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Sharkie's Machine
August 6, 2006
“The Viper and The Bazooka At The Garden”
By Frank Gonzalez Jr.
Some questions were answered about the reincarnations of Vernon “The Viper”
Forrest (38-2, 28 KO’s) and Ike “Bazooka” Quartey (37-3-1,31 KO’s) Saturday
night at Madison Square Garden. Either guy would make fair opponents for the
division’s elites, represented by the current crop of WBA Champ, Jose Rivera,
IBF Champ, Corey Spinks, WBC Champ, Oscar De La Hoya or relatively unknown WBO
Champ, Sergeii Dzinziruk.
I think Kassim Ouma (25-2-1, 15 KO’s) would probably beat all of the above but
has the smallest chance of getting the big names to fight him after again
demonstrating his tenacious style in a convincing win over unbeaten Sechew
Powell (now 20-1, 12 KO’s). I wouldn’t write off Powell though, he’s still young
and learning. His experience vs. Ouma should pay good dividends in the future. A
rematch between Ouma and Roman Karmazin (34-2-1, 21 KO’s) might be an
interesting redemption match for both.
Fighting at 154-pounds, Quartey and Forrest showed decent stamina, durability
and ring generalship. Quartey landed the better punches at a higher clip.
Forrest showed that he can still box well and that his left shoulder has healed
enough to fight competitively. Neither looked like world- beaters but it was
good match making for two former World Champions on the rebound.
Forrest showed poor sportsmanship early on by refusing to touch gloves during at
the start of the fight. Bad blood? No—just bad manners.
*
Forrest started fast, throwing jabs and combinations, circling round the shorter
Quartey, who used his signature, “bazooka” jab with success. Forrest pushed
Quartey, who went to the canvas. It was correctly ruled a slip. I thought
Forrest did just enough to win the first round, which was close.
Forrest boxed well from the outside, popping Quartey with jabs and not so
powerful combinations. Vernon lacked enough pop to ever rattle Ike, as evidenced
by how easily Quartey took Forrest’s best landed punch of the night, a nasty
right upper cut in the third round. Quartey used his jab and pressured Forrest
to easily win the second and third rounds. Vernon turned the tide in the fourth,
out boxing Quartey and landing some of his cleanest punches.
By the fifth round, I had it even. In the fifth round the tide turned, favoring
Quartey, who pressed Forrest with his jab into back-up mode, rendering him less
effective. The sixth was all Quartey, who proved much stronger and able to
nullify Vernon’s range and height advantage by sticking close and working his
jab.
The seventh belonged to Forrest, who worked real hard for the payoff of having
been slightly more effective in that round. Quartey fought smartly and kept
Forrest out of his ideal punching range. By the eighth, Ike’s jab caused
Vernon’s face to swell like a ripe tomato, almost closing his right eye. Late in
the round, Forrest landed a low blow and was warned by the referee. Quartey
proceeded to take it to Forrest with punches that had more sting and were
landing at a high rate.
In the ninth, Forrest was boxing well, when suddenly he threw a nasty low blow
that caused referee Arthur Mercante Jr. to pause the action and take a point.
Forrest had been warned a few times by then about low punches. Action resumed
quickly and Quartey made Forrest pay with a slew of jabs and some bonus right
hands. Losing a point at this juncture had to be crucial for Forrest.
The tenth started aggressively with Forrest coming in, then wrapping up, only to
be pushed down to the canvas by Quartey, putting a tenth round ‘ying’ to the
first round’s ‘yang.’ It was rightly ruled a slip. Vernon threw lots of shots,
rarely landing cleanly. Quartey was one-dimensional but landed some good shots,
though not enough to prove more impressive in the final round.
* *
As they waited to hear the official scores, Forrest did not look confident. When
it was announced that the Judges had a Unanimous Decision, I was sure Ike
Quartey who had won. Then the scores were read, 96-93 and 95-94 twice…all in
favor of Vernon Forrest. Judge Tony Paolillo was the one with the 96-93
scorecard. If you consider the lost point in the ninth, Paolillo only gave three
rounds to Quartey, who according to the tabulations, landed more punches overall
and at a considerably higher clip than Forrest.
That Decision pissed off the fans at The Garden, who could smell the corruption
and chanted, “Bullshit! Bullshit! Bullshit!” Whoever said foreign fighters get a
fair shake in the USA?
During the post fight interview with HBO’s Larry Merchant, Forrest said he
wanted to thank God. Merchant quipped, “And don’t forget to thank the Judges.”
Maybe Forrest should send a nice box of chocolates to Tony Paolillo.
Well folks, that’s boxing. No accountability.
Where does Vernon go from here? A third fight against rebounding Shane Mosley
seems out of the question, since the risk is too high for Mosley to chance
another loss to Forrest, especially now. Shane also seems content to remain at
147 or wherever Forrest isn’t.
As for Ike Quartey, if he never fights again in the USA, I wouldn’t be
surprised. The Ghanaian fighter was robbed Saturday night in a fight that even
the American fans at the Garden thought he won. Quartey can still make money if
he elects to continue fighting. He may not win any titles but he usually gives
fans their money’s worth and that alone maintains his commercial appeal. The
European circuit may be a better bet for him in the future. At least there, he
might get a fair shake with the Judges.
* * *
Comments can be emailed to dshark87@hotmail.com