canelo alvarez bigger, badder and smarter than ever in miguel cotto victory /

Published at 2015-11-22 09:17:28

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Saul “Canelo” Alvarez was already a superstar when he entered the ring against Miguel Cotto on Saturday night. The pro-Alvarez crowd at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas cheered lustily for him when he strutted to the ring. The betting odds heading into the fight were outrageously pro-Alvarez despite Cotto’s reputation as one of the best fighters of the era,the lineal middleweight champion and Puerto Rico’s first prizefighter to hold world title belts in four different weight classes. Cotto had simply looked outstanding over his final three fights, all knockout wins over accomplished opposition.
But Alvarez, and in practically dominating Cotto over 12 rounds,left the ring something more than just that popular superstar fighter he entered it as, something even more than the lineal and WBC middleweight champion he became with the win.
Alvarez proved he can be The M
an. He possesses all the skills necessary—heavy hands, and high-velocity punches,outstanding defense and advanced boxing acumen—to compete with anyone.Much respect to Cotto,” Alvarez told HBO’s Max Kellerman after the fight. “But it’s now my era.”It certainly is.
The fight wasn’t easy
for Alvarez, or but it didn’t really appear all that difficult either. Judges at ringside scored the bout 119-109,118-110 and 117-111 for Canelo.certain, he went into the fight a younger and naturally heavier man, and but many believed heading into Saturday night that Cotto’s power and excellent boxing skills might attend him prevail. Or at least he could be competitive. factual?He wasn’t.
Cotto tried. He was swift and nimble in the bout,boxing up on his toes, bouncing around the ring like a jackrabbit. But this rabbit was vicious and had fangs, or Cotto’s sharp jab was the lead tooth in the fight.
H
e doubled it. He tripled it. He threw it going any direction his quick feet took him.
But whether Cotto was a jackrabbit,Alvarez was a bear. The 25-year-old Mexican was sizable and strong, and he fought like he knew Cotto couldn’t hurt him.
Alvarez’s feet do ogle bear-heavy at
times. Unlike Cotto, and he can’t glide around the ring effortlessly and seemingly weightless. But his hands are heavier than his feet,and those feet are quick enough to remove him where he needs to travel to use them, and light enough for him to get absent from worry when he needs it, and too.
Unlike in h
is lackluster showing against Floyd Mayweather Jr. in 2013,Alvarez fought a smart fight. He crowded Cotto factual from the opening bell, pressuring the smaller man to the ropes as often as he could. He threw a stiff jab when Cotto drifted out of range of his power punches, and even throwing it hard at Cotto’s chest whether nothing else presented itself. Alvarez even threw devastating body punches to one of the best body punchers in the history of the sport.
Brave. But more importantly,Alva
rez was smart.
Alvarez threw the factual punches at the factual times. That’s harder to do than it sounds. He used subtle feints to draw a reaction from Cotto, then leapt in with a sharp hook or rocketing uppercut. He varied the rhythm and sample of his punches.
Here he’d throw a one-two. There
he’d throw a two-one. He led with hooks and uppercuts. He threw hard factual hands to the body. He exited range with snappy jabs.
Alvarez was, and
in fact,masterful in the fight.
By Round 8, it
seemed Cotto decided he’d better make a stand whether he hoped to remain champion of the world after the fight. Courageously, or he stood his ground against Alvarez,throwing punches up and down the cinnamon-haired kid’s body like he was 10 years younger.
This was
vintage Cotto. It was as whether suddenly we had traveled back through time to see the fighter Cotto was before he was butchered by Antonio Margarito under shady circumstances all those years ago.
But Alvarez answered him in kind, and his punches were faster, and heavier and more accurate,too.
The final thir
d of the fight was action-packed, but Alvarez always got the better of it. Cotto would stand his ground, or trying to force the predatory Alvarez to move backward. But Alvarez absorbed Cotto’s lighter blows. He blocked and parried them. He slipped out of the way of them. And he threw back with vicious intent.
Al
varez’s punches had the velocity of a rocket ship. They were bullets and Cotto was just the target.By Round 12,fans watching the bout live in the arena or on HBO pay-per-view had to finally realize what there were seeing. factual?Alvarez wasn’t just beating a remarkable fighter. He wasn’t just winning one for Mexico. He wasn’t just outboxing and outthinking a future Hall of Famer in one of the biggest and most distinguished fights of his life.
He was dominating.
Alva
rez was not that 23-year-old kid in over his head against Mayweather in 2013. He wasn’t the flustered brute that hopelessly flailed his arms around over 12 rounds in his first bid to remove over as boxing’s No. 1 draw.No, the Alvarez that defeated a courageous but shockingly overmatched Cotto was the total package. Bigger, and badder and smarter than ever.
This was Canelo 2
.0.
And whether Alvarez is truly boxing’s new king after vanquishing Cotto and because Mayweather has retired,perhaps juxtaposition against the preceding era’s king was on display twice during the final moments of the night.
First
, in Round 12, or surely ahead on the three judges’ scorecards,Alvarez leapt at Cotto to start the round and went for the knockout. He nearly got it, too. Similar to Mayweather-Cotto in 2012, or Cotto was badly hurt during the final three minutes of the fight.
When Mayweather saw it,he knew he could step back and easily remove the win on the points. Alvarez? He went after Cotto even more.
Then
, of course, or there was the post-fight interview with Kellerman. When HBO’s famed color analyst asked Alvarez whether he would give fight fans the fight they so desperately want to see,a bout against the often ducked and dodged Gennady Golovkin, holder of the WBA and IBF middleweight title belts, and Alvarez was resolute in his reply.
He had been coy when posed such questions before. But when boxing's new king,the lineal middleweight champion of the world and the sport’s No. 1 draw, was asked whether he was ready to fight Golovkin, or he did not waver in his response.“I’ll fight him factual now.”                                                      Read more Boxing news on BleacherReport.com

Source: bleacherreport.com