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For Cotto fans!
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For Cotto fans!
great post CC
Wicked read,CC. I really hope Miguel reverts to being more of a boxer particularly against the monsters like Williams and Margarito and the slick guys like Quintana and Collazo! I'm nervous but confident,we shall find out soon enough if he suits the weight.
Thanks El Gamo - a few spellings need sorting out but overall im happy with it.
I preferred to write a 'factual' piece rather than an opinion.
Miguel Cotto en la division Welter, va ser un monstro en el ring.
What will Hatton do? Should he vacant and run? Or should he stay and defend?
I would love to see this fight in both the 140 and the 147. Wouldn't you?
BTW nice read. Cotto is by far my favorite fighter today.
Great read. I cant wait to see who his next opponent is gona be.
Great article with some good facts. The only thing he forgot to mention was the left hand fracture on the Paulie fight.
Cotto Would NOT Beat Hatton.....
No one would at 140 not even Flloyd
Cotto destruiría hatton muy rápidamenteQuote:
Originally Posted by B@rr3r@
Sin duda alguna
Spouting off random arguments/statements with no basis on fact whatsoever...and neither Cotto nor PBF are at 140.Quote:
Originally Posted by B@rr3r@
Cotto hasnt yet fought at 147, so Barrera is kinda right....and I kinda agree with him. Im not as sure on the outcome but Hatton would beat Cotto at 140 and would give PBF fits...Quote:
Originally Posted by El Gamo
Floyd would out box Ricky Hatton and Cotto would eventually adapt to Rickys constant jump in and grab you technique and eventually Ricky would get dropped. You think Ricky's face looked bad after the Collazo fight? Lol Cotto would turn Ricky into the elephant man. Both of these fighters would beat Hatton because they have more skills and they have more brains. Floyd would cry again and again to the ref about Ricky's holding. (I Think PBF's elbow would be all in Hatton's face too) Cotto would eventually keep hitting Ricky below the belt and put Ricky in check for doing so much grabbing.Quote:
Originally Posted by El Gamo
Cotto really doesnt strike me as being a skilled fighter. He seems to make his fights more difficult than what they are on paper...Quote:
Originally Posted by Danny_G
Hatton would beat him concisively....PBF is a different story...
There were people on the net on another forum, saying Cotto was slow, he had no skills, he was one dimensional and that he would be exposed by Paulette Malignaggi. I found out later that most of these were white or Italian people who had never followed Miguel's Career at all. They were all just saying the same things over and over again. I was like WTF are these people smoking? The only thing I could not argue was that maybe, just maybe Cotto has looked a little chinny but that has not stopped him from brawling. The early Cotto was slick, with a turtle shell defense who would go to the body like nobody elses business and did a great job of cutting off the ring. He has changed a lot since then and I have seen him do a lot of different things since he turned pro. He has a lot of gears. I like the early Cotto who would not allow himself to get hit so much. His corner tells him to do one thing and he ends up just going out there and doing what he feels like doing. This might come back to haunt him? I don't know. I think that is what Evangelista Cotto is there for right. I think we will see a the old Cotto again once the opposition get's better. I will give credit to Ricky for stopping an old Kostya Tszyu, we can't take that away from him. The Collazo fight was a tough challenge for Ricky and he should move back down and duck Cotto as Cotto is rumored to move up. Collazo does not have near as much pop in his pep as Cotto does. At 140 it would be a tougher fight for Cotto. @ 147 it would be a tougher fight for Ricky. I still put my money on Cotto based on what I have seen both fighters do in the ring.Quote:
Originally Posted by miles
Cotto vs common opponets
Sosa- tko 4 mayweather ud12- paul spadafora 12 ud
branco-tko 8 Gatti 12 ud
corley tko 5 mayweather 12ud- judah 12 sd
maussa-tko8 hatton 9ko
hernadez tko7 cotto-tko7 harris ud12-urango-tko2 d-hop ud8
on papper cotto did much better than some other fighters so if he made them more difficult what about these other fighters?
I think miguel is a very patient fighter.
But when you see how fast he has stopped some opponents it goes against that.
The excitment and energy seems to be most apparent in my personal opinion, when he fights at home.
The vibe and relaxation of home soil, seems to make miguel throw caution to the wind and go to war.
When miguel fights in the USA, he seems more methodical and concious of his technical performance.
