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Date | November 14, 1998 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Venue | Foxwoods Resort Casino, Ledyard, Connecticut, U.S. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Title(s) on the line | WBA and WBC light heavyweight titles | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Tale of the tape | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Result | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Jones wins via 10th-round technical knockout |
Roy Jones Jr. vs. Otis Grant was a professional boxing match contested on November 14, 1998 for the WBA and WBC light heavyweight titles. [1]
Three months after winning the WBA light heavyweight title after defeating Lou Del Valle in his previous fight in July 1998, Roy Jones Jr. announced in early October that he would make the first defense of the newly unified titles (having been promoted to full WBC champion after the controversial demotion of former champion Graciano Rocchigiani) the following month against the reigning WBO middleweight champion Otis Grant. Jones, who had not been scheduled to fight until December, agreed to fight one month ahead of time at the request of HBO, who were left without a main event for their November telecast of HBO World Championship Boxing when a rematch between Arturo Gatti and Ivan Robinson fell through. [2]
Despite fighting two divisions below him, Grant, who was a special education teacher at the time of the fight and had to take a leave from the school that he was teaching at in order to take the fight, was handpicked by Jones with Jones claiming he had done so because he "liked Grant's character" and wanted a "challenge." In order to make up for the 15-pound weight disparity between their respective divisions, Jones and Grant initially agreed to fight at the 168-pound super middleweight limit. [3] Come fight time, the contract called for the slightly increased catchweight of 170 pounds "give or take a pound." Jones entered the fight at 171 pounds while Grant weight one pound heavier at 172 pounds. [4]
After having raised money for the severely injured and disabled former boxer Gerald McClellan two years prior with his fight against Bryant Brannon, Jones continued his charitable efforts in regards to McClellan, first hosting a fund-raiser in nearby New York City to raise money for McClellan and his family four days before the fight whilst also donating a portion of his fight purse to the fund himself. [5]
The untelevised bouts included wins for Derrick Gainer and David Izon.
Title(s) on the line | IBF lightweight title | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Tale of the tape | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Result | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Mosley defeats Leija by 9th round RTD |
The first of the two televised bouts saw IBF Lightweight champion Shane Mosley make the sixth defense of his title against former WBC super featherweight champion Jesse James Leija. [6] Leija would take the fight on 3 weeks notice. [7]
As the fight progressed, Leija was knocked down in rounds 6, 7 and 9. The fight was stopped when Leija's corner pulled him out after the 9th round. [8]
Mosley was leading by scores of 89–78, 89–78 and 88–79 at the time of the stoppage. [9] [10]
According to CompuBox, Mosley outlanded Leija with the champion connecting with 249 of 550 punches thrown (a 45.3% connect rate) against Leija landing 109 of 469 (a 23.2% connect rate).
Speaking after the bout Mosley said "In the fifth round I noticed that my left hand was hurting, so I quit throwing the jab so much and started working the body. In the sixth round my right hand started to hurt. But I kept working the body. I think that's what did it for me."
Jones dominated Grant through 10 rounds. Though neither fighter threw many punches, Jones decidedly had advantage, landing 173 of 392 thrown, which was over 100 more than grant who landed just 66 punches of 248, including just a single jab out of 137 thrown jabs for a paltry 1% success rate. Jones scored two knockdowns during the fight, first send Grant flat on his back, with his heels going up over his head, with a right uppercut. Grant answered referee Arthur Mercante Sr.'s 10-count at eight and survived the round despite a Jones flurry. Following the sixth round, Jones fought extremely tentatively, seemingly taking it easy on Grant, causing Mercante to call a brief stoppage during the seventh round to admonish Jones and Grant for their lack of activity amid heavy boos from the crowd. Finally in the 10th round, Jones sent Grant down on the seat of his pants with a straight right hand for his second knockdown. Though Grant once again got back to his feet at the count of eight and Mercante was seemingly going to allow him to continue, his manager and trainer Russ Anber threw a white towel into the ring to signify surrender and then entered the ring soon after, causing the fight to be stopped. Jones was named the winner by technical knockout at 1:18 of the round. [8] At the time of the stoppage Jones led on all three scorecards 90-80, 90–81 and 89–80. HBO's unofficial ringside scorer Harold Lederman scored the fight 89–81 for Jones.
Confirmed bouts: [11]
Weight Class | Weight | vs. | Method | Round | Notes | ||
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Light Heavyweight | 175 lbs. | Roy Jones Jr. (c) | def. | Otis Grant | TKO | 10/12 | note 1 |
Lightweight | 135 lbs. | Shane Mosley (c) | def. | Jesse James Leija | RTD | 9/12 | note 2 |
Heavyweight | 190+ lbs. | David Izon | def. | Darrol Wilson | KO | 4/10 | |
Lightweight | 135 lbs. | Derrick Gainer | def. | Louie Leija | TKO | 6/10 | |
Welterweight | 147 lbs. | Lemuel Nelson | def. | Sam Girard | PTS | 6/6 | |
Light Heavyweight | 175 lbs. | Billy Lewis | def. | Tim Hillie | PTS | 4/4 |
^Note 1 For WBA and WBC Light Heavvyweight titles
^Note 2 For IBF Lightweight title
Country | Broadcaster |
---|---|
![]() | TSN |
![]() | HBO |
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