Skip to content
Saddo Boxing News
  • Home
  • Boxing Forum
  • Boxing Videos
  • Contact
Saddo Boxing News
Boxing Articles

Fight of the Year: Trinidad-Mayorga.

ByJim Cawkwell 24/11/200412/05/2013
Compared to recent boxing years, 2004 has acquitted itself very well and with approximately five weeks left to be further embellished with more hallmark moments, I do not feel I am being too presumptuous in declaring the true candidate for fight of the year honors. It was

a fiercely profound rebuttal to the strategic meanderings displayed by Bernard Hopkins and Oscar de la Hoya two weeks prior. Explosions were a certainty in Felix Trinidad’s return against Ricardo Mayorga, but what actually elapsed between the two fighters exceeded all expectations. Routinely throughout the boxing year, a tone is established, an equilibrium balanced in the general boxing consciousness by the steady stream of notable results and performances. However, occasionally a fight produces a spectacle that defies the logical perceptions already gathered and the happening that was Trinidad-Mayorga held true to that tradition. It was the type of fight that inspired religious outbursts; I know that I have never cried to the heavens so often during one fight because of the immensities of courage and power on display. In a sense, Mayorga proved to be the architect of his own demise due to the predictably crass and provocative dismissals of his opponent during the fights promotion. Trinidad’s typically serene and respectful demeanor was broken down gradually by Mayorga’s remorselessly insulting tirades towards him; but Mayorga’s insistent goading was not a master-class of reverse psychology aimed to tempt Trinidad forward before a deceptive game-plan of evasiveness and textbook boxing would be revealed to defeat him as Hopkins had done. Mayorga harbored no such sophisticated ideology; his aim was to lure Trinidad into his clutches before administering the savagery that was his renown.

The euphoric raptures that enveloped Madison Square Gardens in those precious seconds before the opening bell affirmed that boxing is still loved and when real fights are given to them, the people are more than willing to show their ample affections. Mayorga’s greeting of Trinidad with almost two minutes of his swarming and wildly exciting advances was predictable but nonetheless hazardous for Trinidad to traverse en-route to completing his first round in over two years. However, Trinidad’s first truly venomous responses ignited the fire within Mayorga and the confrontation everyone had so desired would not be denied any longer. Suddenly alight with his famous bravado, Mayorga stood before his foe and dropped his hands, exposing his defiant features to an attack. When Mayorga had first delighted the boxing world with this impetuous display before former welterweight champion Vernon Forrest, he was answered with Forrest’s inherent caution before two calculated right hands from the American tempered Mayorga’s temerity. Trinidad however, possessed none of Forrest’s patience and inhibition; he leaned his weight into a left hook that Mayorga duly absorbed, but its accomplice shook the Nicaraguan Wildman, leaving the abrasions of concern upon his face and doubt upon his heart.

In the third, Trinidad’s penchant for instilling fear in the hearts of his millions of followers proved that his killer instinct was not all that had remained intact throughout his self-imposed ring exile. The Puerto Rican was adjudged by referee Steve Smoger to have touched the canvas in retreat from a left-right combination from Mayorga. This habitual aberration would only be consequential on the scorecards as Trinidad roared back to compensate for the indignation. Significantly, a distinct dynamic began to emerge. Usually, it was the posturing and subsequent mauling and marauding of Mayorga that dominated the audience’s consciousness throughout his fights. Here, it was Trinidad that heightened theintensity of the combat, stealing the eye with his sharpened combinations and eclipsing Mayorga’s efforts with consistent success. One punches’ impact inspired the roar from the crowd that spurred on its companion and one felt that the very will of the people was driving the action to an almost insurmountable crescendo.