A good blend of the two styles would be the 'ideal Cotto'.
ok now im not just saying this because he is from pr but im saying this based on his style and some other things but cotto is a carbon copy of tito because of these 3 reasons. 1.i dont beilieve that his defence is up to par. 2. he is very offensive minded. and 3. that questionable CHIN ( im not sayin that that colombian wasnt tough as rocks) but i beilive if cotto goes against some one who can box he will be exposed such as tito was with b-hopalicious and the winkalicious winkster
Quote:
Originally Posted by ELBI16
Diagree bo,he has a great jab,he has awesome awesome body shots and if he can learn to cut off the ring effectively,I think he would do well against a boxer,he has the tools whereas Tito was more of KO headhunter type of guy,rarely using bodywork or a jab.He didn't need to! His defence was poor against Torres and he got caught by Corley but other than that,I mean against Pauli,he was taking ALOT of the shots on the gloves,I was impressed by his D. Cotto has also said that he knows he needs to box more so I don't think he will be going for KO anymore,hopefully not!
I agree bro, Cotto is technically sound! He tends to throw caution to the wind at times though. If he sticks to his game plan & boxes more than brawls he won't get caught like he did against Corley & Torres. He seemed a little to eager & left himself open. Cotto is gonna be tough to beat if he continues to fight smart.Quote:
Originally Posted by El Gamo
Anyone got any idea who he's fighting next?
Well he was supposed to fight Urkal for Hatton's vacant title but that appears to be in doubt at this moment because Carlos Quintana is actually the number 1 contender and has said that either he wants to fight Urkal for the title OR he wants Cotto,neither move being good for Cotto. Cotto's promoters have said to Quintana that he can fight the winner but he is not interested in being shafted! I'm not sure what is going to happen!
Ricky Hatton, speaking about Cotto plus others in this months boxing monthly:
ARTURO GATTI
It would always be an honour to fight Arturo. I was praying he’d beat Baldomir. Then it was game on for us and the money would’ve been great.
Arturo’s such a big name, i’m sure people would still turn out but he’s not the scalp he would’ve been since losing to Mayweather and Baldomir.
Will he continue to fight? I don’t think so and who can blame him if he hangs ‘em up. People are starting to worry for his health.
Him and me would’ve been something else excitement-wise. Unfortunately, I think it’ll be the fight that got away.
FLOYD MAYWEATHER
That’s the dream because Floyd’s No. 1 pound-for-pound on the planet. Already, I’ve surpassed my wildest dreams. Four world title belts. Fought at Madison Square Garden and Las Vegas. If I could beat him there’d be nothing more for me.
But a fight with Floyd is not part of my current HBO deal which is a blessing. On 2 October, I’m due in court with Frank Warren and I want that concluded. You want to be fighting Floyd Mayweather with a clear head.
It wouldn’t be hard to get up for Mayweather. He’s got a bad attitude. Apparently, he told Sugar Ray Leonard that he’d have knocked him out! When I offered him my hand, away from the fans and the media, he’s refused to shake. Who wants to be considered best, pound-for pound, when everyone thinks you’re a dickhead!
That said, I've got respect blowing out my arse for Floyd as a fighter. How’d I beat him? Duran-Leonard 1. Floyds got such a box of tricks so you cant t let him use them. If Zab Judah had shown just a little more guts and workrate down the stretch, he’d have run Mayweather close.
Remember, I get better as the fight goes on. I’ve got the style to beat him.
While I consider myself the best light-welter in the world, I’d fight Floyd at either 140 or 147. When he weighs in at 147, he fights around 149-150. Either division, I’m the stronger man.
MIGUEL COTTO
I'd have that next (9 December). After all his chat, well see if Bob Arum really wants it.
I’m a fan. I love watching Cotto but, though he’s beat some good men, he’s not really been let off the leash against the crème de la crème yet.
Personally, I'd rather do that one at light-welter. I think I do 140 more comfortably than Miguel. Even training at 100-plus degrees over in Puerto Rico, he’s not looked sensational over the last 12 months so he must be tight. Yet, for me, its actually getting easier. Look at the pace I sustained against Tszyu and Maussa.
The fight could go only one way. War!
We both prefer a rumble so don’t expect much jab and moving. He’s a classy, solid puncher himself. There’ll not be much in it.
But he doesn’t like a hot pace. He likes to nick little breathers like Eubank did.
Who’ll fold first? Definitely not me. But I might have to get up off the floor to beat him.
JUNIOR WITTER
Provided Junior beats Corley in style, there’s a strong possibility that fight will be made soon.
Junior will need to be a damn sight better than he’s been in his last two but maybe he just needs a fight he can get up for. I expect him to beat Corley, who’s top 10 but always comes second against the cream.
