Shane Mosley and Sergio Mora fought to a 12-round draw in a junior middleweight bout on Saturday night at Staples Center.
The 39-year-old Mosley (46-6-1, 39 KOs) had hoped to earn another big-money fight after his one-sided loss to Floyd Mayweather Jr in May, while Mora (22-1-2, 6 KOs) was trying to re-establish himself as an elite fighter. Neither fighter left the arena satisfied — and neither did the crowd, which booed both boxers.
“We both fought hard,” Mosley said. “It was good fight, a good decision.”
PHOTO: REUTERS
The fight was very difficult to score, with judge Kermit Bayless calling it 115-113 for Mora, David Denkin giving Mosley a 116-112 edge and Lou Moret ruling it even at 114-114.
Mosley had an edge in the CompuBox punchstats, landing 161 of 522 punches to 93 of 508 for Mora.
Mora, who held the 69.9kg title in 2008, said he actually let up because he thought he was winning the fight down the stretch.
“I should’ve listened to my corner,” he said. “They were telling me that it was a close fight. I thought I was winning, so I didn’t fight as hard because I have respect for Shane. I didn’t want to hurt him.”
Mosley was the aggressor from the beginning, but had a difficult time landing clean punches because Mora is a standout defensive fighter. The former titleholder consistently danced out of harm’s way or tied up Mosley when he got inside.
Mora threw fewer punches than Mosley, but landed more clean shots, giving him several rounds. Neither fighter hurt the other or even had a particularly big round, making it even more difficult to separate them.
Before the main event, junior welterweight contender Victor Ortiz (28-2-1, 22 KOs) took a round to feel out Guyana’s Vivian Harris (29-5-1, 19 Kos), before unloading, stopping Harris early in the third round after knocking him down three times in the second round.
Ortiz was too quick and sharp for his aging opponent. He landed a right hook and then a quick right uppercut to knock down Harris 45 seconds into the third round, with referee Raul Caiz waving off the fight right when Harris hit the canvas.
Ortiz’s handlers have been talking to WBO titleholder Timothy Bradley and Ortiz likes the idea of facing the winner of the Dec. 11 fight between WBA champion Amir Khan and Marcos Maidana, who knocked out Ortiz in the sixth round last year at Staples Center.
Harris, a former titleholder from New York, is 1-3 with one no-contest in his last five fights.
Earlier on the same bill, budding Mexican star Saul “Canelo” Alvarez had a spectacular third-round knockout of veteran Carlos Baldomir.
Alvarez (34-0-1, 26 KOs) hurt Baldomir (45-13-6, 14 KOs) with a number of punches toward the end of the final round, before a straight left put the Argentine on his face.
Baldomir, who had failed to go the distance only once before, was able to get to his feet, but was too wobbly to continue.
Baldomir was a good test for the 20-year-old star from Guadalajara because of his experience and awkward style, but Alvarez was much quicker than Baldomir and he patiently outboxed his 39-year-old foe. Baldomir, who has one of the best chins in boxing, took most of the big shots, but was slowly worn down.
Daniel Ponce de Leon (40-2, 33 KOs) also stopped fellow Mexican Antonio Escalante (23-3, 15 KOs) with a single right hook after 2 minutes, 40 seconds of the third round in a 12-round featherweight bout.
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