Though Robert Guerrero’s return to the welterweight ranks Saturday night was expected to be a chance for the long-absent “Ghost?to reestablish his brand in one-sided fashion, it turned out to be a comeback defined more by breathtaking violence than dominant destruction.
In fact, for nearly every second of the 2,160 seconds they spent in the ring together, Guerrero and comparatively unknown Japanese import Yoshihiro Kamegai set about jabbing, hooking and upper-cutting each other into a reddened-faced, swollen-eyed 147-pound oblivion.
It was brutal. It was punishing.
And for those who like nothing more than two fighters in a perpetual real-time car crash ?regardless of their world standing or the stakes involved ?it was bliss.
[Click Here To Read More]
In fact, for nearly every second of the 2,160 seconds they spent in the ring together, Guerrero and comparatively unknown Japanese import Yoshihiro Kamegai set about jabbing, hooking and upper-cutting each other into a reddened-faced, swollen-eyed 147-pound oblivion.
It was brutal. It was punishing.
And for those who like nothing more than two fighters in a perpetual real-time car crash ?regardless of their world standing or the stakes involved ?it was bliss.
[Click Here To Read More]
Comment