Vinny Pazienza vs. Roberto Durán II

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A Matter of Pride
DateJanuary 14, 1995
VenueConvention Hall in Atlantic City, New Jersey
Title(s) on the lineIBC super middleweight title
Tale of the tape
Boxer Vinny Pazienza Roberto Durán
Nickname The Pazmanian Devil Manos de Piedra
("Hands of Stone")
Hometown Cranston, Rhode Island, U.S. Panama City, Panama
Purse $750,000 $619,000
Pre-fight record 39–5 93–10
Height 5 ft 7+12 in (171 cm) 5 ft 7+12 in (171 cm)
Weight 168 lb (76 kg) 168 lb (76 kg)
Style Orthodox Orthodox
Recognition IBC super middleweight champion
2-division world champion
4-division world champion
Result
Pazienza wins via unanimous decision (118-110, 117-111, 116-112)

Vinny Pazienza vs. Roberto Durán II, billed as A Matter of Pride was a professional boxing match contested on January 14, 1995, for the IBC super middleweight title.

Background[edit]

Durán and Pazienza had first fought just over six months prior at the MGM Grand Garden Arena in a pay-per-view bout broadcast by HBO. Though Durán got off to a good start and scored the fight's lone knockdown, Pazienza took control during the fight's later rounds and was awarded a lopsided unanimous decision that proved to be somewhat controversial as the fight appeared closer than what the scorecards showed.[1] Pazienza would admit that he was unhappy with his performance while Durán maintained that he was rightful winner.[2] Going into the first fight, it was uncertain if the now 43-year old Durán would continue his boxing career should he lose, but when asked about retirement, Durán responded "No, I will fight. I just hope Vinny will give me another shot." to which Pazienza replied "Let's do it again."[3]

The rematch was officially announced in November 1994 to take place in January.[4] Prior to the announcement of the rematch, both fighters took tune-up fights in the interim. First, Durán would meet unknown Heath Todd in October, easily dispatching him by sixth round referee technical decision.[5] Pazienza, meanwhile, would face another virtual unknown in Rafael Williams in November, however he struggled mightily and barely outpointed Williams in a close unanimous decision. Pazienza, who was booed after the decision was announced and at the post-fight press conference, admitted to taking Williams lightly stating "I didn’t train as hard as I usually do, I didn’t want to burn out before the Duran fight."[6]

The fight[edit]

Pazienza dominated Durán en route to another unanimous decision victory. Like their previous fight, Durán was aggressive in the early rounds attempting to stay in close and attack Pazienza's body, but Durán quickly tired and Pazienza used his superior quickness to pepper Durán with combinations, right uppercuts and left hooks while eluding Durán's offense throughout the duration of the fight. All three judge's scorecards were overwhelmingly in favor of Pazienza's favor with scores of 118–110, 117-111 and 116–112.[7]

Durán, who again shot down retirement rumors, blamed his poor performance on overtraining claiming "I over trained, and my arm hurt a bit. I wanted to move, but I was all tied up tonight." He also alleged that Pazienza had used performance-enhancing drugs stating that Pazienza fought "like he has dope in his body." Pazienza, meanwhile, turned his attention to a potential super middleweight championship match with the then-top pound-for-pound fighter in the sport Roy Jones Jr., who was in attendance to witness Pazienza's defeat of Durán.[8]

Fight card[edit]

Weight Class Weight vs. Method Round Notes
Super Middleweight 168 lbs. Vinny Pazienza def. Roberto Durán UD 12/12 Note 1
Welterweight 147 lbs. Héctor Camacho def. Todd Foster TKO 5/12
Light Heavyweight 175 lbs. John Marceta def. Matthew Charlston TKO 9/10
Welterweight 147 lbs. Larry Barnes def. Hilario Mercedes UD 10/10
Middleweight 160 lbs. Aaron Davis def. Dennis Milton TKO 3/8

^Note 1 For IBC Super Middleweight title

References[edit]

  1. ^ PAZIENZA POUNDS OUT DECISION OVER 43-YEAR-OLD DURAN, Desert News article, 1994-06-26, Retrieved on 2024-05-27
  2. ^ Duran Beats Barkley for 4th Title, NY Times article, 1989-02-25, Retrieved on 2024-05-27
  3. ^ DURAN VOWS TO PRESS ON DESPITE LOSS TO PAZIENZA, NY Times article, 1994-10-19, Retrieved on 2024-05-27
  4. ^ DURAN, PAZIENZA TO FIGHT REMATCH IN JANUARY, Desert News article, 1994-11-10, Retrieved on 2024-05-27
  5. ^ Results Plus, NY Times article, 1994-06-26, Retrieved on 2024-05-27
  6. ^ Pazienza Fails to Impress, Hartford Courant article, 1994-11-09, Retrieved on 2024-05-27
  7. ^ Age 32 Beats Age 43: It's an Old Story, NY Times article, 1995-01-16, Retrieved on 2024-05-28
  8. ^ Pazienza Easily Puts Away Duran, Baltimore Sun article, 1995-01-15, Retrieved on 2024-05-28