By the fifth, Mayorga’s bewildered features had endured a tidal wave, a punishing barrage of virtually every punch in a fighter’s armory, all thrown with the same vicious accuracy. Suddenly, whatever thoughts of victory being entertained in Mayorga’s mind were engulfed then eroded by a relentless attack from Trinidad; the force of each blow compelling Mayorga’s body to the direction of its will. The only response came from Mayorga’s skin, which finally broke under his left eye leaving tears of blood streaming down his face. The sixth round was as close to surrender as Mayorga would approach. Exhaustion seemed to bind his guard, leaving his face vulnerable for the many unanswered punches Trinidad duly obliged to inflict. Referee Smoger administered warnings to Trinidad for low blows and Mayorga’s desperation began to mount as he belatedly complained in accordance with Smoger’s remonstrations. Mayorga’s last real offensive came at the round’s end but it was weakened, dispirited and quite futile under Trinidad’s onslaught.

The final two rounds saw Mayorga’s courage forced to its limits; it held to its task but threatened to fail him through his constant complaints. Mayorga was the fighter that bullied Cory Spinks and ridiculed him, even questioned his manhood when Spinks consistently fell to the floor in the fallout of their uncoordinated exchanges. Mayorga could escape accountability for the Spinks fight through spewing such negative allegations at Spinks and alluding to an underhanded conspiracy at his own expense, now against Trinidad, he was being removed from his pedestal by a force entirely more dangerous and irresistible than he had imagined.

In the eighth, Mayorga’s resistance finally crumbled under the scything effects of a left hook to the right side of his ribcage, the punishing and paralyzing blow that so completely condemned De La Hoya to defeat. However, Mayorga rose and stared defeat in the face advancing towards him in the shape of a Puerto Rican legend ravenously stalking his own redemption. Full of malicious inevitability, Trinidad raged forward once again until Mayorga collapsed a second time. At ringside, Don King was conspicuous by his decidedly vacant expression; the promoter, once agitated enough at the failings of Mike Tyson against Evander Holyfield to simulate the right hands Tyson would never land was stone-faced amid the clamor of Madison Square Garden. Trinidad compelled Mayorga to the canvas one last time, it was finally over, the agony, the ecstasy revealed in equal measure. As Mayorga’s beaten body lay shielded by Smoger, Trinidad strolled across the ring, he raised his arms to his adoring fans and felt home again.

A concept that solidifies my belief that fighters are a breed apart from all other athletes is that there is a unique space they enter in their darkest moments of combat. A place beyond the reaches of adversity, a wilderness of pain at the very mouth of defeat, a testament to the power of the mind in that when the body is failing, the mind has barely begun to summon its deadliest strength. All fighters must transcend the confines of themselves and negotiate this sacred ground on their path to true greatness, yet few instances of this appear before us in these modern times. The warrior has no choice but to take this way, and in my eyes, surviving its peril grants an affirmation worth more than any title. Such moments resonate through the ages like a singular euphoric moment of clarity in an otherwise cacophonous symphony. Trinidad walked that hallowed earth when he overcame Fernando Vargas; later he would weep at the magnitude of his struggle. In defying the limits of absorbable punishment and scorningthe inner reaches of our humanity, imploring him to take no more, Mayorga carved his own distinction on that same ground. Statisticians offer boxing as a measured world of precise and telling elements, of weight and physical dimension, but Mayorga’s performance was a demonstration of the spirit, a boundless and soulful expression beyond man’s comprehension and one that even defeat could not taint.

I once described Felix Trinidad as a fighter that does not simply beat a man, he ruins him. Before fighting Trinidad, Ricardo Mayorga was a man on a mission in search of his eight figure fight, after fighting Trinidad, Mayorga announced his retirement. By the time a fighter reaches the upper echelons of world class competition such as the Trinidad’s, Tszyu’s and De La Hoya’s of the world, they will have already notched up approximately twenty years of competitive fighting accompanied by the rigors of the training that is simply part of the territory. Trinidad and Tszyu used 2004 to write a new chapter for posterity; it tells of the fighter rejuvenated after a long spell away from the ring, not rusted and dormant. There was so much to admire in Trinidad’s work: the fluency of movement, the crisp combinations and the economy with which they were chosen, the alertness in defense, the focus and intensity and most certainly the pure and perhaps limitless power.

