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News ID: 118246
Publish Date : 14 August 2023 - 21:43

Navarrete Dominates Valdez in ‘Battle of Mexico’

ARIZONA (AFP) - Emanuel
Navarrete didn’t have the high profile that his opponent, Oscar Valdez, enjoyed heading into their bout for the WBO super featherweight title at Desert Diamond Arena in Glendale, Arizona.
He left with the belt, the biggest win of his career and a greatly enhanced reputation after pounding out a unanimous decision over Valdez, the former champion. Judges scored it 116-112, 118-110 and 119-109 for Navarrete, who won the fight by pouring on the pressure.
Even an injured, possibly broken, hand could not slow him. He landed 72 power punches total in the first seven rounds according to CompuBox, but connected on 104 in the last five.
He hurt Valdez and commanded his respect early on in the fight. Valdez was staggered several times in the early rounds and dug himself a hole.
The fight was billed as the “Battle of Mexico,” and Top Rank brought in legendary Hall of Famers Erik Morales and Marco Antonio Barrera to take part in the festivities. Julio Cesar Chavez Sr., the greatest Mexican-born boxer ever, was working a Spanish-language TV broadcast.
The fight didn’t come close to matching the brilliance of the three Barrera-Morales fights, which remain among the greatest in this century. It was still, though, a stirring and dramatic bout as each man poured his heart out and had to overcome serious adversity at some point.
“I want to thank everyone who was here watching because you were able to witness the next chapter in the great Mexican rivalries,” Navarrete said in the ring afterward. “I want to thank Oscar, as well, because he came out and gave all his heart. We performed everything that we promised we would.”
Valdez’ right eye was a grotesque mess by the midpoint of the fight and it was so bad during the final three rounds one wondered why the referee didn’t consider stopping the bout. Valdez was making Navarrete miss, but true to his style, Navarrete was simply a workhorse.
In a fight at this level, it’s often the fighter with the higher connect percentage who wins, and Valdez connected on 32 percent of his blows compared to just 21 percent for Navarrete. But Navarrete threw an astounding 1,038 punches, 602 more than Valdez. He connected on 216 shots, 76 more than Valdez.
He did it mostly with the jab, sometimes out of plan and often by necessity. His jab tore Valdez apart and kept him in range for Navarrete to land his right hand. When the right was so painful that Navarrete went a round without using it, it was the jab that carried him.