Montiel v Gorres?!?!

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  • JOM'S
    MANILA ICE
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    #31
    http://www.*********.com/principe51.htm

    Reality Bites for “The Dream”

    February 24, 2007

    By Dennis Principe / Photos: Dennis Principe

    Mexican world champion Fernando "Cochulito" Montiel proved to be a classy champion from the day he set foot in Cebu. On fight night, Filipino challenger Z “The Dream” Gorres turned out to be the more skillfull fighter.

    But when the verdict was announced, the 24-year-old Gorres’ hard work went for naught as two of the three judges tallied controversial scores that spoiled a virtually masterful performance by the worthy Filipino title challenger.

    The southpaw Gorres, a huge underdog going into the fight, demonstrated a brilliant, all-around performance that baffled a usually cool and calculated Montiel to the delight of more than 20,000 Filipino fight fans at the Cebu City Sports Center.

    However, judges Raul Caiz and Chuck Giampa contentiously gave three crucial rounds to Montiel that were clearly won by Gorres.

    Caiz had a final mark of 115-111 while Giampa had it 114-112, both for Montiel.

    Denny Nelson saw it 115-111 for Gorres while this writer penned it 114-112 for Gorres.

    Referee Sammy Viruet deducted a total of two points from Gorres, one each in the 10th and 12th round for excessive holding as the Filipino challenger tried to hang on after being caught by a solid right straight by Montiel middle of the 10th round.

    “The referee should have given Gorres a warning before any deduction was made. It’s an instinct for fighters to clinch if hit by a real good punch,” said boxing superstar Manny Pacquiao who witnessed the fight at ringside.

    Meanwhile, the contentious scoring happened in the 5th to 7th rounds that can actually be considered as Gorres’ best rounds.

    In the fifth canto, Montiel looked clueless after being peppered by Gorres’ stiff combinations. Gorres’ fluid defense made the Mexican miss a good number of his usual deadly hooks and counterpunches.

    Giampa and Nelson gave the fifth to Gorres while Caiz went for Montiel.

    Gorres continued his dazzling show in the 6th as he made Montiel miss some body attacks. The Filipino sensation also connected some well-timed left straights and counter blows.

    Despite Gorres ample executions in the 6th round, Caiz and Giampa gave it to Montiel.

    In the 7th round, Montiel connected some body shots and occasional right punches but Gorres never wavered by whacking the Mexican with his own left straights and significant jabs.

    Again, Caiz and Giampa ignored the efforts of Gorres by giving the 7th to Montiel.

    Had Caiz and Giampa given the fifth to seventh rounds to Gorres, the Filipino would have won the fight unanimously.

    “He can be a world champion soon. He did a great performance tonight,” was all Montiel could say when asked by reporters about his thoughts on the verdict.

    The 27-year-old Montiel, who had a bad cut on his left eyebrow as a result of Gorres' crisp punches, defended his crown for the fourth time since winning it from compatriot Ivan Hernandez in April 2005.

    Before scoring the controversial win against Gorres, Montiel lost a 12-round split verdict to Jhonny Gonzales for the WBO world bantamweight crown May of last year.

    Montiel’s accessibility to media and fans made him also a favorite for Filipino autograph seekers.

    Montiel improves to 33-2-1, with 24 KO's while Gorres drops to 26-2-1, 14 KO's.
    Last edited by JOM'S; 02-25-2007, 02:58 AM.

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    • JOM'S
      MANILA ICE
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      #32
      [IMG]http://www.*********.com/1photos/cebu3.jpg[/IMG]
      [IMG]http://www.*********.com/1photos/cebu4.jpg[/IMG]
      [IMG]http://www.*********.com/1photos/cebu8.jpg[/IMG]

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      • JOM'S
        MANILA ICE
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        #33

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        • JOM'S
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          #34

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          • JOM'S
            MANILA ICE
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            #35


            THE DREAM TURNS INTO A NIGHTMARE

            By Ronnie Nathanielsz
            PhilBoxing.com
            25 Feb 2007

            The nation's collective dream of crowning a new world boxing champion turned into a nightmare when a WBO appointed referee and judges robbed flashy southpaw Z "The Dream" Gorres of the WBO super flyweight crown despite his giving champion Fernando "Cochulito" Montiel a classic boxing lesson most of the way in their title fight at the Cebu City Sports Complex late Saturday.

            A crowd of some 30,000 fight fans sat stunned as Ted Lerner announced that Montiel had won by an unbelievable split decision with Raul Caiz scoring it 115-111 for Montiel, Chuck Giampa 114-112 and Danny Nelson having Gorres the winner by a comfortable 115-111 margin. Nelson's scoredcard would have been 117-111 if not for the fact that New York based Puerto Rican referee Samuel Viruet incredibly deducted two points from Gorres in the 10th and 12th rounds without the customary warning. Green said later "I scored it as I saw it. Gorres clearly won."

