Published Date:
25 May 2008
By Mark Staniforth
RICKY Hatton survived a couple of scares on his way to retaining his IBO light-welterweight title via unanimous decision over Juan Lazcano in front of 55,000 fans at the City of Manchester Stadium last night.
Hatton's relentless aggression won him landslide 120-110, 118-110, 112-108 verdicts on the three judges' cards but brave Lazcano gave him plenty of trouble and came close to dumping the champion on the canvas in rounds eight and 10.
Hatton showed he had not entirely learned the lessons of his 10th-round knockout defeat by Floyd Mayweather in December as he got careless and was forced to cling on and ride the storm.
And arguably his win over Lazcano – a fringe 140lbs contender who effectively came out of retirement to take the fight – leaves his dream of enticing Mayweather into a rematch a long way off.
But Lazcano came into the ring with a potentially valuable five-inch reach advantage and deserved enormous credit for the way in which he stood up to Hatton's relentless bombs and hung around until the final bell.
With even Hatton's trainer Billy Graham admitting he would not know how the knockout to Mayweather would affect him until the first bell sounded, there were enough imponderables for the sell-out home crowd to savour.
Hatton, who entered the ring wearing a padded robe 'fat suit' in a jibe to the critics who deride his habit of ballooning in weight between fights, did not look like showing any ill effects in a confident start.
Lazcano had entered the ring first wearing a sombrero and smiling broadly despite the boos of the pro-Hatton fans, as fight stars like Oscar De La Hoya and Mike Tyson watched from ringside.
Hatton got right in his stride from the first bell, flinging a fine right hook and a straight left, although he left himself open to a good right by Lazcano which reddened his nose.
Much the taller of the two, Lazcano looked far from overawed, jolting out a decent left jab from behind a tight guard which caught the majority of Hatton's chopping early efforts.
Hatton hit the deck at the start of round three but it was judged a slip by referee Howard Foster. Hatton responded by clattering home a superb left uppercut, but Lazcano rode the storm.
While Hatton was dominant, his obvious eagerness to finish the job was not helping, with the Mexican still firing back admirably through the onslaught as the fight approached the halfway stage.
Hatton survived his first mighty scare in the eighth when he walked into a corkscrewing left hook from Lazcano and a follow-up left to the body had the home favourite temporarily stunned.
The Mancunian, clearly wilting down the home straight, was rocked again by a big left in round 10, but was given valuable respite when the laces on his boots came undone. Still, when the final bell sounded, the 'Hitman' had done enough to clearly win all but perhaps two of the 12 rounds.
Whether it will prove enough to take Hatton back to the super-fights that he craves remains to be seen. Next up is expected to be an Autumn showdown against Paulie Malignaggi in New York.
Following the verdict, Hatton admitted he had been more nervous about this fight than he had been before any of his previous 44.
He said: "The hardest one's out the way, coming back from Floyd Mayweather. I've never been more nervous before about a boxing match in my life.
"I felt great in the gym but it's different once you get in there… All those demons are in your mind: 'can I come back as strong?'."
Hatton praised Lazcano's courage, saying: "There were about three or four times in the fight when I thought I had him. If I wanted to box my way to a points victory, I could have come through a lot more comfortably."
Hatton believes tonight's win proved he is the light-welterweight king and he confirmed he would like his next fight to be against Malignaggi, who won an unconvincing victory on last night's undercard.
The full article contains 704 words and appears in Scotland On Sunday newspaper.
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Last Updated:
25 May 2008 12:26 AM
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Source:
Scotland On Sunday
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Location:
Scotland