
By Jimmy G
Whether or not the world truly awaited Oscar De La Hoya against
Floyd Mayweather is open to debate, but one thing is for sure,
the aptly named promotion ‘Gladiators’ could not have had two
fighters more worthy and fitting of such a billed accolade.
In Ricky Hatton and Jose Luis Castillo, you have two boxers whom
encapsulate the term ‘Gladiators’, and although hailing from
differing homelands, both could have been born quite
easily on opposite sides of the dusty, hardened Mexican streets;
such is their natural temperament and respective machismos
within the sacred square.
It was a fighter’s fight, the proverbial ‘Irresistible Force’
once again classically pitched against the ‘Immoveable Object’.
Both are bravado based, pound for pound marquee stars, both
renowned for refusing to take a backwards step, and both
clinically versed in the supreme art of murderous body punching.
It was an intriguing match up provided by Fight Academy and
Banner Promotions in collaboration with Bob Arum’s Top Rank that
had the boxing world foaming at the mouth in eager anticipation
of a prospective ‘Barnburner’, and a subsequent potential fight
of the year candidate.
After two
previous below par performances by Hatton’s very high standards,
finally he had an aggressive, orthodox opponent in Castillo to
showcase his fire. Castillo also had added incentives, both
personal and financial.
The
recent unfortunate and sad death of his brother Cesar from a
brain aneurysm, and the financial repercussions of his proposed
third fight with the late, great Diego Corrales still fresh in
his mind and pocket.
Castillo was not
only fighting for his dedicated family name, but also his
economic future well- being.

"I started in the gym 12 weeks ago and I have never worked this
hard for any fight. It will be the best Jose Luis Castillo the
world has ever seen."
"I cannot wait. It is like a new beginning for me. My last fight
(against Herman Ngoudjo) was just a warm-up. This is the real
thing," added the two-time world champion."
"I need the motivation of facing someone like Hatton to get the
best out of me. I have been in a lot of big wars and I need the
best opponents to make me fight at my best. When I lost to Diego
Corrales the first time, I regrouped and beat him easily when we
met again."
"But those fights showed I have the heart of a lion and that
will come to the fore again on June 23. Hatton will have never
seen anything like me."
Castillo said: "I have best upper cut in the division and I will
use it against Hatton. Ricky is used to slow, cumbersome
fighters, but I have real hand speed and that will cut him
down."
"Hatton is there to be beaten and I know I am going to be the
first boxer to do it. My trainer told me he has never seen me
any better in the sparring I have done. That is a warning to
Hatton and he should know that on June 23 it will be a war."
"I am going to win that war." predicted a confident Castillo.

The Hitman responded ‘"The achievements have been a little
better than the performances in my last two fights," conceded
Hatton, who is unbeaten in 42 professional bouts.
"But there have been reasons. Against Collazo, I was fighting in
a division I didn't want to be in [a proposed bout with Juan
Lazcano at 140lb fell through after Lazcano injured his wrist].
"Against Urango, the hotel air conditioning brought out a head
cold in the week of the fight and that affected me in the last
four or five rounds."
"I was fighting a couple of awkward southpaws and I was maybe a
little complacent without even
realising
it."
"This is more up my street, someone who is going to stand in
front of me. I'm bang on; I've got the same excitement and
motivation as before the Tszyu fight."
“This is the best training camp I’ve ever had; it even leaves
the Tszyu camp in its tracks”.
"I've been walking around snarling for the last two weeks and
I've not had that for the last two fights. On Saturday night,
Castillo is going to
realise
I'm the real deal." concluded a very upbeat Hatton.