From a purely personal dimension, he’s the one id like most, more than Floyd Mayweather even.
Juniors been very disrespectful, particularly after I won my British title against Jon Thaxton.
We should’ve fought back then but were told to let the fight brew so we could fight for more money. But, while Frank Warren built me up, because of my fan base, Junior was kept in six-rounders.
Part of me says why grant him the biggest payday of his career when he’s been so disrespectful? But I would like the fight because I genuinely feel ill beat him.
Witter’s gone very quiet regarding me over the past 18 months, hasn’t he? He prays on confidence but, against Judah, as soon as things weren’t going quite right for him, he went all negative.
In a fight with me, I expect him to resort to old habits and cover more ground than Forrest Gump. I'll break his heart.
On the evidence of Junior’s last two fights, ill stop him in six rounds.
JOSE LUIS CASTILLO
Castillo’s certainly a scalp to put my name in lights when I’ve hung my gloves up. He’s an ex-world champion and always in great fights, which is what develops great fighters.
It could only be a toe-to-toe war. Similar to a Cotto fight. I’m sure there’d be times I'd have to suck it up and take my digs.
Castillio, back down at light-welter, would be my next fight of choice.
To a degree, I feel I’m giving my opposition a head start, half a chance, fighting up at welter. But, at light-welter in a tear up, I know I’m too strong for any of them. I’m sharper at 140 and I'm able to bully people.
Nice article and find Hacienda.
Ricky is a pretty stand up guy. It's hard to hate on him outside the ring.
I would love to see him and Cotto fight at 140 but I really want to see Cotto at 147. The struggle of making weight at 140 :-\ what can I say.
Gracias X el articulo Hacienda te debo un CC.
Paz
I wonder what Floyd is going to say when he reads/hears that Ricky called him a dickhead ;D
Oh My! Them is fighting words ;D
ningún amigo de problemo
CC Danny G
Great find!
I doubt that Cotto is going back to 140. If this fight happens it have to be at 147. Hatton will be getting up off the floor as he said, but he will not be beating count. 8)
Amazing aint it how he has such kind words for Gatti Cotto and Castillo
yet calls Mayweather a dickhgead
rickys genuine so i think that says alot about the guys he talks about
Mayweather really is a prick
great boxer
but still a prick
if cotto were to meet castillo at 147 because we know that he has trouble making 140. I beilieve that castillo would outbox him and maybe even tko him. castillo is one of the most underated fighters today and i just dont think that cotto would have any answers to his superb boxing skill. Cotto is too green for any top welters except hatton at 147 i think he would have good chance against him. O0
Miguel Cotto is fast becoming a phenomena within the wider boxing public, adored by thousands of Boricua’s (Puerto Ricans) across the planet as the natural successor to the mighty Tito Trinidad and has been established their number 1 boxing icon in a similar vein as Ricky Hatton is to the British public or the legend-killer Manny Pacquiao is to the Philippines.
Miguel was born in October 1980 and stands at 5’8, first began fighting at the age of 9 years old. He is married to Melissa and has 3 children. He started boxing at the Barioa boxing gym under the tutelage of his uncle who helped him develop in a fine amateur, even representing his country Puerto Rico at the Sydney 2000 Olympics.
It was at these Olympics that Miguel was sadly eliminated during the first round, but the Amateur’s games loss was the professional game’s gain as Miguel decided that his relentless hard-hitting style was certainly more suited to the professional game.
His career caught fire from an early stage , knocking out Jason Doucet in round 1 in Texas in 2001 and during his first 10 fights scored 8 KO’s and only 2 went the 4-round distance where by he won unanimous decisions both times.
During only his 6th professional fight he starred in a 2 round destruction of Arturo Rodriguez on a star studded bill at the Staples centre featuring Mayorga, Eric Morales and Roy Jones Junior – this was just the start of an exciting career – but as quickly as it began, it nearly ended just as quickly when once dark 5am morning, Miguel crashed his car badly and was hospitalized with a severely broken arm.
Luckily for him, the doctors did a fine job that day and Miguel, after a few months recuperating finally resumed training the gym. This career scare re-focused Miguel’s mind as to the importance of boxing in his life.
On the 22nd of June 2002 he starred on the undercard of the Barrera V Morales, knocking out Ugandan Justin Juuko in only round 5 of a scheduled 10 rounder. Miguel Cotto had now begun his ascendancy into his own stratosphere, featuring in a big televised fight with none other than Joe Cortez refereeing the bout.