Bernard Hopkins defeated Trinidad three years ago and appeared to give us a gauge of the Puerto Rican’s range, an idea of his limitations. Certainly, Trinidad has not returned to go unchallenged and if vengeance lies in his heart, God help anyone who obstructs his path to Hopkins. Hopkins and De La Hoya have looked to the future and formed a progressive alliance that may see them usurp the positions of the monopolistic money men they once toiled beneath as fighters. For Trinidad, you sense that victory and glory is all there is and ever will be. Has this Felix Trinidad, a reinvigorated entity become an unanswerable challenge for Hopkins? We will see, but for now, he is what he has always been: a hero to his people, a champion of champions and a fighter needed now more than ever in the fight game.

Jim Cawkwell can be reached at jam2lis@sprint.ca

Post navigation

Previous Previous
Lee Meager Hits Out At Decision.
NextContinue
Riddick Bowe Injured.

Boxing Site Team

Owner/Webmaster:
Saddo 📧

Site Photographer:
Jane Warburton 📷
Site Writers:
(Click name to view all that writer’s work)
  • Curtis McCormick
  • Nick Chamberlain
  • Jose Espinoza
  • Robert Brizel
  • Richard Eberline
  • Danny Wilson
  • Bruce Dingo
  • Alejandro Tostado
  • Ricky Jones
  • Wellington Amadulu


