Morales and Barrera did their part. While the bout at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas last Saturday (Sunday morning, Manila time) wasnt as action-paced as their first encounter two years ago, it was still exciting. The fans got their moneys worth for sure.
But what left a bitter taste in the mouth was the final outcome. The three judges scored it for Barrera who, in my book, didnt deserve the decision. Chuck Giampa saw it 116-112, awarding the first three rounds to Barrera although Morales dominated the action. Mike Glienna and Duane Ford had it 115-113, both for Barrera.
As if scripted to do a hatchet job on Morales, the three judges more like the Three Stooges scored five of the last seven rounds for Barrera in identical sequence.
Incidentally, Giampa is 59, Glienna 75 and Ford 64. Shouldnt there be an age limit for judges?
Referee Jay Nady, who was here to work two Luisito Espinosa title fights in 1997, contributed heavily to the disgrace. In the seventh round, Morales floored Barrera with a left to the body. It was a clear knockdown. But Nady ruled it a slip. You can only guess why. At hindsight, if Nady called a knockdown, Morales wouldve won via a split decision. As it turned out, all three judges scored 10-9 for Barrera in the seventh. A knockdown wouldve reversed it to 10-8 for Morales.
Worse, Nady never deducted a point from Barrera despite repeated violations. Nady warned Barrera at least thrice for various infractions, including hitting south of the border, pushing Morales head down, and wrestling him down to the canvas. Any referee worth his salt wouldve asserted his authority and slapped at least a point deduction on Barrera who apparently resorted to roughhousing to derail Morales attack.
The irony is Barrera shouldve won over Morales in their initial meeting but didnt. Ford was a judge in that bout and scored it 114-113 for Barrera. He was the only judge who saw it for the Baby-Faced Assassin. The others Carol Castellano and Dalby Shirley scored it for Morales, 114-113 and 115-112. The decision stunk particularly as Morales, who faded badly in the late going, was decked in the 12th round.
As if to reward Ford, he was picked to be a judge in the rematch.
The hype leading to Saturdays fight constantly referred to Barrera as the victim and portrayed Morales as an undeserving champion, particularly as he was less than impressive in his last two outings where he struggled to barely beat Guty Espadas and In Jin Chi. Barrera was installed a 9-5 favorite and the consensus pick to pay back Morales.
But Morales was determined to prove himself. He fired his trainer Floyd Mayweather Sr. and hired amateur coach Al Stankie, who led Paul Gonzales to the light flyweight gold medal at the 1984 Olympics, to polish his boxing skills. The indication was Morales would box Barrera a known slugger from a distance using Stankies amateur tactics.
Morales, however, surprised Barrera when he came out smoking as the aggressor in the first round. Barrera didnt gain his bearings until the sixth round when he began to drive back Morales with powerful counters. From the exchanges, it was obvious that Barrera was the heavier hitter. Morales punches lacked sting his power has diminished since moving up to the featherweight division.
Still, Morales landed a lot more than Barrera although it didnt seem like he ever hurt his opponent. After the fight, Morales was cut on the bridge of his nose and his right eye was badly swollen while Barrera was almost unmarked. Morales looked like the loser. But looks can be deceiving. Morales fought a tactical, intelligent fight.
Morales won seven of the 12 rounds and most ringsiders thought he did enough to earn the decision. My pal Bruce McTavish a much more competent arbiter than Nady watched the fight on TV in his Angeles City home and scored it 115-113 for Morales. Boxing websites fightnews.com and secondsout.com agreed that Morales was robbed. Both websites castigated Nady for not ruling a knockdown in the seventh.
The decision was a make-up call for Barrera, an atonement for the sin in the first bout. The three judges probably figured there will be a third duel anyway, a rubber match that should make a killing at the box office. But two wrongs dont make a right.
What made my stomach churn and my blood boil was the way Morales goose was cooked. The dice were loaded from the start. The only way Morales couldve won was by knockout. It was a conspiracy that involved Nady and the three judges.
Despite the "win," Barrera wasnt awarded the WBC title. Thats even more anomalous. He dethroned Morales but didnt win the crown. Why? Because Barrera isnt ranked by the WBC. Hes not even rated by the International Boxing Federation (IBF). Barrera is undoubtedly one of the top three fighters in the featherweight division as a rebel. Barrera used to be a World Boxing Organization (WBO) and International Boxing Organization (IBO) champion. The WBC and IBF dont like Barrera because he doesnt adhere to their ridiculous dictates. Barrera is rated No. 3 by the World Boxing Association (WBA) and No. 1 by the WBO and IBO.
With Barreras "win," the WBC has declared the featherweight throne vacant. No. 1 In Jin Chi and No. 2 Juan Manuel Marquez will fight for the vacant title in October. Where that leaves Morales and Barrera is a question mark. If they tangle in a third meeting, what crown will be at stake?
Its not the fighters fault that boxing is disgraced. Blame it on unscrupulous promoters who dont care for the integrity of the sport but only for the money they generate from controversy. Blame it on the conscienceless officials of the alphabet soup organizations that govern the sport. Blame it on the bookmasters who ride on the bettors naivete to laugh all the way to the bank.