Emanuel Navarrete Survives a Bloody Battle with Charly Suarez in San Diego

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By David A. Avila



In a torrid battle Mexico’s Emanuel “Vaquero” Navarrete and his staccato attack staved off the herky-jerky non-stop assaults of Philippine’s Charly Suarez to win by technical decision and retain the WBO super feather world title on Saturday.

What do they feed these guys?

Navarrete (40-2-1, 32 KOs) and his elongated arms managed to connect enough to compensate against the surprising Suarez (18-1, 10 KOs) who wowed the crowd at Pechanga Arena in San Diego.

An accidental clash of heads opened a cut on the side of Navarrete’s left eye and forced a stoppage midway through the fight.

From the opening round Navarrete used his windmill style of attack with punches from different angles that caught Suarez multiple times early. It did not matter. Suarez fired back with impunity and was just as hungry to punch it out with the Mexican fighter.

It was savage.

Every time Navarrete connected solidly, he seemed to pause and check out the damage. Bad idea. Suarez would immediately counter with bombs of his own and surprise the champion with his resilience and tenacity.

Wherever they found Suarez they should look for more, because the Filipino fighter from Manila was ferocious and never out of his depth.

Around the sixth round the Mexican fighter seemed a little drained and puzzled at the tireless attacks coming from Suarez. During an exchange of blows a cut opened up on Navarrete and it was ruled an accidental clash of heads by the referee. Blood streamed down the side of Navarrete’s face and it was cleared by the ringside physician.

But at the opening of the eighth round, the fight was stopped and the ringside physician ruled the cut was too bad to continue. The California State Athletic Commission looked at tape of the round when the cut opened to decipher if it was an accidental butt or a punch that caused the cut. It was unclear so the referee’s call of accidental clash of heads stood as the final ruling.

Score cards from the judges saw Navarrete the winner by scores of 78-75, 77-76 twice. He retains the WBO title.

Interim IBF Lightweight Title

The sharp-shooting Raymond “Danger” Muratalla (23-0, 17 KOs) maneuvered past Russia’s Zaur Abdullaev (20-2, 12 KOs) by unanimous decision to win the interim IBF lightweight title after 12 rounds.

Both fighters were strategic in their approach with Muratalla switching from orthodox to southpaw at various times of the fight. Neither fighter was ever able to dominant any round.

Defense proved the difference between the two lightweights. Muratalla was able to slip more blows than Abdullaev and that proved the difference. The fighter from Fontana, California was able to pierce Abdullaev’s guard more often than not, especially with counter punches.

Abdullaev was never out of the fight. The Russian fighter was able to change tactics and counter the counters midway through the fight. It proved effective especially to the body. But it was not enough to offset Muratalla’s accuracy.

There were no knockdowns and after 12 rounds the judges scored it 118-110, 119-109 twice for Muratalla who now becomes the mandatory for the IBF lightweight title should Vasyl Lomachenko return to defend it.

Muratalla was brief.

“He was a tough fighter,” said Muratalla. “My defense is something I work on a lot.”

Perla Wins

Super flyweight Perla Bazaldua (2-0) eased past Mona Ward (0-2) with a polished display of fighting at length and inside.

Combination punching and defense allowed Bazaldua to punch in-between Ward’s attacks and force the St. Louis fighter to clinch repeatedly. But Ward hung in there despite taking a lot of blows. After four rounds the Los Angeles-based Bazaldua was scored the winner 40-36 on all three cards. Bazaldua signed a long term contract with Top Rank in March.

Photo credit: Mikey Williams / Top Rank
 
it was not a head butt it was a punch then a glove touched the head of the Nav and they made it out to be a head butt...............it will not be debated for years to come but it will be noted in the future of his fights. A rematch is not of any use but they will do that to make money on a lie............
 
Thank you for weighing-in.

If I were Charly Suarez's manager, I would file a protest with the California commission to have the result overturned to a no-contest with the proviso of an immediate rematch.

I doubt the commission would act favorably on the protest, but it would be the right thing to do.
 
Thank you for weighing-in.

If I were Charly Suarez's manager, I would file a protest with the California commission to have the result overturned to a no-contest with the proviso of an immediate rematch.

I doubt the commission would act favorably on the protest, but it would be the right thing to do.
And its everything that goes into a fight, the training the night and i mean that who has not seen the night belong to the B-sides corner ? Nav not hardly making weight which shows more then a few facts about him in the build up to this match up. Even a rematch can not make right certain poor decisions that are carried out by a few refs that were involved. You are right more should and could be done but in the minds of most fans they will remember it as a Win for Nav and lets be clear stopping a fight is an art to some of these ring-docs and how many have been allowed to bleed on in spite of what was the real reason ..............eh boxing you love it when they bang you hate it will the authorities get involved. Just like on the street although " street justice " in this situation would not look nice. these and other similar match ups could bring new fans in but not after they watch the game and how it plays out .......... i bet Arum is smiling and glad he put the re-pay refs in that he hand picked....Everybody did there part and they still got it wrong.....
 
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