Cotto bows out of boxing
Before adoring fans at Madison Square Garden, the 37-year-old Cotto just didn't have enough against his 29-year-old opponent.
Puerto Rico's Miguel Cotto goes out a warrior, but not a winner, after dropping a unanimous 12-round decision Saturday to Sadam Ali in a world title fight he vowed would be his last.
Ali seized the World Boxing Organisation light middleweight world title the Puerto Rican won in August with an undisputed decision over Japan's Yoshihiro Kamegai.
After a back-and-forth battle that saw both fighters hurt, Ali got the nod from all three judges by scores of 115-113, 115-113 and 116-112.
Ali rocked Cotto with a right in the second, but the Puerto Rican veteran held on and gained the upper hand in the middle rounds, doing damage with his left hook and catching Ali with a punishing right to the head in the sixth.
“I had him hurt here and there,” Ali said. “But I didn't want to get over myself and get caught with a shot. He has tremendous power.”
Cotto continued to apply pressure in the seventh, but said that “something happened” to his left biceps in the round.
“I don't want to make excuses,” he said. “Sadam won the fight.”
As the younger fighter's speed and stamina began to tell, Cotto took some hard shots in the eighth. After a close ninth, Ali was in control in the 10th.
“I knew I had to do something, or he would have dug in,” said Ali, who improved to 26-1 with 14 knockouts. “By the 11th round, I thought the fight was close.”
Cotto fell to 41-6 with 33 wins inside the distance.
A six-time world champion in four different weight divisions, Cotto vowed he would stick by his decision to retire.
“It is,” he said, when asked if the bout had been his last. “I want to be happy in my home and enjoy my family.”
It was Cotto's 10th fight at the famed Manhattan arena. His only prior defeat there was to American Austin Trout in 2012.
The rapturous welcome he received upon entering the ring was repeated as he departed in defeat.
“Thank you for supporting me at every opportunity,” Cotto told his fans. “I'm so glad to call Madison Square Garden my home.”
In his 17-year pro career, Cotto defeated a host of marquee fighters, including Zab Judah, Paulie Malignaggi, Shane Mosley, Antonio Margarito and Ricardo Mayorga.
He was also beaten once by Margarito, while his other defeats came at the hands of American Floyd Mayweather, Filipino legend Manny Pacquiao and Saul “Canelo” Alvarez.
“I want to thank Team Cotto for giving me this opportunity,” Ali said. “They really didn't have to. They could have taken an easier fight.”
- NAMPA/AFP
Ali seized the World Boxing Organisation light middleweight world title the Puerto Rican won in August with an undisputed decision over Japan's Yoshihiro Kamegai.
After a back-and-forth battle that saw both fighters hurt, Ali got the nod from all three judges by scores of 115-113, 115-113 and 116-112.
Ali rocked Cotto with a right in the second, but the Puerto Rican veteran held on and gained the upper hand in the middle rounds, doing damage with his left hook and catching Ali with a punishing right to the head in the sixth.
“I had him hurt here and there,” Ali said. “But I didn't want to get over myself and get caught with a shot. He has tremendous power.”
Cotto continued to apply pressure in the seventh, but said that “something happened” to his left biceps in the round.
“I don't want to make excuses,” he said. “Sadam won the fight.”
As the younger fighter's speed and stamina began to tell, Cotto took some hard shots in the eighth. After a close ninth, Ali was in control in the 10th.
“I knew I had to do something, or he would have dug in,” said Ali, who improved to 26-1 with 14 knockouts. “By the 11th round, I thought the fight was close.”
Cotto fell to 41-6 with 33 wins inside the distance.
A six-time world champion in four different weight divisions, Cotto vowed he would stick by his decision to retire.
“It is,” he said, when asked if the bout had been his last. “I want to be happy in my home and enjoy my family.”
It was Cotto's 10th fight at the famed Manhattan arena. His only prior defeat there was to American Austin Trout in 2012.
The rapturous welcome he received upon entering the ring was repeated as he departed in defeat.
“Thank you for supporting me at every opportunity,” Cotto told his fans. “I'm so glad to call Madison Square Garden my home.”
In his 17-year pro career, Cotto defeated a host of marquee fighters, including Zab Judah, Paulie Malignaggi, Shane Mosley, Antonio Margarito and Ricardo Mayorga.
He was also beaten once by Margarito, while his other defeats came at the hands of American Floyd Mayweather, Filipino legend Manny Pacquiao and Saul “Canelo” Alvarez.
“I want to thank Team Cotto for giving me this opportunity,” Ali said. “They really didn't have to. They could have taken an easier fight.”
- NAMPA/AFP
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