William Joppy vs. Roberto Durán
Date | August 28, 1998 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Venue | Las Vegas Hilton, Winchester, Nevada, U.S. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Title(s) on the line | WBA middleweight title | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Tale of the tape | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Result | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Joppy wins via 3rd-round TKO |
William Joppy vs. Roberto Durán, billed as Legendary History was a professional boxing match contested on August 28, 1998, for the WBA middleweight title.[2]
Background
[edit]In his previous fight, William Joppy had regained the WBA middleweight title after defeating Julio César Green, whom had upset him the previous year to take the title, in a rematch. For the first defense of his second reign, 28-year old Joppy was matched up against former 4-division world champion Roberto Durán, whom at 47-years old was two decades older than his opponent and had turned professional in 1967, 3 years prior to Joppy's birth. Durán had not fought for a major world title since challenging Sugar Ray Leonard for WBC super middleweight title in December 1989 and had had limited success since then, only defeating unknown journeymen and losing the three big fights (two against Vinny Paz and one against Héctor Camacho) he did have.
Durán, who had been experiencing financial troubles, excepted Joppy's promoter Don King's offer of a $250,000 purse. After his payday became public knowledge, a Florida judge issued an injunction against King and Showtime (whom was to broadcast the fight), claiming Durán owed $41,000 in child support to the mother of his 10-year-old son,[3] while the IRS looked to seize part of the purse due to Durán owing $300,000 in unpaid taxes.[4]
When the fight was first announced, it was to take place on June 6 as the featured undercard bout on an event headlined by an Evander Holyfield–Henry Akinwande heavyweight title bout. However, when Akinwande tested positive for Hepatitis B the day before the fight, the entire card was cancelled.[5] The Joppy–Durán fight was then rescheduled for August 29 (and then subsequently moved up a day to August 28) with a Bernard Hopkins–Robert Allen IBF middleweight championship as the co-headliner.[6]
The Fights
[edit]Hopkins vs. Allen
[edit]Title(s) on the line | IBF middleweight title | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Tale of the tape | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Result | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
No contest |
In the chief support, IBF middleweight champion Bernard Hopkins made the eight defence of his title against Robert Allen.
Hopkins was a 4 to 1 favourite entering the bout.
The fight
[edit]After three lackluster rounds, which had featured much holding and clinching, with Allen as the aggressor and appearing to frustrate the champion, referee Mills Lane moved in to break the two boxers apart and pushed them both, with less than 10 seconds left in round. This send Hopkins through the ropes and out of ring injuring his left ankle in the process.
After being examined by ringside doctor Flip Homansky, it was determined that Hopkins' should not continue and the fight was ruled a no contest, despite Hopkins wanting to continue.
Aftermath
[edit]Speaking in the aftermath, Lane said "The momentum of everyone caused him to fall out of the ring. I've seen everything in boxing not this. What can I say!". Hopkins would say "I'm not a wrestler, I don't know how to fall. But I don't want my fans to say I quit." He would also call for an immediate rematch.[7]
At the time of stoppage Hopkins led on two of the judges scorecards 30-27 and 29-28 with the third having Allen ahead 29-28.
With Hopkins' ankle needing time to heal, Allen would three weeks later, face No. 10 ranked Abdullah Ramadan for a "Interim title", stopping him in the first round.
Despite rumours of a rematch with Roy Jones Jr. the two would meet again in February 1999.[8]
Main Event
[edit]Durán, looking every bit his age, was dominated by Joppy who landed punches nearly at will. After easily winning the first two rounds on the scorecards, Joppy wobbled Durán early in the third round and proceeded to continue to brutalize Durán, who offered little offensively or defensively, for the remainder of the round until referee Joe Cortez stopped the fight with six seconds left in the round and awarded Joppy the victory by technical knockout.
Aftermath
[edit]After the fight Durán all but officially announced his retirement stating simply "I am finished.", though he would return the following year and fight until 2001. Said Joppy of the victory "This was kind of a sad victory for me, Roberto Duran is a great legend. I've watched him fight since I was a kid. But it's my time now. He's had his years. I want to have mine."[9]
Fight card
[edit]Confirmed bouts:[10]
Weight Class | Weight | vs. | Method | Round | Notes | ||
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Middleweight | 160 lbs. | William Joppy (c) | def. | Roberto Durán | TKO | 3/12 | Note 1 |
Middleweight | 160 lbs. | Bernard Hopkins (c) | vs. | Robert Allen | NC | 4/12 | Note 2 |
Cruiserweight | 190 lbs. | Saúl Montana (c) | def. | Tiwon Taylor | TKO | 1/12 | Note 3 |
Light Heavyweight | 168 lbs. | Julio César Green | def. | Joaquin Velasquez | TKO | 6/10 |
^Note 1 For WBA Middleweight title
^Note 2 For IBF Middleweight title
^Note 3 For NABA Cruiserweight title
Broadcasting
[edit]Country | Broadcaster |
---|---|
United States | Showtime |
References
[edit]- ^ "The World Boxing Association OFFICIAL RANKINGS May 1998". wbaonline.com. World Boxing Association. Archived from the original on 15 June 1998. Retrieved 13 September 2024.
- ^ "William Joppy vs. Roberto Duran". boxrec.com. BoxRec. Retrieved 13 September 2024.
- ^ Fighter Scratched From Bout: She's 21 Weeks Pregnant, NY Times article, 1996-06-05 Retrieved on 2024-06-02
- ^ Horseplay days are over for Duran, Independent article, 1998-06-05 Retrieved on 2024-06-02
- ^ Akinwande KO'd By Hepatitis, CBS News article, 1998-06-05 Retrieved on 2024-06-02
- ^ Date Is Changed For Duran's Fight, NY Times article, 1996-07-22 Retrieved on 2024-06-02
- ^ "Hopkins-Allen fight in bizarre no contest". The Robesonian. Las Vegas. Associated Press. 29 August 1998. Retrieved 13 September 2024.
- ^ Bernard Fernandez (7 October 1998). "Hoppin Mad". The Day. Knight Ridder Newspapers. Retrieved 13 September 2024.
- ^ Duran suffers loss; Hopkins triumphs, Deseret News article, 1998-08-29, Retrieved on 2024-06-02
- ^ "BoxRec - event".