Post by Scott on Jun 24, 2007 18:08:59 GMT
From BBC:
Manchester's Ricky Hatton beat Mexico's Jose Luis Castillo with a stunning fourth-round knockout in Las Vegas.
Hatton, 28, started furiously, swarming all over Castillo and landing the better shots in the first three rounds.
Castillo, 33, was docked a point at the start of the fourth before Hatton landed with a savage left to the body that sent his rival down for the count.
The impressive nature of Hatton's victory could pave the way for a super-fight with Floyd Mayweather.
Mayweather has twice struggled to outpoint Castillo but it was a different story for a pumped up Hatton at the Thomas and Mack Center.
Cheered on by an estimated 10,000 British fans, Hatton, billed for the bout as the Manchester Mexican, entered the ring in a sombrero and poncho in Manchester City colours.
Manchester United's Wayne Rooney and Mexican legend Marco Antonio Barrera had the honour of carrying his championship belts.
Hatton was fastest out of the blocks and Castillo briefly touched down in the opening stages, although referee Joe Cortez ruled it a slip.
The English fighter rammed home two crisp uppercuts as both men bored into each other in the centre of the ring, although it was an untidy start to the fight.
Hatton kept up the pressure in round two, landing with a couple of useful lefts to the body and continuing to outmanoeuvre Castillo on the inside.
Castillo came into the fight in the third, letting fly with two hurtful left hooks to the body that had Hatton wincing.
But the Mexican was deducted a point for repeated low blows at the start of the fourth, and when the action resumed, Hatton poleaxed Castillo with a brutal left hook to the kidney.
Castillo twisted, crumpled to one knee, gumshield hanging from his mouth, and Cortez counted him out after two minutes and 16 seconds of the round.
It was the first time in Castillo's 17-year professional career that he had been sent to the canvas.
Hatton, who is now undefeated in 43 professional fights, said: "I trained for 12 rounds of pain tonight. I told everybody that I've never had a training camp like it before and I think it showed.
"Sometimes I have tried too hard to put on a show and that has got me in trouble in the past.
"I think I've definitely proved the fat man is back. I hit him with a left and then another left and it just about cut him in half.
"I was going for the body from the first round and I've got him with one of the best shots I've ever thrown.
"It was a big shot in the first round and I know he winced. I went for the body time and again after that although I should have shown a bit more caution.
"The greatest night of my life was in Manchester against Kostya Tszyu but beating by KO one of the pound-for-pound best and coming halfway across the world to do it underlines what I'm all about.
"There was more action in those four rounds than you'd have had in Floyd Mayweather's last half dozen fights."
Castillo, who fell to 55 wins and eight defeats, admitted he had been the victim of a "perfect shot".
"He got me good," said Castillo. "It was a perfect shot. I couldn't breathe. I couldn't get up."
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Manchester's Ricky Hatton beat Mexico's Jose Luis Castillo with a stunning fourth-round knockout in Las Vegas.
Hatton, 28, started furiously, swarming all over Castillo and landing the better shots in the first three rounds.
Castillo, 33, was docked a point at the start of the fourth before Hatton landed with a savage left to the body that sent his rival down for the count.
The impressive nature of Hatton's victory could pave the way for a super-fight with Floyd Mayweather.
Mayweather has twice struggled to outpoint Castillo but it was a different story for a pumped up Hatton at the Thomas and Mack Center.
Cheered on by an estimated 10,000 British fans, Hatton, billed for the bout as the Manchester Mexican, entered the ring in a sombrero and poncho in Manchester City colours.
Manchester United's Wayne Rooney and Mexican legend Marco Antonio Barrera had the honour of carrying his championship belts.
Hatton was fastest out of the blocks and Castillo briefly touched down in the opening stages, although referee Joe Cortez ruled it a slip.
The English fighter rammed home two crisp uppercuts as both men bored into each other in the centre of the ring, although it was an untidy start to the fight.
Hatton kept up the pressure in round two, landing with a couple of useful lefts to the body and continuing to outmanoeuvre Castillo on the inside.
Castillo came into the fight in the third, letting fly with two hurtful left hooks to the body that had Hatton wincing.
But the Mexican was deducted a point for repeated low blows at the start of the fourth, and when the action resumed, Hatton poleaxed Castillo with a brutal left hook to the kidney.
Castillo twisted, crumpled to one knee, gumshield hanging from his mouth, and Cortez counted him out after two minutes and 16 seconds of the round.
It was the first time in Castillo's 17-year professional career that he had been sent to the canvas.
Hatton, who is now undefeated in 43 professional fights, said: "I trained for 12 rounds of pain tonight. I told everybody that I've never had a training camp like it before and I think it showed.
"Sometimes I have tried too hard to put on a show and that has got me in trouble in the past.
"I think I've definitely proved the fat man is back. I hit him with a left and then another left and it just about cut him in half.
"I was going for the body from the first round and I've got him with one of the best shots I've ever thrown.
"It was a big shot in the first round and I know he winced. I went for the body time and again after that although I should have shown a bit more caution.
"The greatest night of my life was in Manchester against Kostya Tszyu but beating by KO one of the pound-for-pound best and coming halfway across the world to do it underlines what I'm all about.
"There was more action in those four rounds than you'd have had in Floyd Mayweather's last half dozen fights."
Castillo, who fell to 55 wins and eight defeats, admitted he had been the victim of a "perfect shot".
"He got me good," said Castillo. "It was a perfect shot. I couldn't breathe. I couldn't get up."
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GET in lad #boxing#