Forrest tops Quartey by Disputed Decision (My Column)

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  • Mr. Ryan
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    #1

    Forrest tops Quartey by Disputed Decision (My Column)

    Forrest tops Quartey by Disputed Decision
    By Ryan ********, photo courtesy Yahoo
    8-6-06

    [IMG]http://i18.***********.com/albums/b120/mnash_98/quarteyforrest.jpg[/IMG]

    New York City's Madison Square Garden was filled with mixed reactions to the verdict in the junior middleweight fight between Ike Quartey and Vernon Forrest. The arena was a chorus of discontent, reacting to the disputable unanimous decision victory that was awarded to Vernon Forrest on a night in which he did not appear the more effective fighter. The "Now or Never" event was promoted by Lou Dibella Entertainment.

    As a pair of former welterweight champions on the comeback trail, both men gave respectable accounts of themselves, fully acknowledging that it may be too late to recover from a big setback. However, Ike Quartey of Accra, Ghana found himself on the downside of a decision he appeared to deserve the better fortune in. Quartey was the more accurate and effective puncher throughout, and used his physical strength and jab to back up Forrest. Vernon Forrest, Atlanta, GA, did not appear sharp from the opening bell, unable to sustain an effective offense for extended periods in the fight.

    The early rounds were dominated by the crisp jabs and counter punching of Quartey. Forrest was not using his own jab effectively to set up his power punching, and found himself having to lunge while out of range to land his own blows. However, and this is important in the scoring discrepancies, Forrest was the busier fighter and threw more punches.

    By the middle rounds, Forrest's right side of his face began to swell as a visible testament to Quartey's proficient use of his left hand punches. Quartey's stamina remained better preserved than Forrest's, who appeared the more exhausted of the two down the stretch. In the ninth round, a stanza Quartey seemed to win, Forrest was docked a point by the referee for low blows.

    Quartey, who looked absolutely sensational in his public workout this past Tuesday, put on a well concocted display of technical brilliance through out the fight. Quartey remained the aggressor throughout, and was much more effective with his jab than Forrest. Forrest was the busier fighter, but his porous defense and unstable balance enabled Quartey to take advantage with accurate power shots.

    When the official scores were announced, the debatable tallies of 95-94, 95-94 and 96-94 were met by the jeers of the dissenting crowd. Unofficial HBO ringside judge Harold Lederman's scorecard read 97-92 for Ike Quartey. My perspective had the identical result of the aforementioned commentator.

    Forrest's inability to make his longer jab a factor may be attributed to the persistent injuries to his left rotator cup. After suffering damage to his rotator cuff in 2004, he endured a long layoff in which he had multiple surgeries to repair his maligned shoulder.

    His open media workout in Manhattan this last Wednesday may have suggested that his arm was not 100 percent healed and functional following his recent injuries. At the Crunch Gym in midtown Manhattan, Forrest barely worked up a sweat as he shadow boxed for a couple of rounds before calling it an early session after approximately twenty minutes of light shadow boxing. Forrest's exhibition was in stark contrast to the impressive showing of Ike Quartey, who was very sharp in his appearance.

    Quartey still looks to be in fantastic form, but his continued inability to win over the judges seemed to elicit signs of discouragement and bitterness during his post fight interview. The typically stoic Quartey appeared on the verge of tears while talking to HBO commentator Larry Merchant following the decision.

    When Quartey lost under similar circumstances to Oscar De La Hoya in 1999, he spent more than a year away from the ring. In the aftermath of his close loss to Fernando Vargas the following in 2000, Quartey spent nearly five years out of the ring while regaining his hunger and motivation. At the age of 36 and 18 years since his professional debut, this was a setback that he could not afford.

    He will find it very difficult to get the big names in the ring giving the high risk, intermediate reward that fighting Quartey will bring. Forrest, while victorious, showed vulnerability and holes in his game, thus potentially helping make him an attractive opponent for some of the big name fighters in the welterweight and junior middleweight divisions. A rematch between the two combatants would be an ideal scenario for the Quartey camp, while Team Forrest will likely look to challenge for a world title before considering going at it with "Bazooka" again.

    Forrest would be best served to take a step down in opposition later this year to help regain his form. The Vernon Forrest who showed up Saturday night did not perform like the boxer that earned him Ring Magazine's 2002 Fighter of the Year Award.

    A fortuitous Forrest raises his professional ring record to 38-2 (28 KO) and sets himself up for some possible big money showdowns down the road. Ike Quartey, whose deflated and dejected expression told the story of the fight, drops to 37-3-1 (31 KO).

