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While De la Hoya fishes around for an easy fight ("Paging David Reid, you have a payday calling."), Vernon Forrest and "Six Heads" Lewis bank some easy defenses with their new titles, and Kostya Tszyu and Zab Judah delay a move to 147 for a fall showdown, Mosley has been left without any big-name opponents to showcase his skills. Adrian Stone was nothing more than a way to keep busy, and the lack of adequate challenge was obvious in the fight's opening moments. Mosley began the fight dry, perhaps intending for the first round to be his pre-fight warm-up. The champion approached Stone slowly and tossed out a few light jabs, looking as casual as a fighter starting his first drill on the mitts. Mosley's jabs lacked the heavy snap or the rapid repetition of his best moments. As Stone crouched and bobbed and clinched, Mosley watched him closely. Mosley would occasionally fire off a rapid bomb, such as a blistering lead left hook that caught a squatting Stone flush, but most of the champ's infrequent punches sailed over his ducking opponent's head. Stone occasionally returned fire, including a couple of solid rights to the body, but was mostly content to move his head and convince a circling Mosley that he should pick his spots carefully.
Mosley made the proper adjustments in the
third round, and it soon became clear that the end was near.
Instead of struggling to land his trademark overhand right on a
crouching fighter, Mosley now pointed It was a right hand, and it slammed into the side of Stone's bald head and stopped him in his tracks. At first he stood still, as if frozen, then he wobbled slightly to one side. It was a sign that he was hurt, and Mosley - finally - let his hands go. Rather than come in and allow Stone to clinch, Mosley took a step back and then threw himself forward into a big right hand. The punch missed so he tried it again. And again. And again. Six times in a row, Mosley hurled his exaggerated overhand right at Stone, and most of the blows landed. As Stone's crouch sank lower, Mosley tossed a left hook into the mix. The punch pushed Stone's head, minus his defense, into the path of yet another Mosley right. The final shot nailed Stone right on the ridge of his jaw and he dropped flat to the canvas.
While Mosley's string of post-De la Hoya opponents has been lacking, his schedule for the next year is ripe with possibility. First up appears to be a fall showdown with Vernon Forrest. Then Mosley will unify against Six Heads Lewis, battle a Tszyu-Judah victor, or finally lure Oscar into a rematch. Mosley weighed a trim 155 through the ropes this night, suggesting that a jump to 154 to face De la Hoya would not be a struggle. Boxing Chronicle picks Mosley (now 38-0/35) over all of these opponents. Let's just hope most of these match-ups can be made.
Here's how it went: Opening bell. Grant takes three steps forward with his hands low. McCline throws a perfectly average lead left hook. Grant eats it on the face and flops backwards to the canvas. The mandatory eight count Grant received was four times as long as the fight to that point. Grant initially sat up on the canvas and shook his head. Soon he was on his feet convincing Tony Weeks that he could continue. But it was already over. As Grant was knocked down, his 254 lb. body collapsed onto his back leg. As momentum sent him onto his back, his right leg eventually snapped out from under him, his foot waving in the wind. Grant had seriously injured his ankle, possibly breaking it. With the adrenaline pumping, he likely didn't feel it at first. In fact, he didn't mention the injury or limp after getting to his feet.
Grant's faced was now wrinkled in pain,
and after his shoe was cut off, a grotesquely swollen ankle
emerged. Whether the injury was a break, a sprain, or a
ligament tear would not be determined until after Grant (now
31-2) was carted off in an ambulance... but the injury to
his once-promising career will not heal. After all, Grant
didn't slip and break his ankle... he hurt himself after
being knocked down by the light punch of a journeyman set-up
opponent. If Grant wishes to keep fighting, it will be only
after another rehab assignment, and it will be only on
Cedric Kushner's small-town Heavyweight Explosion cards.
For Jameel McCline (26-2-3/16), this was a golden opportunity and a chance at some big money. So wide open is the barren heavyweight picture that McCline instantly becomes a Top Ten candidate. With his 24 fight win-streak and muscular 260 lb. frame, he'll be a natural replacement for Grant in the ratings. Let's just hope he has an easier time finding opposition than Shane Mosley. .....Chris Bushnell |
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