By Thomas Gerbasi - With enough false starts and questions marks in what has still been a solid professional boxing career - one that can raise itself to a new level should he defeat Saul “Canelo” Alvarez for the junior middleweight title this Saturday - you can’t mention Kermit Cintron’s nickname “The Killer” without more than a few caveats.
In fact, if anyone deserved that nickname, it was the man who provides the asterisks on Cintron’s 33-4-1 record, Antonio Margarito, a fighter who has enough names thrown at him these days, few of them complimentary.
It wasn’t always that way though. On his way up the ranks, Margarito was almost destined to earn the same respect and adoration shown to his Mexican countrymen Julio Cesar Chavez, Marco Antonio Barrera, and Erik Morales. The Tijuana native didn’t have the natural ability or technical skill of those aforementioned stars, but what he lacked, he made up for with guts, determination, and a relentless pressure that broke opponents. He wasn’t pretty, but oh, he was exciting. [Click Here To Read More]
In fact, if anyone deserved that nickname, it was the man who provides the asterisks on Cintron’s 33-4-1 record, Antonio Margarito, a fighter who has enough names thrown at him these days, few of them complimentary.
It wasn’t always that way though. On his way up the ranks, Margarito was almost destined to earn the same respect and adoration shown to his Mexican countrymen Julio Cesar Chavez, Marco Antonio Barrera, and Erik Morales. The Tijuana native didn’t have the natural ability or technical skill of those aforementioned stars, but what he lacked, he made up for with guts, determination, and a relentless pressure that broke opponents. He wasn’t pretty, but oh, he was exciting. [Click Here To Read More]
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