More Human Than Human: Juan Manuel Lopez W12 Rogers Mtagwa

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In an extraordinary performance, Rogers Mtagwa nearly pulled off the upset of the year by battling Juan Manuel Lopez tooth and nail over twelve desperate rounds last night at the WaMu Theater in New York City. Final scorecards were 116-111, 115-111, and 114-113, all in favor of Lopez, but the numbers do not reveal the fact that the Puerto Rican star barely made it to the final bell.

What looked like a grotesque mismatch on paper turned into a thrilling free-for-all that had a crowd of just over 3,000 gasping and screaming by turns. Somehow, without a jab, without much head movement, without consistent body punching, and without fancy footwork, Mtagwa, 26-13-2 (18), found himself nearly flattening one of the top young fighters in the game. A heavy underdog going into the bout, Mtagwa, 121, showed just how much courage, hunger, resilience, and conditioning–when cranked up to near pathological levels–can offset superior technique. Mtagwa appeared ready to walk through coals, charge a pack of wild dogs, and lie down for aspell on a Catherine Wheel to win last night. And he almost did.

During the early rounds Lopez, Caguas, Puerto Rico, flashed his classy combinations and outboxed Mtagwa from the outside with relative ease. He caught an onrushing Mtagwa, Philadelphia via Tanzania, with flush shots and an accurate jab and often sent Mtagwa off-balance with his blows. Lopez scored a flash knockdown in the fifth round but Mtagwa rose and kept the pressure on, and his roughhouse tacticsparticularly headbuttshad Lopez bruised and finally cut over the left eye by the fourth round. Referee Eddie Cotton resembled an astral projection of himself and decided early on that a hands-off approach would best serve his obscure needs for the evening. At one point, Lopez retaliated with a blatant headbutt that Cotton also ignored. The bout was filled with butts, low blows, elbows, and punches thrown after the bell. Needless to say, this kind of mayhem benefited Mtagwa, who succeeded in turning the fight into a brawl.

Little by little Lopez, 121, found himself in a shootout against a far less skilled opponent and almost paid for it. His technique seemed to unravel as Mtagwa increased the pressure. Lopez might also have been affected psychologically by the fact that Mtagwa walked through crushing blows time after time without decelerating.  (Compubox figures reported that Lopez landed over 300 punches in the fight.) By the eighth round Lopez, 26, was winging shots with abandon and getting caught during wild exchanges by overhand rights and sweeping left hooks. Although he connected with jarring rights and straight lefts, Lopez could not discourage Mtagwa, who showed startling determination throughout the fight. Mtagwa, 30, simply ignored the hurt. Lopez, on the other hand, could not match his opponent in the pain management department. He was rattled by Mtagwa in the 10th round, and just before the bell to end the 11th, Lopez took a thunderous right hand that left him shaken and shaky on the stool during the rest period.

Lopez emerged from his corner at the start of the twelfth round like a somnambulist. A few seconds later the fight appeared to be over as Mtagwa launched a ferocious attack that left Lopez reeling and apparently out on his feet. Indeed, Eddie Cotton might have been justified in waking up from his public nap and stopping the fight at any moment. Only the fact that Lopez, in between desperate clinching, still poked out his gloves once in a while kept him from being a TKO victim. He lunged in to clinch, staggered around the ring without being hit, was bounced off the ropes after getting nailed by a right, slipped to the canvas, held Mtagwa pinned to the ropes with his gloves, and was hammered relentlessly by a fighter determined to win at all costs. Somehow Lopez made it to the bell and instead of scoring a dramatic knockout, Mtagwa had to settle for a 10-8 round.

When the decision was announced cheers were quickly drowned out by boos.  Lopez, now 27-0 (24), showed remarkable heart getting through the last round, but, inevitably, questions must be raised about his defense and perhaps his chin. He was seriously hurt in a fight with a journeyman at least three times and ended the evening bruised and bloodied.

For brave Mtagwa, who emerged from the fight without a nick or a bruise, the future apparently does not include a rematch with Lopez. When asked about the possibility of a return bout, Bob Arum nixed the idea outright and instead mentioned something  about Steven Luevano, a fighter from Planet Earth.

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Hi Will, thanks for writing, it's been a while. Mtagwa put on an incredible show, but we can't overlook the fact that he was put in there to be thrashed. Mtagwa has lost by landslides to much lesser fighters than Lopez, but on Saturday he refused to go gently. No one should be able to recover from the Tomas Villa fight, but Mtagwa is unbelievably tough and determined. Let's hope he gets another payday soon. The fight was thrilling in itself but there was an extra oomph knowing that Mtagwa was such an underdog. Lopez will be better off for having been through such an ordeal, but his defense was porous. He seemed intent on paying back Mtagwa for dirty tactics and was nearly poleaxed for it. Eddie Cotton just did not feel like being on the job on Saturday night. He should find another moonlighting gig if you ask me. And how on earth did two judges score the last round 10-9 for Mtagwa? For Linares you should check out my latest post above....

Wonderful fight. Wonderful summary CA. You captured just about all my impressions. Not the greatest technical bout in the world (have no idea why Juanma chose to get into a firefight-- which Im sure much to his surprise went the full 12 rounds), but clearly one of the most enjoyable bouts I have ever witnessed. Made paying the PPV worth it.
Opponents with the heart of Mtagwa (or the fellow who upset Jorge Lineras) are why I try never to disparage any propose opponent as unworthy. And why I harp on the need for more TV coverage and not just of the "super matchups" with HBO's seal of approval. Imagine how many new fans would have been won over had that fight been on Spike? Or Vs? Plus it would be replayed repeatedly. I'm glad I saw it on PPV, but its a missed opportunity to broaden the audience for the sport.
I'm not down on Juanma (who I had been real high on) after this. Dont get me wrong-- I have no clue what he was thinking strategically in just banging and throwing away many of his skill advantages. But I liked how he remained composed for the first 2/3rds of the fight as it became clear he was in a war. And as for the baptism of fire that was the last third of the fight, What's that saying about needing to forge steel? I think this could turn out to be a good thing long term for Juanma. But he has to learn from it.
Thanks CA for also for pointing out the lousy ref job. Mtgawa's most damaging punches in the early part of the fight came AFTER the bell in at least 3 rounds that I recall-- probably even more. And the only WARNING of the evening went to Juanma. Ridiculous. But, good thing for Juanma that the only round he did break the fighters immediately at the bell was the 11th-- becuase he was toast if one more punch landed.