Naseem Hamed vs. Wilfredo Vázquez
Date | 18 April 1998 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Venue | Manchester Arena, Manchester, UK | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Title(s) on the line | WBO and Lineal Featherweight Championship | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Tale of the tape | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Result | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Hamed defeated Vázquez by 7th round TKO |
Naseem Hamed vs. Wilfredo Vázquez was a professional boxing match contested on 18 April 1998 for the WBO and Lineal featherweight championship.[1]
Background
[edit]In December of the previous year WBO featherweight champion Naseem Hamed had made his American debut after inking a 6-fight contract with cable giant HBO. Hamed had taken on one of his toughest opponents at the time in former WBC featherweight champion Kevin Kelley. In an action packed fight that HBO commentator Larry Merchant dubbed the Hagler–Hearns of the featherweight division, Hamed and Kelley each scored three knockdowns over one another with Hamed ultimately scoring the KO victory in the fourth round. In March 1998, it was announced that Hamed would return to his native England to face veteran 3-division world champion Wilfredo Vázquez of Puerto Rico. Vazquez had captured the WBA version of the featherweight title in 1996 and was recognized as the lineal champion of the division. Though Vazquez was supposed to make a mandatory title defense against WBA's number one contender Antonio Cermeño , Vazquez had hoped that the WBA would allow him to postpone his match with Cermeño and instead allow him to defend the title against Hamed, but the WBA instead opted to strip him of the title.[2]
For Hamed's return to England, promoter Frank Warren organized a fight card that also included Chris Eubank moving up to the cruiserweight division to challenge Carl Thompson for the WBO cruiserweight championship and Herbie Hide defending his WBO heavyweight crown against Damon Reed. Steve Robinson was also originally scheduled to challenge Luisito Espinosa for the WBC featherweight title, but Espinosa pulled out of the bout after his father and trainer Egmedio suffered a heart attack prior to the fight.[3]
The fight
[edit]Prior to the fight, Hamed predicted that he would knock out Vázquez within 2 rounds, though his prediction would not come to be.[4] Through the first two rounds, Hamed was the more active puncher as Vazquez took a more defensive approach and attempted to counter the highly unorthodox Hamed. As the first round came to a close, Hamed threw Vazquez to the canvas after he missed with a left hand and the resulting momentum caused Vazquez to go down. In the second round, Vazquez wobbled the champion after landing a hard right hook, but Hamed was able to quickly regain his composure. Hamed began to take control in round 3 as he was able to score his first knockdown of the fight. Vazquez landed a straight right to Hamed's head, but Hamed countered with a left hand that sent Vazquez down, though he was able to quickly get back up and continue the fight. After controlling both rounds 4 and 5, Hamed landed a straight left in the sixth that again put Vazquez down for the second time, but Vazquez was again able to continue. Shortly after, the referee momentarily stopped the bout as one of the ring ropes had come loose. After an over 5-minute delay in which the damaged rope had to be completely removed and in which Vazquez and Hamed exchanged words before Vazquez got into Hamed's face and headbutted him, the fight resumed. Despite the fact Vazquez was floored in round six, one judge (Paul Thomas) for some reason scored the round for him, 10-9. Early in round 7, Vazquez swung and missed Hamed with a right hook and Hamed countered with a strong left that put Vazquez down for the third time. Vazquez was clearly hurt from the exchange and Hamed dropped Vazquez again with another left. Vazquez again got back up but was swarmed by a barrage of punches by Hamed causing the referee to stop the fight and award Hamed the TKO victory at 2:29 of the seventh round.
Aftermath
[edit]This was the most lucrative fight of Vázquez career, as he received $600,000 as payment.[5] This fight would cause tension within his own family, who were informed by telephone of the results.
Fight card
[edit]Confirmed bouts:[6]
Weight Class | Weight | vs. | Method | Round | Time | Notes | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Featherweight | 126 lb | Naseem Hamed (c) | def. | Wilfredo Vázquez | TKO | 7/12 | Note 1 | |
Cruiserweight | 190 lb | Carl Thompson (c) | def. | Chris Eubank | UD | 12/12 | Note 2 | |
Heavyweight | 200+ lb | Herbie Hide (c) | def. | Damon Reed | KO | 1/12 | Note 3 | |
Welterweight | 147 lb | Ricky Hatton | def. | Karl Taylor | TKO | 1/6 | ||
Super welterweight | 154 lb | Ensley Bingham | def. | Jim Rock | TKO | 7/8 |
^Note 1 For WBO Featherweight title.
^Note 2 For WBO Cruiserweight title.
^Note 3 For WBO Heavyweight title.
Broadcasting
[edit]Country | Broadcaster |
---|---|
United Kingdom | Sky Sports |
United States | HBO |
References
[edit]- ^ "Naseem Hamed vs. Wilfredo Vazquez". boxrec.com. BoxRec. Retrieved 12 August 2024.
- ^ Veteran Puerto Rican Next for Hamed at the Nynex, Independent article, 1998-03-13, Retrieved on 2017-09-20
- ^ WBC FEATHER CHAMP LUISITO ESPINOSA PULLED OUT OF APRIL 18 CARD IN MANCHESTER, ENGLAND, The Cyber Boxing Zone article, Retrieved on 2017-09-20
- ^ Hamed Predicts Early Knockout, NY Times article, 1998-04-10, Retrieved on 2017-09-20
- ^ Marvin Fonseca Barahona (2007). Puerto Rico: Cuna de Campeones (in Spanish) (1st ed.). Puerto Rico. p. 272. ISBN 978-1-60643-254-9.
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: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - ^ "BoxRec - event".