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Javier Fortuna comes through in biggest fight of career

Fighters Network
29
May
Javier Fortuna (R) and Bryan Vasquez connect simultaneously during their fight on May 29, 2015. Photo by Al Bello/Getty Images.

Javier Fortuna (R) and Bryan Vasquez connect simultaneously during their fight on May 29, 2015. Photo by Al Bello/Getty Images.

NEW YORK – Javier Fortuna used to carry that ticking time bomb in the back of his mind. Always that slight whisper, asking, “When will the endurance go, when will the shoulders and legs begin to stiffen and ache? When will all fall apart?” For once, in the biggest fight of his life, he didn’t have those doubts. For once, the fighter he envisioned himself being was the fighter that was actually in the ring, rampaging through Bryan Vasquez.

Fortuna, a 25-year-old from the Dominican Republic, went 12 strong rounds for the first time in three years and his reward was a thorough, though at times erratic, unanimous-decision victory over Vasquez before 7,372 spectators at Barclays Center Friday night.

“I’m very surprised that the fight went the distance,” said Fortuna, his left eye swollen. “The biggest key to my success tonight was my training. Before this I didn’t have the stamina that I needed. However, after my work with Hector Bermudez leading up to this fight I was more than ready. Vasquez is a strong fighter. After the fifth round, I was boxing to score points. I was never really hurt by Vasquez, but I hurt my own hand on his head. Vasquez didn’t really affect me throughout the fight. The swelling on my eye is from a headbutt. I’m very proud of my performance tonight.”

He should be.



There was no doubt on the judges’ scorecards. John McKaie had it 116-112 for Fortuna (28-0-1, 20 knockouts), while judges Kevin Morgan and Tom Schreck each had it 117-111 for the Dominican, as did THE RING.

Fortuna was the much more accurate puncher, connecting on a total of 237 of 637 punches (37.2 percent), landing 38 of 189 jabs (20.1 percent) and 199 of 448 power punches (44.4 percent). Vasquez (34-2, 18 KOs) often swung wildly, sometimes throwing wide, almost cartoonish punches – and it showed; he connected on 174 of 710 total punches (24.5 percent), while he was very guilty of loading up, landing a mere 19 of 194 jabs (9.8 percent). Vasquez connected on 155 of 516 power shots (30 percent). That didn’t seem to matter. Fortuna walked through everything.

It wasn’t much of a fight. Though the bout had its spirited moments.

In the closing seconds of the second round, Fortuna did reach Vasquez. In the third, Fortuna tagged Vasquez once again, but this time the Costa Rican responded by countering Fortuna into the ropes. But Fortuna, who landed 21 of 52 shots in the third (to Vasquez’s 10 of 57, 17.5 percent), closed the round with a flurry pinning Vasquez against the ropes.

As the fight wore on, Vasquez began to wear out. His accuracy fell to shreds in the championship rounds, connecting on 17 of 102 punches. Fortuna, when he wasn’t taunting Vasquez or raising his arms in victory, connected on 39 of 96 (40 percent).

“My style is to box and then move,” Vasquez said. “Fortuna fought a smart fight tonight. He wouldn’t engage me and fight. Fortuna used his head and elbows a lot tonight, but I don’t want to use that as an excuse. I tried telling the referee, but nothing was done. I worked very hard for three months of training to get to this fight. I hope I won over some fans because I fight to please them. Hopefully I get a rematch because this is not the end of my career, and I’d love the chance to take that belt (the WBA regular title) from Fortuna.”

On the untelevised undercard, light heavyweight Marcus Browne, from Staten Island, remained undefeated by going 10 rounds for the first time in his career with a unanimous decision over Cornelius White (21-4, 16 KOs). Browne (15-0, 11 KOs) appeared to have White in serious trouble in the fourth, when referee Michael Griffin stopped the action with White visibly wobbling and holding himself up on the ropes.

Photo by Al Bello/Getty Images

Photo by Al Bello/Getty Images

“You can’t become a world champion without going 10 rounds, and now I’ve been down that road, and I know what it feels like to go 10 rounds,” Browne said. “I’m ready to go back to the gym and go to work. I got hurt pretty good with a shot in the ninth, but I saw everything he had. He wasn’t the toughest opponent I ever faced, but we went 10 rounds and it was a good experience. In the fourth, I didn’t hear the referee say break. When we were in the locker room before the fight, the referee told me once he said, ‘Break,’ we could continue the action. He said ‘Break,’ but I didn’t really hear him. He was wobbled and the referee gave him time to recover. I saw he was hurt. That’s what made get a little more head hungry.”

In a sloppy, yet entertaining heavyweight fight, Keith Tapia (15-0, 10 KOs) stopped the slovenly, though game, Leo Pla (5-5-2, 2 KOs) at 2:42 of the eighth round.

Featherweight Heather Hardy upped her record to 13-0 (2 KOs) in winning an eight-round, split-decision over Noemi Bosques (8-3-2, 2 KOs).

“I take every fight and every win like it’s the most important of my career,” Hardy said. “I felt the same pressure for this fight as I did my first fight, and it’s all about that ‘0’ and staying relevant. I put on a good show. The first score scared me. It made me wonder, was I wrong that I thought I won the fight? I was in there. I knew I won.”

Local lightweight Wesley Ferrer (9-0, 5 KOs), from Brooklyn, survived the first knockdown of his career to win a six-round majority decision over Jose Miguel Castro (4-4, 2 KOs). Ferrer had Castro in some early trouble, knocking him down in the first with a left hook. But Castro shocked Ferrer in the fifth by catching him completely by surprise with a flash knockdown.

“I got knocked down and I made a couple of mistakes that were my fault,” Ferrer said. “It was a learning experience – and I did learn from this. It was a big step for me. He caught me with an overhand right that I didn’t see coming. I learned I could get up, and to protect myself better the next time.”

Amateur star Chris Colbert, another local Brooklyn product, made his much-anticipated pro debut with a second-round stoppage of Marquis Pierce (1-6). Colbert, fighting at featherweight, had control of the fight until finally finishing Pierce at 1:31 of the second.

Lightweight Luis Franco (13-1-1, 9 KOs) stopped Guillermo Sanchez (15-16-1, 6 KOs) on a fifth-round TKO in the first fight of the night.

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