SHELLSHOCKED: Andre Dirrell W DQ11 Arthur Abraham

AUTHOR: | IN: Boxing | COMMENTS: 8 Comments |

Michigan News - March 27, 2010

Bad juju followed the World Boxing Classic to the Joe Louis Arena in Detroit last night when Arthur Abraham was disqualified in the 11th round for clobbering Andre Dirrell while Dirrell was on his knees in the opening bout of Group Stage 2 of the Super Six.

Dirrell earned two points in the tournament standings with the unsatisfying win. Abraham, with three points, remains at the top of the Super Six heap, but his position as tournament leader will be in jeopardy when Carl Froch and Andre Ward see action over the next few months.

It was a fine performance by Dirrell, 167.5, who abandoned his spoiling tactics in favor of handing out an efficient boxing lesson. Gone, for the most part, was the clutching, slapping, skittish fighter who appeared to be his own worst enemy against Carl Froch last October; in his place appeared a fluid stylist in command at almost every step. For the first six or seven rounds, in fact, the fight was merely QED for a boxer who entered the ring as a 2 to 1 shortender.

Abraham, 168, appeared out of sorts as soon as Dirrell began the fight with rapid fire combinations punctuated by thumping shots to the body. From the opening bell, Abraham resembled a somnambulist, plodding forward in a straight line behind his high guard, allowing Dirrell, 26, to do as he pleased. It is the rare prizefighter who declines an open invitation to go to town, and not even the often reluctant Dirrell nixed this opportunity. Jabs, quick one-twos, hooks, and hard body shots tattooed Abraham from both southpaw and orthodox stances. Abraham blocked many of the punches on his arms, but offered little firepower in return. While Dirrell racked up points–and dug several hard shots into the ribs– Abraham merely plodded after “The Matrix” ineffectually.

Dirrell, now 19-1 (13), outboxed a mechanical Abraham nearly every step of the way, scoring a flash knockdown in round four with a snapping left hand after first setting Abraham up with his right forearm. From time to time Abraham would connect with a straight right, but his workrate, even for a fighter known for patience, was pitiful, and Dirrell was comfortable enough to don a smoking jacket and light up a pipe before a cozy fireplace over the first half of the fight. To add injury to insult, Abraham, 30, suffered a cut over the right eye in the 7th round that streamed rivulets for the rest of the night.

In the 10th round, Abraham appeared to be getting to Dirrell a little more and he even scored what appeared to be a knockdown with a straight right that dropped Dirrell on the seat of his pants. Laurence Cole, who will probably never win any “Employee of the Month” awards, ruled it a slip. Still, it showed that Abraham, despite his low punch output, might be honing in on the target. He continued to press and Dirrell began to scamper and hold more often.

A minute into the 11th, Dirrell, who has a proclivity for pratfalls in the ring, slipped in his own corner, and Abraham took the opportunity to land a hard, arcing right while Dirrell was on his knees, blissfully unaware of the warhead hurtling his way. The force of the blow sent Dirrell keeling over onto the edge of the ring apron in a bad way.

It was a deliberate foul and Cole disqualified Abraham, now 30-1 (25), immediately.

Ringside doctors rushed into the ring to attend to Dirrell, by now clearly orbiting another planet. He would be disoriented for several minutes to come; indeed, his postfight interview with Jim Gray revealed a man yet to regain his senses. It appeared that Dirrell, distraught, was under the mistaken impression that he had been knocked out. He was right, of course, but it was a KO of the dirty pool variety, and its force not only left him nearly delirious but also deprived him of the opportunity to celebrate what would most likely have been a virtuoso performance from wire to wire.

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I really was beginning to like King Arthur after watching some of his fights on youtube and watching fight camp 360 on showtime's website, but man..after this fight, he just made it much harder. I don't really know why he punched Dirrell when Dirrell was down. I'm not a boxer, hell, I've never even been in a fight! So i don't know what was going through his mind..but after that, he didn't have to say the things he said. I think he could have handled the situation better. I'm still not a fan of Dirrell, but I'll be waiting to see how the King comes back from this.

Hi NIck,

Abraham was very disappointing on Saturday night. He is usually a slow starter, but the fact that he didn't prepare to face a specific fighter is maddening. Credit should be given to Dirrell, who fought the fight of his life and looked good doing it (for once), but Abraham was completely one-dimensional. Not only that, but he fought with such an obvious technical flaw that it was almost embarrassing. He kept plodding forward with his back foot moving first...this is absurd and it's impossible to understand how so many fighters do this. Once you pick up your back foot and move it forward, you are unable to punch and are basically off-balance. it is also a "tell" or a "tip-off"....Every time Abraham picked up his back foot, Dirrell saw it and ran off a combination....Later on, Abraham seemed to get it in his head that Dirrell knew what Abraham was going to do a split-second before he did it so he started to use feints in hopes of throwing Dirrell off and making him commit.

In the end, Dirrell fought well and Abraham was clueless. He was also clueless in postfight interviews. So was his promoter, Sauerland. Abraham whacked Dirrell when he was down because he was frustrated. Even if Dirrell was "acting," as some of the smarter bloggers and forum trolls , who know everything about prizefighting, maintain, Abraham should have been DQ'd anyway since it was an obvious and blatant foul.

Dan,
You might want to watch the illegal hit again. Without a doubt Dirrell was winning the fight up to that point and he did get hit when he was down; however, he was getting hurt and AA was smelling blood. What is interesting to me (and I watch this over and over again) is how after Dirrell gets hit ON THE JAW, he looks up as if to complain and then has a "delay reaction" and grabs his temple in pain and goes into convulsions... He never got hit on the head and to me everything he had done in the fight up to that point just went out the window. He chose the easy way out because he started to feel AA coming to knock him out, which is typically what AA does. What a bunch of BS and that goes to the Showtime people at ringside as well that showed as much unbiased commentary as Johnny Most calling the Celtics games.
AA was right in calling Dirrell an actor but incorrect in calling him a "good" one. That was one of the worst pieces of acting I had ever seen...

Dirrell was dancing like a girl. He's not a warrior. He took the cowards way out. The way he was reacting, when he was down, showed that Dirrell was acting. What a shame.

Weird fight. Ref seemed to miss two knockdowns, one from each fighter, and the DQ at the end. Dirrel deserves his 2 points, but...just weird.

Hi Martin,

the whole Stupor Six has been weird....The World Boxing Classic may be some kind of innovative event, but it can't keep boxing from being boxing...

I sure hope that Dirrell isn't permanently injured. The way he seemed to pause after being hit and then go into convulsions, looked like brain damage. He was still not making any sense after they took him to the dressing room. Abraham behaved horridly after the foul too - no decent human being could have accused Dirrell of malingering. And to continue to deny Dirrell was down when hit, even after watching the replay, was unconscionable. I really think Abrahm should be disqualified from boxing at least until Dirrell is able to compete again. If that if forever - it would only be equitable.

Hi Dan,

Dirrell was released from Detroit Receiving Hospital early this morning....Brain scans came back negative. He should be all right....