    Ryan ******** is a syndicated columnist. If you have any feedback or questions, my email address is ryan********201@aol.com . My ******* address is http://www.*******.com/asian_sensation201 . My Friendster is http://www.friendster.com/********. Special thanks to Matt Nash and Adrianna Fernandez.
  • kg21mvp
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    #2
    Originally posted by Asian Sensation
    Forrest tops Quartey by Disputed Decision
    By Ryan ********, photo courtesy Yahoo
    8-6-06

    [IMG]http://i18.***********.com/albums/b120/mnash_98/quarteyforrest.jpg[/IMG]

    New York City's Madison Square Garden was filled with mixed reactions to the verdict in the junior middleweight fight between Ike Quartey and Vernon Forrest. The arena was a chorus of discontent, reacting to the disputable unanimous decision victory that was awarded to Vernon Forrest on a night in which he did not appear the more effective fighter. The "Now or Never" event was promoted by Lou Dibella Entertainment.

    As a pair of former welterweight champions on the comeback trail, both men gave respectable accounts of themselves, fully acknowledging that it may be too late to recover from a big setback. However, Ike Quartey of Accra, Ghana found himself on the downside of a decision he appeared to deserve the better fortune in. Quartey was the more accurate and effective puncher throughout, and used his physical strength and jab to back up Forrest. Vernon Forrest, Atlanta, GA, did not appear sharp from the opening bell, unable to sustain an effective offense for extended periods in the fight.

    The early rounds were dominated by the crisp jabs and counter punching of Quartey. Forrest was not using his own jab effectively to set up his power punching, and found himself having to lunge while out of range to land his own blows. However, and this is important in the scoring discrepancies, Forrest was the busier fighter and threw more punches.

    By the middle rounds, Forrest's right side of his face began to swell as a visible testament to Quartey's proficient use of his left hand punches. Quartey's stamina remained better preserved than Forrest's, who appeared the more exhausted of the two down the stretch. In the ninth round, a stanza Quartey seemed to win, Forrest was docked a point by the referee for low blows.

    Quartey, who looked absolutely sensational in his public workout this past Tuesday, put on a well concocted display of technical brilliance through out the fight. Quartey remained the aggressor throughout, and was much more effective with his jab than Forrest. Forrest was the busier fighter, but his porous defense and unstable balance enabled Quartey to take advantage with accurate power shots.

    When the official scores were announced, the debatable tallies of 95-94, 95-94 and 96-94 were met by the jeers of the dissenting crowd. Unofficial HBO ringside judge Harold Lederman's scorecard read 97-92 for Ike Quartey. My perspective had the identical result of the aforementioned commentator.

    Forrest's inability to make his longer jab a factor may be attributed to the persistent injuries to his left rotator cup. After suffering damage to his rotator cuff in 2004, he endured a long layoff in which he had multiple surgeries to repair his maligned shoulder.

    His open media workout in Manhattan this last Wednesday may have suggested that his arm was not 100 percent healed and functional following his recent injuries. At the Crunch Gym in midtown Manhattan, Forrest barely worked up a sweat as he shadow boxed for a couple of rounds before calling it an early session after approximately twenty minutes of light shadow boxing. Forrest's exhibition was in stark contrast to the impressive showing of Ike Quartey, who was very sharp in his appearance.

    Quartey still looks to be in fantastic form, but his continued inability to win over the judges seemed to elicit signs of discouragement and bitterness during his post fight interview. The typically stoic Quartey appeared on the verge of tears while talking to HBO commentator Larry Merchant following the decision.

    When Quartey lost under similar circumstances to Oscar De La Hoya in 1999, he spent more than a year away from the ring. In the aftermath of his close loss to Fernando Vargas the following in 2000, Quartey spent nearly five years out of the ring while regaining his hunger and motivation. At the age of 36 and 18 years since his professional debut, this was a setback that he could not afford.

    He will find it very difficult to get the big names in the ring giving the high risk, intermediate reward that fighting Quartey will bring. Forrest, while victorious, showed vulnerability and holes in his game, thus potentially helping make him an attractive opponent for some of the big name fighters in the welterweight and junior middleweight divisions. A rematch between the two combatants would be an ideal scenario for the Quartey camp, while Team Forrest will likely look to challenge for a world title before considering going at it with "Bazooka" again.

    Forrest would be best served to take a step down in opposition later this year to help regain his form. The Vernon Forrest who showed up Saturday night did not perform like the boxer that earned him Ring Magazine's 2002 Fighter of the Year Award.

    A fortuitous Forrest raises his professional ring record to 38-2 (28 KO) and sets himself up for some possible big money showdowns down the road. Ike Quartey, whose deflated and dejected expression told the story of the fight, drops to 37-3-1 (31 KO).

