margarito, in fact, has not lost to anyone shorter than him in over 12 years. Sure, Paul Williams and Daniel Santos troubled him, but they’re both giant and left-handed, two things that Miguel Cotto is not (even though he will switch to a southpaw stance at times).

Theoretically, Antonio Margarito can control this fight as long as he punches regularly and with a purpose to prevent Cotto from getting inside. Cotto can and will walk through lazy punchers, but Margarito is the man that threw 1675 punches against Joshua Clottey, breaking a 13 year old Compubox record. And he’s no light puncher either. 

Even notorious fader Zab Judah managed to hurt Cotto as deep as the 7th round. How will Cotto handle bombs reigning down from on top of him from the likes of Antonio Margarito? Not well.

There is a reason that fighters like Sugar Shane Mosley, Ricardo Mayorga, and Floyd Mayweather Jr. avoided Margarito. The man is a match-up nightmare, plain and simple. He’s a big, bad man in the land of the welterweights. Paul Williams beat him by simply slapping him around for 12 rounds, utilizing a reach advantage that Cotto will not have. Cotto is stronger than Williams, but he will have a far more difficult time hitting Margarito without absorbing punishment.

And it’s no surprise that Margarito doesn’t lose to shorter orthodox fighters. No one has been able to weather his storm, period. Granted, he has never faced Miguel Cotto before. Cotto is a true ring warrior and could be able to swallow Margarito’s medicine with grin.

But the point is that Cotto has never faced a man of Margarito’s size and power. And it’s possible that Cotto is making the mistake that his predecessors were scared to make by stepping into the ring with the Tornado.

A fight like this often comes down to desire. For a pugilist like Cotto, he’s got bigger fish to fry. If he wins this bout, bigger fights beckon. With Mayweather gone, this one can make Cotto a true brand name. And this applies to Margarito as well, but Cotto is the undefeated scrapper in his athletic prime at 27 years old. Margarito has 3 years and 5 losses on Cotto. 

There is no bigger moment than the present for someone like Margarito, who was humbled by his loss to Williams. How badly did he want this fight? How much does he want to take down Cotto? He wanted it bad enough that he threw down his IBF belt without a second thought (and who can blame him?). He knew he was better than Cintron. Now he wants to show the world he’s better than Cotto.

TSS Universe: What are your thoughts? Is Margarito being overlooked a little too much? Or am I desperately trying to make the fight seem more competitive than it actually is? 



