View Full Version : Mora Gets Draw


amanamagus
10-17-2007, 07:12 PM
Mora Gets Draw
By David A. Avila
www.thesweetscience.com

In the co-main event, an upset took place in the middleweight contest between Mora and little-known Elvin Ayala.

After a long 14 month-layoff, Sergio “The Latin Snake” Mora (19-0-1) hoped to get back in the middleweight loop against Ayala but was derailed by the tall counter-puncher and suffered a split-decision draw.

“A draw is like a win for me,” said Ayala (18-2-1, 8 KOs).

Mora, the champion of season one the Contender reality TV show, had possible plans to fight for the middleweight championship. The East Los Angeles boxer needed to get back in the ring.

But after a slow start, even Mora’s rally in the latter rounds proved insufficient. The judges scored it 99-91 for Mora, 96-94 for Ayala and 95-95 for a draw.

“I’m very, very sorry. That was an embarrassment,” said Mora, 26, following the draw. “That was not me.”

Plans didn’t go well for Mora who hoped to face new middleweight king Kelly Pavlik in February. Last month Mora was supposed to face former junior middleweight champion Kassim Ouma but the entire fight card was scrapped because of an injury to one of the fighters in the main event. So he took this fight to keep busy.

From the beginning Mora looked rusty.

Ayala began quickly with a two-fisted attack that seemed to catch Mora by surprise in the first round. But after two minutes, it seemed Mora had figured out Ayala’s style.

A solid right hand by Ayala caught Mora flush at the opening of the second round. That was followed by a low blow by Mora forcing a pause. Then three left hooks by Mora were followed by a straight right hand counter. That seemed to spell the theme of the battle between the two middleweights.

After a minute of inactivity and feints, a strong right to the body by Mora opened the scoring in the fifth round. A three-punch combo by Mora forced Ayala’s trainer Luis Rosa to scream, “keep your hands up.” Another right to the body landed hard for Mora to end the round but Ayala seemed unfazed.

“This is our fight, he’s tired,” Rosa said.

A double left hook opened the sixth round for Mora but a strong right and left combination landed solid for Ayala and let Mora know he still had power in his punches. A left uppercut pierced Mora’s guard and sent sweat flying. Ayala seemed to have more energy, as Mora seemed physically spent.

“I hurt Mora with a body shot,” said Ayala. “I know I hurt him because when I hit him he didn’t punch back.”

The seventh round saw Mora rebound with more effective punching, but Ayala never seemed to lose confidence.

“I was having fun,” Ayala said.

A left to the body and left to the head seemed to hurt Ayala but he fired back. A left hook caught Ayala on the jaw but he retaliated with a quick right. It was a close round that could have gone to either fighter.

It looked like the East Los Angeles boxer found a second wind.

Mora started to close the distance and dig inside with body shots. A left uppercut snapped Ayala’s head but he returned fire once again with that sneaky right hand counter. A left to the body seemed to stun Ayala too. But he recovered quickly to move out of the way. A cut above Mora’s left eye angered the boxer who yelled something and snapped his gloves together. But he just couldn’t land the telling blow.

“I felt I landed the harder shots,” said Mora.

The final round saw Mora punch and slip and land solid shots to the body, but Ayala answered back in the second minute of the 10th round with his own combinations. The two fought furiously during the final 30 seconds with Mora trying to land the knockout punch and Ayala looking for the knockout counter. But neither fighter could find the other’s chin.

“Getting a draw in his hometown is like getting a win,” said Ayala.

Jeff Wald, Contender promoter, said he hopes the draw doesn’t deter a possible title fight against new middleweight champion Pavlik.

“He fought his guts out, he never backed up,” Wald said.

amanamagus
10-17-2007, 07:13 PM
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amanamagus
10-17-2007, 07:13 PM
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amanamagus
10-17-2007, 07:14 PM
Mora-Ayala Ends in Draw, Gomez Beats Tackie
By Mark Vester

In a performance that may possible cost him big bucks, undefeated "The Contender" reality show champion Sergio "The Latin Snake" Mora (19-0-1, 4 KOs) battled back in the late rounds to pull out a draw against the Elvin Ayala (18-2-1, 8 KOs) at the Home Depot Center in Carson, California.

Ayala, who was training last week with Contender stars Peter Manfredo Jr. and Jesse Brinkley, took the fight to Mora in the early going to win most of the early rounds. The scores were 96-94 Ayala, 99-91 Mora and 95-95. The 99-91 score was shocking considering how every person seemed to view the fight as a very close contest.

Mora, who is the running to land future bouts with WBO/WBC middleweight champion Kelly Pavlik and former champion Jermain Taylor, has certainly lost some value with his recent showing.

In the main event, Alfonso Gomez (18-3-2, 8 KOs) won a harder than expected ten-round unanimous decision over a game Ben Tackie (29-8-1, 17 KOs). The scores were 97-93, 98-92 and 98-92.

