Roberto Durán vs. Vinny Pazienza

Roberto Durán vs. Vinny Pazienza, billed as Mano a Mano was a professional boxing match contested on June 25, 1994, for the vacant IBC super middleweight title.

Mano a Mano
DateJune 25, 1994
VenueMGM Grand Garden Arena in Paradise, Nevada
Title(s) on the lineVacant IBC super middleweight title
Tale of the tape
Boxer Roberto Durán Vinny Pazienza
Nickname Manos de Piedra
("Hands of Stone")
The Pazmanian Devil
Hometown Panama City, Panama Cranston, Rhode Island, U.S.
Purse $500,000 $500,000
Pre-fight record 92–9 37–5
Height 5 ft 7+12 in (171 cm) 5 ft 7+12 in (171 cm)
Weight 164 lb (74 kg) 165 lb (75 kg)
Style Orthodox Orthodox
Recognition 4-division world champion 2-division world champion
Result
Pazienza wins via unanimous decision (117-113, 117-112, 117-112)

Background

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A fight between 4-division world champion Roberto Durán and 2-division world champion had been in the works for over a year. Pazienza had returned to boxing in December 1992 after a 13-month absence while he recovered from a broken neck he suffered in a near-fatal car crash in November 1991. After winning the first two fights of his comeback, Pazienza and his promoter and manager Dan Duva entered negotiations with the 43-year old Durán for a potential June 1993 fight after which Pazienza planned to challenge for one of the major middleweight titles, but talks stalled and Pazienza was forced to take on former welterweight champion Lloyd Honeyghan, whom he knocked out in the tenth round. Durán instead fought journeyman Jacques LeBlanc two days after the Pazianza-Honeyghan fight and when asked at a conference call about his rumored fight with Pazienza, Durán angrily replied "If Pazienza is man enough to fight Roberto Duran, then tell him to sign a contract once and for all and stop wasting time. If Vinny Pazienza wants to fight for a title at 160 pounds he has to beat me first. If he can't beat me, he doesn't deserve to fight for a title."[1] Finally, after months of negotiations and Pazienza replacing Duva as his manager with Bill Cayton, the two fighters came to an agreement in March 1994 to face one another in June that same year.[2] Though Pazienza had been fighting at middleweight the year prior, the fight was fought in the super middleweight division (where Durán had been fighting since his 1991 return) with a catchweight of 165 pounds.

Though the 43-year old Durán had fought only journeymen fighters since returning to boxing in 1991 (losing his first fight to Pat Lawlor and then going 7-0 since), there was considerable hype for the fight with the MGM Grand Garden Arena paying a $1.3 million site fee and HBO's pay-per-view division TVKO giving both fighters not only a $500,000 payday, but a percentage of the pay-per-view sales as well.[3]

There was a considerable amount of trash talk from both fighters prior to the bout with Pazienza openly expressing his dislike of Durán stating "I've grown to hate him over the months." and "once a quitter, always a quitter" referring to Durán's infamous second Sugar Ray Leonard fight in which he quit by saying no más. Durán, meanwhile, vowed that he would target Pazienza's surgically repaired neck.[4]

Originally, the fight was to take place in Atlantic City but the venue was switched to the MGM Grand Garden Arena, with the casino-hotel serving as the sole promoter of the bout.

The fight

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The fight would go the 12-round distance with Pazianza winning by relatively lopsided unanimous decision with two scores of 117–112 and one score of 117–113. The decision was somewhat controversial as many had the fight closer than what the judges scorecards showed. Notably, all three judges scored the fifth round a 10–10 draw despite Durán scoring a knockdown after dropping Pazianza with a right hand though Pazianza would quickly rise and answer the referee's 8-count. Later in the round, an accidental headbutt opened up a cut above Pazianza's right eye that continued to bleed as the fight went on, but did not seem to bother his vision. Durán had gotten off to decent start but tired as the fight went on and Pazienza was able to control much of the fight during the later rounds.[5] [6]

After the fight, Pazienza admitted that he had not performed as well as he hoped stating "I thought I would beat him easier. I was a little off." Durán, however, insisted he had been robbed of a victory retorting "If this kid's so tough, look at his face and look at me. I didn't lose the fight."[7]

Fight card

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Weight Class Weight vs. Method Round Notes
Super Middleweight 168 lbs. Vinny Pazienza def. Roberto Durán UD 12/12 Note 1
Welterweight 147 lbs. Tony Lopez def. Greg Haugen TKO 10/10
Heavyweight 200+ lbs. Jorge Luis González def. Mike Evans KO 2/10
Light Middlweight 154 lbs. Ray Lovato def. Pat Briceno TKO 3/8
Heavyweight 200+ lbs. Jonathan Grant def. Obed Sullivan UD 4/4

^Note 1 For IBC Super Middleweight title

References

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  1. ^ Vinny Pazienza decked Lloyd Honeyghan twice and stopped him..., UPI article, 1993-06-27, Retrieved on 2024-05-26
  2. ^ Atlantic City Gets Duran-Pazianza, Hartford Courant article, 1994-03-24, Retrieved on 2024-05-26
  3. ^ At 43, Duran Will Get Perhaps Last Rich Fight, LA Times article, 1993-06-25, Retrieved on 2024-05-26
  4. ^ Pazienza vs. Duran: A Real Grudge Match, Hartford Courant article, 1993-06-11, Retrieved on 2024-05-26
  5. ^ "Pazienza Pounds Out Decision Over 43-Year-Old Duran", Deseret News, 1994-06-26, Retrieved on 2024-05-26
  6. ^ Duran Beats Barkley for 4th Title, NY Times article, 1989-02-25, Retrieved on 2024-05-15
  7. ^ Pazienza Beats Duran, NY Times article, 1994-06-26, Retrieved on 2024-05-27