2003 seen Miguel (nicknamed Junito) continue his successful journey by stopping former title challenger Demetrio Ceballos by KO inround 7 in las vegas on the Shane Mosely – De La Hoya undercard, establishing himself as the No1 contender in the WBA rankings.
Victoriano Sosa was battered by way of 4th round KO in 2004 – promptly followed by yet another car accident, this time being driven by his wife Melissa ! fortunately Miguel and the family were relatively unscathed and the next day he flew out to New York with his long term pal Ivan Calderon to partake in some promotional activities. 2004 continued with a unanimous decision over the tough as teak Lovemore N’dou.
The year continued with 2 more KO’s – Kelson Pinto (a man who beat Cotto as an amatuer) was dispatched in only 6 rounds with Miguel collecting his WBO world title. Pinto, who was a tough unbeaten prospect was taken care of in style by way of Cotto’s supreme power shots. December 2004 seen another KO –that of Randall Bailey who was stopped by the doctor after having both eyes cut open by Cotto’s artillery. This was on the Klitschko-Williams undercard in Las Vegas.
2004 was a perfect boxing year for Miguel, ending it with the accolode of ‘Puerto Rico Fighter of the Year’. Miguel was now of age as a true headlining warrior, his combination of steely determination, patience and punching power had instilled him as not only a Boricua favourite – but an international star.
February 2005 seen a red hot confrontation with the slick DeMarcus Corley, a former world champion. This bout was very exciting – the powerful Cotto against the slick experienced Corley. For the first time Miguel was rocked by a shot to the temple by DeMarcus, which staggered the champion momentarily – only for Miguel to roar back and stop the former champion inside the distance.
Controversy surrounded the stoppage, with people complaining that Corley wasn’t out for the count and was still in the fight – but this was just sour grapes and the referee had probably done Corley a favour in hindsight – especially compared to the physical carnage Cotto’s brutal power has caused to his recent opponents.
June 2005 seen the much awaited, highly anticipated bout between Miguel and Mohamed Abdulhaev (photo). Mohamed was the last name in the pro game that had beaten Cotto as an amatuer. Concerns were raised as to whether Mohamed was too slick for Cotto – did he have the blue print to beat Miguel? Afterall he had sent Miguel packing in the very first round of the Olympics.
Gold medalist Mohamed was taken care of in style, with Miguel opting for different tactics and patience – ending with Mohamed having an eye closed and the fight stopped in Cotto’s favour. Another test completed.
September 2005 seen the very first toe to toe ‘all out war’ for Miguel. Ricardo Torres was a last minute replacement for the injured Gianluca Branco.
Torres, who came with an undefeated record and huge KO ratio of 28 fights / 27 KO’s was labeled a ‘padded fighter’ – a guy whom had scored victorys over B class opposition… how wrong they were!
Cotto started the first round in fierce fashion, scoring a knockdown of the big punching Columbian 25 year old. But Torres roared back had his power was evident as he gave Miguel all sorts of problems. Round 2 began with Miguel dictating the pace, only for Torres to break through with a blistering punch which sent Cotto reeling to the ropes. Torres launched an all out assault and the Cotto fans in the audience were clinging to there seats as Miguel was sent crashing to the floor after taking a brutal barrage from Ricardo. The fist that put him down was half punch / half push but the referee began counting and Miguel stood up and re-grouped himself.
The assault by Torres had tired him and a few little dramas later, was put on the canvas himself – before ultimately being outclassed and outgunned by the champion in the 7th round.
Reviewers examined Cotto’s performance and some negativity was given over Cotto being floored – but the fact he got back up and continued to stand toe to toe with Torres showed tremedous heart and his vulnerblity. That night won him even more fans as the excitement reached new levels in his fights – even Torres earned himself countless new fans and respect from even the most staunch Cotto fans.
March 2006 seen Miguel take on the original opponent – Branco – and gave a stylish performance against the heavy underdog. Branco pulled out through injury in the 8th round and it was later disclosed he had a dislocated shoulder – another stoppage on Miguel’s record.
June 2006 seen Miguel face the unbeaten, feather-punching but slick Paulie Malignaggi. When the fight was announced many people where unsuprised that Miguel had taken an ‘easy’ fight for the date at Madison Square Garden on Puerto Rico day. But as the fight drew clearer and his opponent became more known, concerns began the surface as to whether Miguel could live with Paulie’s supreme speed. Could Miguel catch him clean and end the night early? Or could Paulie ‘steal’ the fight with his jab and footwork?
Controversy surrounded the weigh-in – as the usual 5pm deadline before fight-time was put back to 1pm. Paulie’s camp argued that because Miguel gained so much weight and power between the scales and the ring, that this would be an unfair advantage to the champion.