            Viva Sports/Manila Standard Today had Gorres winning eight of the first nine rounds and losing the last three for a 116-112 margin which was cut to 114-112 because of the two points deducted by referee Viruet.

            Filipino ring idol Manny Pacquiao who was at special ringside said he felt "very bad" for Gorres and criticized referee Viruet for "failing to first warn Gorres before deducting a point for a second infraction." The deductions came in the closing rounds when Montiel, frustrated all night long by the brilliant one-two combinations of Gorres and a stinging right straight plus superb ring craftsmanship, threw caution to the winds and launched a desperate attempt for a knockout.

            It was no consolation that WBO president Francisco "Paco" Valcarcel promised that Gorres, because of his excellent showing would retain the No.1 ranking and could possibly get another shot at bthe vacant title since Montiel who had some problems making the 115 pound limit may move up to the bantamweight division. To respected boxing patron Tony Aldeguer who had put so much into staging a superb event titled "Moment of Truth" it was a painful loss not just for Gorres but for Philippine boxing which would have been given a major boost by a world title won by a decent, well behaved and disciplined fighter and a prime example to the youth.

            A disconsolate Gorres couldn't hold back the tears in his dressing room because he knew all the dedication, hard-work and sacrifices of the recent months and a dream he nurtured since his boyhood days of becoming a world champion had been denied him in a cruel fashion. The media, including a couple of foreign journalists were stunned by the decision and said they couldn't understand it. One veteran scribe said "we know of hometown decisions but this is the first time we have witnessed a fighter being robbed in his own home town. It must be the hispanic connection."

            Golden Boy Promotions vice president Eric Gomez appeared bothered by the decision and the possible repurcussions in the Philippines for both Golden Boy which was a co-promoter with SGG Promotions and more especially the WBO which is trying to strengthen its presence in Asia under its Asia-Pacific vice president Leon Panoncillo.

            With former fighter Rey Caitom carrying a sign "For God and Country" a confident Gorres wearing the famous ALA Gym black trunks free of any crass commercialism entered the ring and after the formalities quickly established himself catching Montiel with a cracking right and ending the round with a one-two combination. Bewildered by the hand speed and skill of Gorres, Montiel spat out his mouthpiece after a solid body shot by Gorres and was warned by referee Viruet which is something he didn't do in the case of Gorres.

            Gorres continued to control the fight until Montiel fought back in round seven with some stinging body shots. But Gorres beat Montiel to the punch in round eight and then snapped the champion's head back in the ninth before staggering him with a classic right hook. In the tenth round Montiel kept up the pressure on Gorres who unnecessarily began to engage the Mexican at close range and was clearly hurt by a hard right. Montiel pressed the action in the last two rounds but in the twelfth when Gorres was once again hurt he was deducted a point for holding which in the end helped deny him of victory.

            The enthusiasm was sapped out of the huge crowd after the decision and even though fan favorite and emerging ring sensation Rey "Boom Boom" Bautista made it a bitter-sweet night with a third round demolition of Marino Gonzalez, the hurt felt by the Gorres loss lingered long into the night as fight fans milled around the world class set-up which proved the Philippines can stand with the best in the rest of the world. In fact WBO and Golden Boy officials praised Filipino fans who didnt show their displeasure over the Gorres robbery by any acts of resentment and in fact gave Montiel a polite round of applause as he walked to his dr4ssing room.

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            • Mech.
              Immortal Iron Fist
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              #36
              lol JOMS I dont know if I trust a website called PhilBoxing "Photos of Pinoy boxers, gyms, ring card girls, etc." as unbiased.

              Headline on their fronpage "Bautista Stops Mexican!''

              LOL

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              • Mech.
                Immortal Iron Fist
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                #37

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                • Alibata
                  Dugong Maharlika
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                  #38
                  How the **** did gorrez loose that fight, I thought the early rounds were close and gorrez straight schooled him in the mid to late rounds except the 10 and 12 rds. Wtf was wrong with that red deducting points for holding. Gorrez straight won that fight. Even in the Philippines pinoys get robbed. Damn that ref should do a Ruiz.fight or hatton fight. I just did not see 2 points being deducted for holding and the fight was still close after that bull **** deduction.montiel got ****in schooled. How the **** did that other judge gave it 115-111 for montiel even with the 2pt deduction. Montiel knows he got beat. I hope there is a rematch. I'm just stunned.

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                  • STEELHEAD
                    Banned
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                    #39
                    yea and don kings ********* breaking it.

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                    • ReadyUp
                      Pound 4 Pound
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                      #40
                      One thing I noticed in those articles was that they were saying how it was an UNBELIVABLE decision for Montiel to win but yet they press scored the fight 114-112!?!?!?!

                      Obviously if even the press scored the fight that close than I'm sure that it can swing either way without being an UNBELIVABLE decision.

                      Still gotta watch the fight though before I jump to any conclusions.

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