The infamous Thomas and Mack Centre in Las Vegas Nevada was
named as the hunting ground for which the ‘Gladiators' were set
to do battle. Live on HBO in the States, and as a Box Office
extravaganza on Setanta Sports in the UK, the stage was set for
a ferocious encounter between the self proclaimed ‘Manchester
Mexican’ and the brutally efficient Mexicali Mexican.
It was Hatton’s second visit to the bright lights of boxing’s
Mecca, but the 11th appointment for Castillo, who 21 months
previous, chopped down the late ‘Chico’ Corrales in four
ruthless rounds within the very same arena.
The fight had all the magical ingredients to make it an
enthralling affair, and the weigh in at Caesar’s Palace 24
hour’s prior, added further excitement. With over 3000 fans in
attendance, both fighters tipped the scales bang on the 140lb
limit, with Hatton noticeably looking as ‘ripped’ as he’s ever
been, focused, and completely in the zone. The preceding
sterling work of Billy Graham and team nutritionist Kerry Kayes
spoke volumes, an undeniable testament to the Hitman’s
sensational physique, advantage Hatton.
The pre-fight tale of the tape told a different story, and gave
Castillo the presumed eminence; a 12cm reach advantage on paper
looked tactically
favourable
to the Mexican. But the anticipated superior natural strength of
the Hitman, his irrefutable conditioning, combined with the 200
hours of meticulous studying of Castillo’s style by Hatton’s
trainer Billy Graham to devise the perfect strategy, looked to
negate any prevalence Jose Luis may have pre-empt.
As the former two-time world lightweight champion made his way
to the ring, the rapturous chants of Mex-i-co, Mex-i-co echoed
around the Thomas and Mack Centre. There was no Mexican wave,
but the Hispanic chants were quickly to be drowned out by the
Hatton fans, as the presence of Manchester’s own Tsunami could
be seen smashing the pads from his dressing room, courtesy of
the television screens throughout the arena.

With the lights dimmed, Manchester’s hired gun was preparing to
make his customary spine-tingling entrance into the
fray. The
legendary words of Winston Churchill – “We will fight, we will
fight, we will fight” began to reverberate around the arena, as
if proclaiming Hatton’s intent.
The trademark melodic charms of Blue Moon were released and
welcomed by an adoring deafening ovation of appreciation from
the 10,000 travelling fans in attendance.
The Hitman was back, and Las Vegas was no longer in the state of
Nevada, more in a state of delirium.
As testament to
Hatton’s
superstar status, his pursuing entourage into the ring, carrying
his belts, included his close friends, and legends in their own
right, the epitome of supreme technique-Wayne Rooney and Marco
Antonio Barrera.

As the familiar big fight figure of the verbally unmistakable
Mr
Buffer introduced the ‘Gladiators’ within the lion’s den, the
atmosphere was reaching melting point, and the strip was getting
ready to rumble Hitman style.

As the bell rang to indicate the beginning of the opening round,
it was barely decipherable amongst the rambunctious noise
generated by the Hitman’s fanatical barmy army. Hatton came out
fast throwing a lead left hand that shaved its proposed target,
as the fighters tied up on the inside. Castillo responded in
kind with a short right uppercut. A left hook to the body
followed by an arcing right hook by Hatton had Castillo off
balance, and subsequently sent the Mexican to the canvas.
Referee Joe Cortez ruled it a slip, although the shot did
connect, it was certainly open to interpretation but Cortez
decided otherwise.

Hatton was looking super-charged; a huge left hook missed the
target and the following clinch had Cortez reprimand the
fighters for holding.
Hatton was looking like a man possessed, and maybe a little too
eager to please, but the crowd were loving it as they chanted
“There’s only one Ricky Hatton” in resounding appreciation.
Hatton was trying to bully Castillo, holding, leaning in, and
firing off shots out of the clinches. Another warning from
Cortez to “Clean it up” was seemingly falling on deaf ears as
Hatton continued the role of the aggressor.
If Castillo hadn’t
realised
previously, he certainly was aware now, he wasn’t going to have
to look for Hatton as he did Mayweather. Hatton was right in
front of him, a proverbial firestorm in the offing. Hatton
continued to press the action, Castillo was looking bemused and
uncomfortable. A trademark left hook downstairs, followed by a
right hook upstairs landed for the Hitman as he applied ruthless
albeit reckless pressure. It wasn’t clean action, but already it
was looking effective. A right uppercut doubled up from Hatton,
finished with left hook to the body seemed to be the plan; it
seemed no coincidence Hatton’s combinations were all ending with
his honey-punch.