    Ryan ******** is a syndicated columnist. If you have any feedback or questions, my email address is ryan********201@aol.com . My ******* address is http://www.*******.com/asian_sensation201 . My Friendster is http://www.friendster.com/********. Special thanks to Matt Nash and Adrianna Fernandez.
    nice column AS!

    who might be the next opponent of forrest?

    or whats gonna happen to quartey after this fight.. share us your insight

    Comment

    • justbc
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      #3
      It was a crazy fight. You knew from the get-go that Forrest was in for a tough night when he came out firing but hit mostly air and leather. For me the controversy began in the third round when Forrest actually landed a hard, clean uppercut but was headlocked by a stunned Quartey. Then as the ref ordered a break, Quartey continued to hold for several more seconds. To me this should be a point right away because a) it could have prevented a knockdown and b) it is in direct violation of the ref's orders, just like continuing to foul after a warning. Forrest continued to struggle through the middle rounds and to my surprise seemed unable to throw his right hand which is of course his power hand and the side that has not been operated on. To his credit Forrest seemed to adapt from his early over-aggressive style and start to use the ring space however he appeared to have no power with either hand and his balance and timing made him look like a shell of a fighter. Not to mention his confidence was obviously shaken by his early failure to set the tone. He ate tough jabs throughout the fight and appeared stunned by a Quartey power show in almost every round. In the 9th the controversy continued when the ref who appeared at odds with Forrest throughout the fight deducted a point for an accidental blow that he was not even in position to see. At that point it seemed the fight was over since going into the 9th it appeared Forrest would need both of the final rounds to have any chance on the scorecards.

      Of course when buffer announced 95-94, 95-94, and 96-93 it appeared that the low blow had cost Forrest a majority draw but to the surprise of all watching Buffer called "...the winner by unanimous decision, VERNON THE VIPER FORREST!"

      If there is a rematch I would bet all my money and possessions on Quartey. Vernon is merely a shell of his former self and I would venture to say that he has a serious injury to his right arm as well. Never a dull moment in boxing...

      Comment

      • DiegoFuego
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        #4
        very well-written and it's no secret you aren't a big Forrest fan, but you didn't let it show in your article. always a pleasure, Asian

        Comment

        • DiegoFuego
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          #5
          Originally posted by justbc
          If there is a rematch I would bet all my money and possessions on Quartey. Vernon is merely a shell of his former self and I would venture to say that he has a serious injury to his right arm as well. Never a dull moment in boxing...
          I wouldn't do that if I were you, and here's the reason. I think Forrest would change a lot more for the rematch while Quartey would just fight the same fight he always fights...the only fight he knows how. I'd take Forrest in a rematch.

          Comment

          • Mr. Ryan
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            #6
            Originally posted by kg21mvp
            nice column AS!

            who might be the next opponent of forrest?

            or whats gonna happen to quartey after this fight.. share us your insight
            On Wednesday, I asked Forrest's trainer Buddy McGirt about possible future opponents, and he said that was up to management. He did however say that Spinks would be a possible opponent because Forrest "needs a title".

            Quartey is gonna have to overcome the negativity of a bad decision from the judges. He can't afford to be discouraged, hes gotta get right back in there because hes not getting any younger.

            Comment

            • DiegoFuego
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              #7
              I'd love to see Forrest vs. Spinks

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              • j/one
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                #8
                For this first time in my life my fighter won on a very questionable...well no he didn't deserve that reguardless, but I have to say that having your guy win like that is no fun at all for me it's a first, usually my favorite guy's lose close ones in this case my guy got it. I really didn't care emotionally though I like both guys almost equally. I just decided to root for Vernon based on my past with him in fights (Meaning enjoyment of the fights)...To bad for Ike his ego may never recover and it's a godamn shame he's a great fighter. Great stoty btw up top.

                Comment

                • Hitman932
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                  #9
                  the curse of buddy mcgirt was smoothed over by this crappy decision

                  i score it 6 rounds to 3, with 1 even.

                  quartey 96 forrest 93 w/ the deduction

                  like someone else said before, quartey should clearly have lost a point for his hulk hogan headlock, im tired of piece of crap refereeing, mercants let that blatant violation slide and then penalized forrest for what was no more than a glancing blow as he was being pushed down

                  does anyone know why the hell forrest gave quartey the throat slash and then refused to touch his gloves before the fight? that was really amatuerish behavior

                  Comment

                  • joeytrimble
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                    #10
                    quartey takes agian another ****ing at the hands of the man ...

                    whats next for this poor guy.. one of the best jabs of all time one of the most under rated fighters of all time fighting close decisions to oscar vargas and forrest to which the results could have went his way

                    on a better note...hell of an artical bro keep that good stuff comming
                    we need more honest straight forward unbiased showing writers and columnist out there

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