RSS Feed

RSS Boxing Forum

  • Wilkens Mathieu Looks to Pass Another Test Against Esquiva Falcao in Quebec City 09/06/2026
    Originally published at: Wilkens Mathieu Looks to Pass Another Test Against Esquiva Falcao in Quebec City Wilkens Mathieu faces experienced Brazilian contender Esquiva Falcao in Quebec, with Mehmet Unal, Moreno Fendero, Leila Beaudoin and more featured on the DAZN card. 1 post - 1 participant Read full topic […]
  • Yuga “the king” fujiki 04/06/2026
    yuga “the king” fujiki isn’t just another prospect, he’s a phenomenon arriving with one of the most decorated amateur résumés of his generation. at just 18 years old, fujiki compiled an extraordinary 80–1 record with 50 stoppages, dominating every level he touched. he went 31–1 in junior high and a perfect 49–0 in high school, winning all nine tournaments he […]
  • Edward Vazquez and Daniel Lugo Clash for Vacant WBC USA Super Featherweight Title 04/06/2026
    Originally published at: Edward Vazquez and Daniel Lugo Clash for Vacant WBC USA Super Featherweight Title Edward Vazquez faces Daniel Lugo for the vacant WBC USA Super Featherweight title in Texas. Full preview of the ProBox TV card featuring Weljon Mindoro, Elias Espadas, Alan Garcia and more. 3 posts - 1 participant Read full topic […]
  • Lamont roach jr v william zepeda august 1st 03/06/2026
    6 posts - 4 participants Read full topic […]
  • Chris Billam-Smith vs Ryan Rozicki 03/06/2026
    Chris Billam Smith fighting for Zuffa for the first time this Saturday. I think he is being set up to face Jai Opetia later in the contract. CBS became world champion when more talented British boxers like Okole and Riakporhe did not. In fact he beat both and forced them to go up to heavyweight. Chris got easily beaten by Zurdo in a unification and we all kn […]
  • Ramirez and Richards Finally Get It On In Montreal 02/06/2026
    Originally published at: Ramirez and Richards Finally Get It On In Montreal Albert Ramirez and Lerrone Richards finally meet in Montreal on June 4 in a light heavyweight main event that pits power against movement. The Eye of the Tiger card also features Imam Khataev, Dzmitry Asanau, Jhon Orobio and several unbeaten prospects. 2 posts - 2 participants Read f […]
  • Julius “juju” ballo (tic’s prospect watch) 29/05/2026
    julius “juju” ballo has basically been around boxing his whole life. started training at 3 years old and stepped into his first amateur fight at just 8. now he’s sitting at 3-0 as a pro and already looking like one of the smoother young talents coming out of san diego. the amateur background speaks for itself too. usa national champion in 2021 and 2022, juni […]
  • Charlie Edwards and Sikho Nqothole Make Weight Ahead of York Hall Eliminator 28/05/2026
    Originally published at: Charlie Edwards and Sikho Nqothole Make Weight Ahead of York Hall Eliminator Charlie Edwards and Sikho Nqothole both made weight ahead of their IBF super flyweight eliminator at York Hall, while Dan Toward, Jak Corrie, James Osborne and Ollie Cooper exchanged heated words at the weigh-in. 7 posts - 3 participants Read full topic […]
  • Amanda Serrano vs Cheyenne Hanson Preview: Serrano Returns On Packed MVP Card In El Paso 28/05/2026
    Originally published at: Amanda Serrano vs Cheyenne Hanson Preview: Serrano Returns On Packed MVP Card In El Paso Amanda Serrano defends her WBO featherweight title against Cheyenne Hanson in El Paso on a packed Most Valuable Promotions card featuring Yokasta Valle vs Lourdes Juarez, Holly Holm vs Stephanie Han and multiple world title fights. 13 posts - 4 p […]
  • Adam Azim Faces Tough Steve Claggett Test At Wembley Arena On BOXXER Fight Night 27/05/2026
    Originally published at: Adam Azim Faces Tough Steve Claggett Test At Wembley Arena On BOXXER Fight Night Adam Azim returns to Wembley Arena on Saturday to face tough Canadian veteran Steve Claggett in a 12-round super lightweight main event, with Juergen Uldedaj vs Muhsin Cason and Francesca Hennessy vs Aurora De Persio adding title fight depth to the BOXXE […]
  • Where does Usyk go from here? 27/05/2026
    For once, I’m totally on board with the WBC. WBC moves to shut down Usyk-Verhoeven rematch talk I personally have NO wish to see a rematch between Rico and Usyk. Call it defensiveness of our sport. Just like I thought Fury’s narrow escape against Ngannou was cringeworthy… I also feel a sense of dread that we came “this close” to having a kickboxer defeat the […]
  • Murat Gassiev v Tony Yoka 27/05/2026
    July 11th in Russia the 2 will face one another for the WBA title. Glad Yoka has been given this opportunity although this is in Moscow. 9 posts - 4 participants Read full topic […]
  • Why was Usyk so bad? 27/05/2026
    What was the major factor for Usyk to perform so poorly against Rico? Rico better than expected, skilled kick boxer, huge size, awkward style, surprise element? Age of Usyk finally showing up? Weight Usyk was too heavy? Usyk not taking the fight seriously? Ukraine war on his mind? 7 posts - 5 participants Read full topic […]
  • Charlie Edwards vs Sikho Nqothole Preview: York Hall Eliminator 26/05/2026
    Originally published at: Charlie Edwards vs Sikho Nqothole Preview: York Hall Eliminator Charlie Edwards returns to York Hall against Sikho Nqothole in a crucial super flyweight clash on May 29, while unbeaten prospects and domestic title contenders fill out a competitive London card. 2 posts - 1 participant Read full topic […]
  • Jai Opetaia saying what many of us think 26/05/2026
    Jai Opetaia Says Boxing Rewards Talk More Than Skill This has long been a thought of mine, but of course it’s always refreshing when an actual boxer says it. Jai is obviously considered by most to be the top dog at cruiser, a division which unfortunately lacks the big names. Surely avoided by many. It could be speculated that at some point Jai could follow t […]

© 2026 Saddo Boxing News

  • Home
  • Boxing Forum
  • Boxing Videos
  • Contact