Already Hatton’s hand speed was proving to be a major factor in
the fight, his movement, although at times erratic, was giving
Castillo problems. The Mexican wasn’t being allowed time to
work, he couldn’t seem to get his jab working as Hatton
continued to bully him backwards. Slipping a Hatton a hook,
Castillo countered well with a straight right hand. With the
timekeepers watch ready to bring proceedings to a close, the
Hitman physically moved Castillo back onto the ropes; a three
punch combination out of the clinch for Hatton punctuated a
fierce opener as both fighters made their way back to their
respective corners accompanied by rapturous applause.
Back in Hatton's corner, Billy Graham certainly wasn't sharing
the same sentiment as the Hitman's devoted fans.
“I don’t want to see that, I don’t want to see that again,
steady him down, set him up with the jab, it will be quicker to
steady him down" was the constructive advice to his protégé.
Hatton seemed caught up in the frenzy, keen to produce the
goods, but he was neglecting his boxing ability, and taking
unnecessary risks.

As the bell kicked off the 2nd round, Hatton was back on the
attack, doubling up the jab with authority, and landing a left
hook to Castillo's hardened head for good measure. Castillo's
face bore the repercussions of the offensive, the Mexican's
bloodied nose clear evidence of the assault. Castillo fired back
with sharp left hook, Hatton acknowledged, with a spiteful
looking left hand to the ribs. The action was frenetic albeit
chaotic, as Castillo rocked Hatton's head back with purposeful
straight left which forced another clinch. Although the holding
maybe perceived as excessive by the boxing connoisseur, there
wasn't a break in the action, it was a brutal battle, and if
nothing else, the paying audience loved it.
As Cortez split the fighters from the clinch, the Hitman let his
hands go, but both shots were caught by Castillo's
defence
who countered with a tidy left jab/right uppercut combination of
his own. Hatton, the incessant antagonist, demonstrated his
superior strength by bullying his Mexican foe back onto the
ropes and into a zone of hurt. A right uppercut, followed by a
left handed torso blow from Hatton drew a wince from Castillo's
poker face; the body-shots were having an effect, of that there
was no doubt.

As the seconds elapsed to draw close to the activity, Hatton was
on top, with two rounds safely in the bag. And although he was
blatantly smothering his own work, he was nullifying Castillo's,
such was his industry. It wasn't Billy Graham's game plan that
was being executed; Hatton was improvising his own agenda. It
wasn't pretty, but it was relentlessly potent, and served to act
as a release for his pent up frustrations from previous outings.
Screams of appreciation from the energetic crowd accompanied the
timekeepers signal to end the round, as the Hitman made his way
back to his corner, and straight into the riot-act, as read by
Billy 'The Preacher' Graham.
The atmosphere inside the Thomas and Mack Centre was electric;
with the voltage continuing to soar as the 3rd round got under
way. A straight left hand lead from Hatton grazed Castillo's
brow as both fighter's once again tied up at close quarters. A
three punch combination from Castillo out of the clinch worked
well, a left jab, right uppercut, left hook had the Mexican's
trademark stamped all over it. Hatton answered with his own
patent, a nasty looking left hook to the body, as the action and
intensity levels scaled new heights.

Castillo was clearly feeling the pace, he didn't look happy with
the body-shots he was taking onboard, and began to tuck his
elbows inside to act as a deterrent against the pain. With his
mouth now open, Castillo fired two body punches of his own, both
of which landed south of the border. Desperation? Distress?
Either way Joe Cortez offered no sympathy, and verbally
reprimanded Castillo, instructing him to keep his punches up.
This was no tickling contest; it was a savage, rough-house
tear-up that would not have looked out of place on the
notoriously hardened backstreets of Tijuana.
Hatton, aggrieved by the low blows, launched a huge leaping left
hook to the head in retribution, but unlike Carlos Maussa,
Castillo saw it coming, and took the relevant evasive action
required to remain coherent. The quality of work on show was
beginning to improve, as both fighters traded high grade
body-shots at close range. Hatton was now utilizing his
excellent and often under-rated footwork, shifting his balance
to create the angles, and landing with sharp punches to
Castillo's mid-section.
The effervescent crowd, buoyant with the action on show,
increased the decibel level to maximum output. The traveling
brass band in attendance belted out the classic Hitman anthems,
and the familiar football-style Hatton chants began to once
again circle the arena as if electrically charged.