Gomez piled up the points early over a slower Tackie. A clash of heads cause the right side of Gomez's face to swell up. Tackie tried to stage a rally in the final rounds, which Gomez was able to hold off.

amanamagus
10-17-2007, 07:14 PM
Mora's draw could cost him a title shot
L.A. middleweight is disappointed with his effort against counter-punching Ayala.
By Lance Pugmire, Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
October 17, 2007

If anyone deserved an excuse, Sergio Mora said Tuesday night, it was him.

He needed one after his draw with Elvin Ayala in a 10-round middleweight fight at the Home Depot Center in Carson.

Mora, the unbeaten 2005 winner of the boxing reality television series, "The Contender," showed defensive rust from a 14-month layoff created by failed contract talks with several fighters, and a late change of opponent from forward-charging former world champion Kassim Ouma to the defensive, counter-punching Ayala.

"I still believe I won the fight," Mora said. "But I'm disgusted in my performance."

Mora never appeared fazed by Ayala's punches but he left himself open to a steady delivery of blows, even though Mora at times battered Ayala with the night's more powerful assaults.

Judge David Mendoza credited Mora (19-0-1) with a one-sided 99-91 decision, judge Raul Caiz Jr. gave Ayala a 96-94 edge and judge Max DeLuca scored the bout a 95-95 tie.

In the night's co-main event, former "Contender" fighter Alfonso Gomez improved to 18-3-2, winning by unanimous decision over welterweight Ben Tackie (29-8-1).

Mora's draw probably sabotages his hopes for a high-profile, rich payday early next year with newly crowned middleweight champion Kelly Pavlik.

Mora, a South Los Angeles native, left the ring abruptly, well aware that his shot at Pavlik might have disappeared. The unbeaten Pavlik is waiting to hear if fallen former champion Jermain Taylor will activate a rematch clause by the end of the month. If he doesn't, Pavlik is expected to pick between Mora and Ireland's John Duddy for his next fight in January.

"Duddy's now the front-runner," said a spokesman for Pavlik's promoter, Top Rank.

"Actually, I'm hoping Pavlik's people are licking their chops because I looked [bad] tonight," Mora said. "I'm still undefeated, and I'm still popular, and I hope they'll understand I had an excuse of preparing nine weeks for Ouma, and then having just three weeks of practice to chase this guy."

Mora often caught Ayala (18-2-1) with the sharper punches in most rounds, but he also left himself open to stiff uppercuts and good combinations such as a sixth-round flurry that made the pro-Mora crowd gasp. Mora looked back at his watchers in a dismissive glance, apparent confirmation that he wasn't being hurt.

The harm, it turns out, was on the scorecards.

amanamagus
10-17-2007, 07:15 PM
Jeff Wald, Hollywood Lou DiBella On Same Page
Latin Snake Sergio Mora Slithers By Ayala, Looms As Jermain Taylor's Comeback Test!
www.boxingconfidential.com
Michael Marley
10/17/2007

Sergio “The Latin Snake” has slithered his way into a likely money fight with former world middleweight champ Jermain Taylor. Mora delivered a subpar performance Tuesday night on ESPN, only managing a draw with journeyman Elvin Ayala (18-2-1, eight KOs), but the disappointing showing may have worked in Mora’s favor.

Before the fight, Jeff Wald of “The Contender’ was pitching and pitching hard for his Season One winner of the boxing TV reality series to fave Taylor who was defrocked of his two world title belts when Kelly “Ghost” Pavlik survived a near, second-round KO to come back and stop Taylor in seven rounds in Atlantic City.

I didn’t see Mora-Ayala but the official cards were whacked out with a 96-94 Ayala score, a 95-95 “push” and a seemingly absurd 99-91 Mora vote. My TV-watching super scout said ESPN commentator Teddy Atlas grudgingly favored Mora by one thin point.

Taylor promoter “Hollywood Lou” DiBella, who is prepping to produce a major motion picture starring Oscar-winner Helen Mirren, said he sees no reason why Mora’s showing disqualified him as Taylor’s next opponent.

“I agree,” Wald said by phone from ringside where he watched his guy Alfonso Gomez take a decision over rugged Ben Tackie. “Sergio and Jermain will be a great fight but what DiBella hasn’t figured out is that Sergio will beat Jermain easily.”

Though there was some sort of rematch clause in the Taylor-Pavlin contract, Pavlik promoter Bob Arum has wiggled and waffled with DiBella. Pavlik’s hometown newspaper, The Youngstown Vindicator, is reporting that Pavlik will make his first title defense in Atlantic City Jan. 26 against popular but harmless Irishman John Duddy.

So Taylor needs a dance partner. He may soon be dancing with a Latin Snake.

Beanflicker
10-17-2007, 09:19 PM
“A draw is like a win for me,”

I laughed out loud at this for some reason. This is the best tomato can quote of all time.

Alekhine_Lord
10-17-2007, 10:41 PM
Mora is going to have to get past Taylor first to face Pavlik.

amanamagus
10-18-2007, 08:18 PM
Here is the post fight video with Sergio and Ayala courtesy of Pound4Pound.com

http://www.pound4pound.com/Videos/2007/MoraAyalaPostFight.wmv