Austin Trout Takes Out Miguel Cotto In His Backyard

Written by Tim Starks on .

(Austin Trout, left, Miguel Cotto, right; credit: Tom Casino, Showtime)

NEW YORK CITY -- Most thought Austin Trout had a dangerous style for Miguel Cotto, and Trout's speed, defense, craft and natural size advantage made him a popular upset pick for some. "Most" were right, and "some" were even righter: Trout went into Cotto's adopted home, Madison Square Garden, Saturday on Showtime and got a deserved decision victory in environs that have not been welcoming to Cotto opponents.

Trout started off smartly, working angles, using his legs and forcing Cotto to expend a lot of energy to find him. Trout boxed brilliantly throughout, in fact, going downstairs, firing combinations up and down. But Cotto did appear to find a rhythm over a few of the middle rounds, dialing in his right cross and firing his strange lead left less like a jab and more like a power punch. When he cornered Trout along the ropes in those rounds, unlike the first couple, he was able to evade Trout's clinches and land some punches inside with his free hand.

But the late rounds turned into the stylistic nightmare that some predicted Trout would visit upon Cotto. In a fight of subtle adjustments -- Cotto would sometimes move backward, forcing Trout to lead, while when Cotto was on the attack along the ropes Trout would duck and slip his punches, for starters -- Trout was able to keep making adjustments, and was in better condition than Cotto, who appeared in some of the pre-fight hype to have one foot out the door of his boxing career. Or, maybe, Trout's body work did a lot of damage, and Trout was punishing him over the course of the fight in a way that made Cotto's face bust up; perhaps Trout, the first physically big natural junior middleweight Cotto has faced, was doing more damage than he usually does, considering he's not thought to have big power. Maybe it was all of the above.

It was a hard fight to score until those late rounds, with scores ringside and on Twitter all over the place. As Cotto faded and Trout stayed strong, it appeared we might be headed toward an inevitable robbery by the judges. Instead, they were, if anything, more generous to Trout than some (I had it 116-112 for Trout): 117-111 on two cards, 119-109 on the third. It's a weird world when you have to give kudos to the judges who simply get it right, but that's boxing for you.

It was an electric environment, and with a heavy Puerto Rican contingent in the building -- albeit somewhat smaller than usual -- it was not unexpected that they would boo the decision. Cotto would only say to Showtime's Jim Gray afterward that the crowd's reaction was warranted. If Cotto thought he won that fight, I would like to hear him explain how, other than the unpopularity of the judges' decision with his native peoples.

You wonder what this does to his stardom. I worried that he wasn't focused enough on boxing anymore, and his late round fade points to that. If he truly wants to keep fighting, and behaves as such, I think he could still do so at a high level -- he faced a very nettlesome style and fought on relatively even terms for a while. Cotto said afterward in the ring that he would go back to Puerto Rico and consider his next move, per one of the quotes offered by Golden Boy PR.

Trout has been one of boxing's better-kept secrets for a while, but his fights haven't often thrilled. This one, though, was a pretty entertaining performance. And the secret about his talent is now officially out.

10 comments
Sort: Newest | Oldest
HitDog
HitDog

Gotta mention Trout some in this conversation: he really impressed me, and I've never been impressed by his fights. (His skills were another matter.)

 

The body attack was a particularly brilliant, and draining, component of the attack, especially when I try to think of how often I actually see a taller fighter go to the body, and although I have some affection for Cotto, I laughed really loudly when Cotto shuddered and drew a low blow warning on a clean, painful waistband shot, after Miguel's history of low blows.

 

Trout might not always do the most to make the fight in the past, but he sure can control space well when you come at him. May he be matched against someone aggressive soon.

ThePJ
ThePJ

Just about every time Cotto fights his face ends up swelling up like a balloon. The more it happens the more I wonder if Margs was wearing loaded gloves or if Cotto just doesn't take punches well. Do you think he has Winky on the phone being like good move turning down Pac Chief.

tstarks
tstarks moderator

 @ThePJThe "Margs loaded glove" theory depends on more than just his hideous face in that fight. But yes, that point in the theory now has a lot of countervailing evidence.

 

LOL on the Winky call.

 

rasec
rasec

i said it before, i'll say it again: cotto isn't impressive at '54. he's sluggish, lacks snap in his punches and fades often in the end. i've never been sold with his wins at super welter. an ordinary foreman was in the fight til he got injured. mayorga was shot and cheato had already been damaged by pacquiao. and cotto was fading fast in that fight. he also faded in the floyd fight which was probably his best performance at the weight. against trout, he was slow and kept missing. his punches just didn't have crunching power like when he was at 147. he picked it up in the middle rounds and moved like he used to for a while but again started to fade in the end. i think he's been done at the elite level for awhile now. he could probably still win against non-movers like canelo or angulo but i think he has already lost his status as one of the best.

tstarks
tstarks moderator

 @rasec There was evidence of it before on his '54 status and now it REALLY looks that way. Even the Mayweather win -- Mayweather was moving up in weight.

 

I'm not sure he could beat Canelo. I'd vote "no."

beccapooka
beccapooka

@tstarks @rasec. I dunno. I thinly he'd have an easier time against Canelo. Styles make fights. And Mosley made Canelo look downright ordinary in a fight Canelo decisively won.

tstarks
tstarks moderator

 @beccapooka  @tstarksStyles do make fights, but I don't like Canelo's style for Cotto at this point in his career, either. Canelo throws a lot of punches and hits harder than Trout, and if Cotto was gassed in this fight, I think he'll get gassed against Canelo, too. Plus, it's becoming clear that Cotto isn't a puncher at 154, so it's not like he'll be able to keep Canelo off of him. How does Cotto beat Canelo? Just outboxing him? I see Canelo outworking him to such a degree that whatever clever work Cotto does would be neutralized, even in the best case scenario.

 

You Might Like...

Top Stories