In what was the most competitive round so far, Castillo was
beginning to land some of his higher calibre artillery.
Two tight right uppercuts in succession from the Mexican brought
cheers of hope from the Hispanic contingent, but another low
blow via the Castillo left glove forced Cortez to have more
words. Hatton didn’t look too impressed by the persistent
'birth-control' shots he was having to accommodate and fired
back with a two-fisted assault. A peach of a straight right was
followed by the trademark left hook south.
Hatton was winning the battle of the 'body-snatchers' hands
down. As the bell rang to conclude the most evenly contested
three minutes out of the nine, both fighters punctuated the
round trading left hooks. The Thomas and Mack was on its feet,
the fight ticket refund queue was deserted.

As the Hitman returned to his corner The Preacher spread his
word -”Use your balance inside, you can take him to school on
the inside".
As the bell rang to initiate the action for the 4th round, the
arena erupted with a fanfare of noise, and the expectation
levels were beginning to rise off the scale. Castillo was the
first to let his hands go, a left jab was duly slipped by
Hatton, and countered masterfully with a dig to the Mexican's
ribcage. A triple right-handed flurry from the Hitman to follow,
showcased his fast hands and even quicker feet, as he landed a
right body shot, right uppercut, right hook to his intended
target. Hatton was now giving himself the room to work, and with
his trainer's instructions being adhered to, he was looking like
a different fighter. The aggression hadn't diminished, but the
pressure being applied was now of the educated variety.
The Hitman's fan base in attendance, approximately 10,000 from
the offset and rising as the fight progressed, made their
presence felt as Hatton began to pick off a tired looking
Castillo at will. The Mexican warrior was being made to miss as
the Hitman landed a right hand lead, straight left down the
pipe. It was all Hatton, as he manhandled Castillo to the ropes,
threw punches in bunches and finished off again with the left
hook to the liver. Castillo responded with devilish right
uppercut off the ropes that registered, but Hatton was fighting
fire with fire and kept coming. A cracking straight right hand
from the Mexican scored a point that was soon to be deducted by
Joe Cortez. Another low blow from Castillo was enough for the
referee to take action, and stamp his authority on the
proceedings. A right handed body-shot by Hatton was refunded
with interest as the Mexican landed a short, sharp jolting left
uppercut on the inside.

With Castillo fried on the ropes, Manchester's 'whirlwind of bad
intent’ moved into the zone firing off another dual-fisted
attack. The Mexican was looking beleaguered and bewildered.
Hatton was in the ascendancy, a touching left hook upstairs was
enough to lure Castillo's guard up and remove any protection he
had to his ribcage. Seizing the opportunity, the Hitman
delivered a sickening left hook around behind the elbow, which
ended the argument there and then. Castillo, with a delayed
reaction, turned away from Hatton to seek refuge in a zone free
from pain. The Mexican dropped to the canvas for the first time
in his 64 fight pro career. On one knee, biting on his
gum-shield, and in obvious pain, Castillo was counted out at 2
minutes 16 seconds of the 4th round. It was a devastating shot,
perfectly placed, that gave the renowned Mexican body-puncher a
little taster of his own particular brand of Tequila.

The Hitman punched the air and screamed out in ecstatic delight
as the Thomas and Mack Centre exploded into a state of frenzied
euphoria. This was vintage Hatton, the trademark left hook
finishing the job in his historically favored 4th round, and to
take out a Mexican in Vegas with that shot, was just the icing
on the sweetest of cakes. The Hitman had answered his critics in
spectacular fashion, he'd done what Floyd Mayweather had failed
to achieve in 24 rounds with Castillo, and that was stop him
dead in his tracks.

After Fight quotes
Bob Arum - "In 42 years of boxing, I've seen that punch
land maybe 5 times".
Fat Lad - “I trained for 12 rounds of pain tonight, I
told everybody that I'd never had a training camp like it, and I
think it showed tonight".
“From the very first exchange, I felt I could throw him around
like a rag doll, and I think I was trying a little bit too hard.
Billy was telling me to slow it down, use my boxing ability. But
I think I went into the fight a very frustrated man, especially
after my previous two performances which weren't vintage Ricky
Hatton.
Sometimes trying to put on a show has landed me in trouble in
the past, and I'm sure it will again in the future."
“I think your saw more action in those 4 rounds than the whole
of Floyd Mayweather's career ".