Concerns from the Cotto fans also surrounded the publicly known struggle, that Cotto had in boiling down his powerful body to make the 140lb limit.
The weigh-in controversy continued to bubble and eventually the weigh in happened at around 3pm on the day prior to fight time. The main surprise was that Miguel actually weighed ¼ pound less than Paulie come scale time ! And was seen as a tactical decision to lose some bulk in a trade off for some extra speed.
Fight night presented a tremendous atmoshpere and the Puerto Rican fans made it known to Paulie as he entered the ring that he was the lamb and their boy Cotto was the butcher. The fight itself began with a little needle between the fighters and started fast with Paulie put the jab on Cotto – and arguably won round 1. All was going smoothly for the confident Malignaggi – but it was confidence that would be his undoing. Paulie was moving nicely and looking slick, but kept keeping his hands low, especially the right. Miguel (who is actually left-handed but fights orthadox) unleashed a ripping left hook and dropped Paulie to the deck.
Paulie, although cut, began to adjust his style after the shock knockdown and it continued to serve him well. Although he was mostly the busiest fighter, it was Cotto who was picking his heavier punches and catching the eye. Although the fight went the distance it was obvious that Cotto was the clear winner, albeit close.
Paulie, after all the talk leading up to the fight, put his chin where his mouth was and although he lost, he wasn’t really a ‘loser’ and his heart and desire won him many new admirers. Although afterwards Paulie’s swollen cheek was confirmed as being broken by the powerful hook that Cotto repeatedly landed during the course of the fight and subsequently required surgery to remedy – even more testament to Cotto’s heavy hands.
What now for Miguel? Well the rumour mill is mentioning his inevitable move up to welterweight (147lb) will come in December with potentially the WBA belt up for grabs (should Hatton choose to vacate it). For me personally I would want the next fight to be against the Hitman himself – as I feel stylistically this fight could be explosive. Mayweather sure has the world at his feet, but I feel that Cotto V Hatton is a much more mouth watering prospect and I do very much hope that Bob Arum can make this fight happen during 2007. Perhaps if the two fighters reside in different divisions next year, then certainly a catch-weight fight at say, 144 could certainly be an option Puerto Rico and Manchester would love to see.
I heard that Cotto is fighting the other Clottey brother ?
Is this true?
Quintana wont step aside for the WBA shot....
So Tito had a questionable chin..... Laughable.Quote:
Originally Posted by ELBI16
Did not everyone and their mother think that Paulie Malignaggi could box? Didnt a lot of people say Cotto would be terribly exposed by Malignaggi? Can Paulie box? Yes. Was Cotto exposed? No. Cotto hurt his hand and that is why Paulie was able to go the distance.Quote:
Originally Posted by p4pking
I think that Pauli is a tough mofo with skills is just his mouth that doesn't have control but it did help to hype the bout to sell more. Cotto is great but then again he still to be proven on the last level where all the big names are witch there only a few I'm one of his followers not a bandwagon guy but a good follower an suppoter, but I'm first a boxing fan then a Boxer fan.
it seems TORRES is fighting Mighty Mike next.... will be a good fight.
Any news on who Cotto is facing ? its seems to be uncertain now Viv Harris is not a option anymore.
With junior welterweight titlist Miguel Cotto headed up to welterweight for a Dec. 2 Showtime fight, he plans to vacate his 140-pound belt. The move will clear the path for Ricardo Torres -- who pushed Cotto to the brink in a courageous defeat last September -- to face Mike Arnaoutis for the vacant title. They will probably meet Nov. 18 on the Manny Pacquiao-Erik Morales III HBO PPV undercard. Torres' promoter Top Rank and Arnaoutis' promoter Joe DeGuardia have been working on an agreement for a couple of weeks. "Certainly it is a fight we expect to take place soon, and if it turns out to be in November on HBO PPV, that would be great," DeGuardia told ESPN.com. "I think we'll end up coming to an agreement. It's good for both fighters and it's good for the promoter who's guy wins. It makes sense for all of us to make the fight." Neither fighter has gotten much work lately. Arnaoutis (17-0-2, 9 KOs), who suffered a cut in training and withdrew from a July fight with Vivian Harris, has scored three consecutive first-round knockouts since December. Torres (29-1, 27 KOs) scored a second-round knockout in June, his only bout since the seventh-round knockout loss to Cotto
nice I like mighty mike arnautis he has good skills but suddenly he grew a big mouth but thats the only way they can be notice