Ness:  Mike - good article and great points. You did not changed my mind, I still think that Cotto's superior boxing skills, timing and speed will give hell to Margo therefore adding another W on his record. But your point did make the fight closer and more intriguing. Too bad we can have fights like this every four months...... Peace Ernesto
Friday Jul 25, 2008
donputo69:  i respect your prediction mike...BUT ITS NOT GONNA HAPPEN...here's why....i've been to 7 cotto's fights...and im 7-0 when i leave the arena....and tomorrow, i'll be leaving the MGM 8-0...holla back!!!
Friday Jul 25, 2008
bodyshotkid:  Dude, good piece. I've been watching both of these guys for years and although i like the way cotto has developed the fact is margarito is no joke! I see margarito as an old pro in the best sense of the word. He's learned his 'trade' the good ol' fashioned way. Matched tough from the start he may have picked up a few losses along the way but so what? Way too much is made of keeping a fighter's '0' intact nowadays, often to the detriment of the fighter! Truth is a fighter sometimes learns more from an occasional loss than he does from a string of easy wins. I'm taking nothing away from cotto who has developed into a very good fighter indeed but let's keep things in perspective here. both zab and shane had, in my opinion, seen better days by the time cotto got to them but they were both still able to hurt him. Further, forget the gomez fight! He was made to order and cotto couldn't miss him with anything he threw that night! Margarito is whole different kettle of fish. A daunting prospect for any 147 top ten guy. I'm talking about a guy with a huge fighting heart who walks through his opponents shots and applies withering pressure both to the body and head. A guy who has good power in either hand and one of the highest punch outputs at 147. I think a lot of media guys and fans are under the spell of the cotto aesthetic - the way he moves, puts his punches together in tidy bunches, textbook delivery etc. Nothing wrong with that. But in margarito i think cotto is in completely new territory. With margarito there's no flash - only substance. And that substance is borne of being matched tough from day one. Accepting and learning from his losses so he could truly learn his trade. In my mind being a pro fighter is about more than just punching for pay. I think it's also about how deeply you've learned and understood your trade and i think margarito has learned his on a deeper level than cotto has.
Friday Jul 25, 2008
The REAL Salt lover:  And why is this prediction the "Devil's"??????? What? Margarito doesn't have the right to win? Geeez, when Antonio Margarito KO's Cotto, I just can't wait what y'all gon' be sayin' after. The Cotto fans are screaming now, but what when Margo gets the Is guess "The Devil's" win......I wanna see how Emmanuel Stewart is gon' say.
Friday Jul 25, 2008
Radam G, making business in Vegas:  You are making the bout more than what it will be, fightwriter Mike. But I understand. Writers sometimes make the writing exciting. More than I will say for this bout. Margarito has too much flaws for an almost perfect machine like Cotto. Wide punching, wild swinging, legs too wide apart, throwing uppercuts from a mile away, being slow of hand speed, and absolutely no foot speed spell a doom for Margarito. He is not in the ring with the many B-minus fighters he has destroyed. He is in the ring with an elite -- not any incomplete. This will not be a promising night for Margarito. Holla!
Friday Jul 25, 2008
Nelson Feliciano:  Although Margarito on output alone tends to be more busier than his opponents and always move forward, it would be to his advantage to fight at a distance in this one. If Margarito wants to win this one, he should use his height and fight from a distance. If he throws away his height advantage and instead uses his bravado to try and walk through Cotto's punches to land his own, like he did with Cintron, Cotto will make him pay. The only reason I will not go with Margarito in this one is because in my opinion, he cannot win by fighting his type of fight unless Cotto stops fighting intelligently. Margarito will try to turn the fight into a brawl, which against Cotto isn't a good idea - unless he somehow gets under Cotto's skin during the fight. Margarito's plan B would be to not try and impress and just use his reach and output to win a decision. If a knockout comes, then so be it, but don't chase one against someone who can do the amount of damage that Cotto can. Cotto has been down before, but that was at a lighter weight class and against a last minute opponent, which is not the case here. I have no doubt that Margarito is powerful, but if all he has is a plan A, then the fight doesn't look as promising as it is hyped up to be - at least for him.
Friday Jul 25, 2008
rudy:  I'm with Salt, stupid to call your pick 'going out on a limb' or 'playing devil's advocate.' No need, its a pick and a solid one -- Margarito owns Cotto in 7, too much firepower.
Friday Jul 25, 2008
donputo69:  hey salt...wanna see how we are going to react sunday?...HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA...WHERE ARE ALL THE COTTO HATERS?...I THOUGHT MARGARITO WAS GOING TO WIN?..WHAT YA GOTTA SAY NOW?....HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHHA...COTTO COTTO COTTO COTTO......thats how we are going to react...so get ready sunday when you see these comments...lol..holla back!!!!
Friday Jul 25, 2008
DaveB:  Too much is made about a loss as bodyshotkid said. But I'm picking Cotto until he proves me wrong. That possibly could happen tomorrow. Margarito's losses (wisdom gained) are what could pull this fight out for him. Like I said before that is what makes this thing so exciting. Unless it ends on cuts or a bad decision this is going to be one helluva fight.
Friday Jul 25, 2008
The REAL Salt lover:  Yo rudy! I'm really surprised (and somewhat happy) with your pickin' Margo. I remember a couple months ago I once asked you why you were a Cotto Fan and if a Mexican ever fought against him, you told me you was still gon' root for Cotto, ya remember tha'? I guess you couldn't go with the man this time. Good one man. Sunday morning we gon' be celebratin' this wonderful Victory. Peace.
Friday Jul 25, 2008
donputo69:  rudy is a confused dude....either he's a traitor or he's a sellout....i think he's a sellout....SO...TONIGHT'S DA NIGHT...MY BOY COTTO ITS GONNA HAVE A BIG NIGHT...then....is party time....holla back losers!!!!
Saturday Jul 26, 2008
959 Santa:  Can't wait for this fight. I thank Bob Arum for putting this on for us Boxing Fans. I will be watching it at home. Don't order many PPV's but this one I did. Im going with Cotto to win. It's gonna be an awesome matchup give or take. Cotto will win. That's my prediction.
Saturday Jul 26, 2008
Danny:  I don't think that the rivalry between Mexico and Puerto Rico makes the Yankee Red Sox rivalry look like a game of marbles. Remember that rivalry goes deep into the early 20s eversince the trade of The Babe. Take it from a real Yankee fan. You can't compare a 100 years of competition to 20 or 30! If you try to compare this to that you would have to say that Cotto is the NYY, 26 Championships to Margarito Red Sox 6, Theres no comparison...
Saturday Jul 26, 2008
andy from newcastle:  Mike, Rudy, Salty (real or otherwise). Kudos to y'all for being prepared to put your necks on the line, I wasn't, and like Yuvie really couldn't call it. As it was, it was only the fact (now confirmed) that Margarito is the toughest SOB on the planet that stopped him being KO'd by the best (now confirmed) boxer on the planet, Cotto. Credit to him, he's a real Mexican warrior, and credit to Cotto for boxing the fight of his life-and still losing. He would have beaten absolutely everyone else with that performance tonight. Toonoy
Saturday Jul 26, 2008
Francisco:  Its July 27th, and the fight is over, and I just want to HOLLa Holla to Radam and DonPuto, cause they asked for me(a Margarito follower) to holla back. LOL LOL. I was there live. And every Puerto Rican fell silent after the BRUTAL 11th round TKO. As Don Puto and RAdam say, Holla Back.
Sunday Jul 27, 2008
east los:  miguel 'no mas ' cotto was very lucky to have quit. because he was in for a whupping if only tony could have cut the ring. no mas ran all night.. but give him credit for trying to give his one or two punches here and there. any other fighter would had gone down from no mas punches or been worn down from his stick and run style. holla
Monday Jul 28, 2008
Andrew:  Hey Brotha Lynchung, you da man. When you told me about your pick of this fight article, I hoped like h*ll I would get to read it. Mad props to a brotha for comin mad close on the upset, if you would call it that. Keep it gangsta.
Monday Jul 28, 2008
rudy:  Sellout? I root for Cotto against others, but I said since the fight was talked about that Margarito would whoop Cotto. And he did just that. Check back to all the TSS columns involving Cotto and Tony, said it all along that Margarito was the spoiler for Cotto's career.
Monday Jul 28, 2008

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