I can only speculate. In a general sense, I think it was his inexperience as a pro. It was only Rigo's seventh pro fight. Playing armchair psychologist, I'd say he instinctively reverted to his amateur conditioning. I mean, the man had over 400 amateur fights going into the Cordoba fight. It appears that Guillermo determined it was more prudent to take the safe road, knowing he was winning and would continue to outbox Ricardo.
That performance really hurt Rigo's stock. I don't doubt that it bothered him. Guillermo came roaring back in his next fight and absolutely tore through Willie Casey: first round KO, with multiple knockdowns. Since the Cordoba fight, we haven't seen Rigondeaux fight the same way he did in those last six rounds. He didn't run from Marroquin, despite being rocked with a couple of hooks.
That performance really hurt Rigo's stock. I don't doubt that it bothered him. Guillermo came roaring back in his next fight and absolutely tore through Willie Casey: first round KO, with multiple knockdowns. Since the Cordoba fight, we haven't seen Rigondeaux fight the same way he did in those last six rounds. He didn't run from Marroquin, despite being rocked with a couple of hooks.
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