Hometown hero, Lucian Bute of
Montreal, dominated the No. 1-ranked challenger Librado Andrade
of La Habra, Calif., en route to a unanimous decision victory
and third successful defense of his International Boxing
Federation (IBF) super middleweight world title.
However, it was Bute who
appeared to be out on his feet at the end of 12 rounds.
Bute used superior hand speed
and excellent footwork to easily handle the rough challenger for
most of the fight.
Andrade, who had been clearly
battered and beaten through 11-plus rounds, took control only as
Bute tired late in the final round. Andrade found a home for a
few big punches and had Bute stumbling from pillar to post.
With Bute up against the ropes
and seemingly out on his feet, Andrade landed another punishing
overhand right that sent Bute down for the first time in his
career.
Referee Marlon B. Wright gave
what many considered a long count, including a break to instruct
Andrade to remain in the neutral corner. When Wright resumed the
count, Bute was on his feet, leaning against the ropes. Wright
had deemed Bute ready to continue, but since the round had
ended, it went to the scorecards.
Judges scored the fight
117-109, 115-110 and 115-111 all in favor of Bute.
“We’ve discussed this before,”
said ShoBox analyst Steve Farhood during the telecast. “It is
very difficult to win a title on the road. We may have seen an
overly dramatic example of that tonight.
“This fight was 30 seconds too
long for Bute. He totally collapsed… and basically, the referee
cost Andrade the title.”
In the post-fight interview
with Farhood, Bute said through a translator, “I think he took
advantage of me getting tired. He won the 12th round,
and maybe one other round, but I won the fight.
“I am not aware of any
controversy but, maybe he was leaving the (neutral) corner. That
is not for me to judge.”
“He was completely out,” said
Andrade in the ring after the fight. “I didn’t come out of the
corner. I don’t know what (Wright) was talking about. It was
outrageous.”
Andrade falls to 27-2, 22
KOs. At the post fight press conference, he added, “If he gives
me a rematch, we’ll take it. But I didn’t come out to win a
decision. I promise you if we have a rematch, I am coming for
him.
“It doesn’t matter. I had a
job to do and I did it. I knocked him out. But whatever happens,
we’ll move forward and whoever I fight next, I am coming to
fulfill my dream. Whoever it is, I am coming. I am coming like
rain.”
“We said he’d have to walk
through fire if he was to win this fight in the last few
rounds,” said Nick Charles, ShoBox host and play-by-play
announcer. “He did. He came through fire, bullets and smoke.
What a gutsy performance from Andrade.
“He leaves the loser,
incredibly so, and walks off with tremendous grace.”
A near capacity crowd of
16,000-plus rocked the Bell Centre in favor of Quebec’s favorite
fighter. A native of Galat, Romania, Bute has lived in Canada
since 2003. He improves his record to 23-0, 18 knockouts.
HEARNS vs. CLAVETTE
In the co-feature, “The Chosen
One” Ronald Hearns of Detroit, Mich., continued his climb up the
154-pound rankings with an impressive performance over Paul
Clavette of New Brunswick, Canada (TKO 6).
Hearns fought effectively on
the outside in the opening rounds. In the fifth, he began
inflicting damage with a powerful straight right hand. In the
sixth, Hearns sent Clavette down twice before forcing the
referee to halt the action at 2:37 of the round.
Hearns entered the ring as the
No. 11 ranked World Boxing Council (WBC) contender and No. 13
ranked World Boxing Association (WBA). He improves to 20-0, 15
KOs while Clavette drops to 14-2-1, 2 KOs.
The event was promoted by
InterBox. Charles called the action from ringside with Farhood
serving as expert analyst. The executive producer of ShoBox
is Gordon Hall with Richard Gaughan producing and Rick
Phillips directing.