Published on Taipei Times
http://www.taipeitimes.com/News/sport/archives/2006/12/26/2003342092

Hard-hitting Cotto aiming to be one of boxing's greats


AP, NEW YORK
Tuesday, Dec 26, 2006, Page 18

Puerto Rico's Miguel Cotto poses with his award for Outstanding Boxer at the Premios Fox Sports Awards at the Jackie Gleason Theater in Miami Beach, Florida, on Dec. 14.
PHOTO: AP
Some advice for young, promising fighters: Avoid getting in the ring with Miguel Cotto. It could be hazardous to one's career.

Cotto is a 26-year-old Puerto Rican who delivers vicious body punches and nasty hooks. His latest victory came on Dec. 2 in Atlantic City, New Jersey, where he pummeled tough welterweight Carlos Quintana and won in five rounds.

The victory gave Cotto a second world title and his first million-dollar payday. It was also considered his coming-of-age moment.

Now, Cotto (28-0, 23 KOs) is hoping to cash in, with the goal of one day supplanting Floyd Mayweather as boxing's best pound-for-pound fighter.

"All the good boxers, I know I can fight with them," Cotto said in an interview from his home in Caguas, Puerto Rico. "I know I can beat them. I have no doubts."

Cotto doesn't like to simply beat opponents, he likes to destroy them. But he is modest and soft-spoken, going about his work without the hyperbolic rhetoric of a Bernard Hopkins or James Toney.

"I don't like to talk," said Cotto, who started boxing at age 11 to lose weight.

Cotto fights with a punishing style that disfigures the faces of foes. He declines to compare himself to any one boxer, although his relentless ring stalking and trademark body shots make him more Tony Zale than Marvin Hagler.

Like Zale, a middleweight champion in the 1940s, Cotto prefers attacking the body. He's knocked out about a half dozen fighters digging to the body like a backhoe.

He has dispatched everybody in front of him in a stretch of impressive wins over the previous two years.

His last fight against Quintana was risky. Cotto moved up to 147 pounds (66.6kg) to battle Quintana for the WBA welterweight title.

The fight basically ended when Cotto delivered his signature shot to Quintana's liver. A battered Quintana refused to leave his corner.