Naseem Hamed vs. Marco Antonio Barrera

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Playing with Fire
DateApril 7, 2001
VenueMGM Grand Garden Arena, Paradise, Nevada, U.S.
Title(s) on the linevacant IBO featherweight title
Tale of the tape
Boxer Naseem Hamed Marco Antonio Barrera
Nickname Prince The Baby-Faced Assassin
Hometown Sheffield, England Mexico City, Mexico
Pre-fight record 35–0 (31 KO) 52–3 (40 KO)
Height 5 ft 3 in (160 cm) 5 ft 7 in (170 cm)
Weight 126 lb (57 kg) 125+12 lb (57 kg)
Style Southpaw Orthodox
Recognition Former unified featherweight champion
The Ring No. 6 ranked pound-for-pound fighter
WBO super bantamweight champion
Result
Barrera wins via 12-round unanimous decision (115-112, 116-111, 115-112)

Naseem Hamed vs. Marco Antonio Barrera, billed as Playing with Fire, was a professional boxing match contested on April 7, 2001, for the vacant IBO title and Hamed's lineal featherweight championship.

Background[edit]

A fight between Naseem Hamed and Marco Antonio Barrera, which had been years in the making, was finally agreed upon in November 2000 for a March 3, 2001 date.[1] 3 months prior, Hamed, who had held the WBO featherweight title for nearly five years and had successfully defended it 15 times, decided to vacate the title rather than take less money to face mandatory challenger István Kovács.[2] However, as he had not lost in the ring, he was still regarded as the "lineal" champion. Barrera was the reigning WBO super bantamweight champion and was moving up to the featherweight division for the first time and, as a result, was instilled as a 3–1 underdog.[3] In January, the planned March 3 date was scrapped and instead the fight was announced to be taken place on April 7 instead in order for both fighters to finalize their contracts.[4] Hamed, who was making his American pay-per-view debut, was guaranteed a purse of $6 million while Barrera would earn $2 million.[5]

The fight[edit]

The usually aggressive Barrera changed his usual technique to combat the unorthodox Hamed, thoroughly outboxing Hamed throughout the contest. Barrera stood back for the entire fight, never charging towards Hamed in an effort to neutralize Hamed's powerful left-handed counter-punch. Hamed, who had not expected Barrera to take this approach, had trouble landing any offence as Barrera circled away and landed many counter-punches whenever Hamed attempted to engage him. In the 12th and final round, Barrera briefly abandoned his approach an began aggressively attacking Hamed before reverting to his previous tactic. Hamed, knowing he was behind on the scorecards, began swinging at Barrera wildly in hopes of scoring a knockout. During one such encounter, Hamed missed Barrera with a wild left hook leading to Barrera to lock Hamed into a full-nelson and drill his head into the turnbuckle, for which Barrera was deducted a point. However, the lost point would have no bearing on the result as Barrera would earn a unanimous decision victory with two scores of 115–112 and one score of 116–111. For Hamed, it was his first and only professional loss.[6]

Aftermath[edit]

After the bout, Hamed expressed interest in a rematch with Barrera, stating "I want Barrera again. I'm going to knock him out." Hamed held a rematch clause that he had to invoke within two months of this fight should he want to face Barrera in an immediate rematch. However, the two-month deadline came and went with no word from Hamed or his camp and Barrera moved on to face Enrique Sánchez instead.[7] Hamed finally announced in February 2002 that he would face unknown Spanish fighter Manuel Calvo on March 23, though the bout was later pushed back to May 18.[8] After over a year of inactivity Hamed would beat Calvo by unanimous decision in what would prove to be the final match of his career.

Barrera would vacate his newly won IBO featherweight title immediately following his victory. Initially his manager announced plans for Barrera to return to his previous weight division of super bantamweight and defend the WBO championship still in his possession, however Barrera ultimately decided to remain in the featherweight division, which he would remain until 2004.[9]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Hamed-Barrera deal done, BBC article, 2000-11-12 Retrieved on 2020-01-01
  2. ^ Hamed Loses Last World Belt, Telegraph article, 2000-08-21 Retrieved on 2020-01-06
  3. ^ Naz Well Beaten in Vegas, Irish Times article, 200`-04-08 retrieved on 2020-01-12
  4. ^ Hamed in Las Vegas date with Barrera, Telegraph article, 2001-01-23 retrieved on 2020-01-12
  5. ^ THE PRINCE OF POMP ; HAMED WON’T STOP DANCING TO OWN TUNE, NY Post article, 2001-02-15 retrieved on 2020-01-12
  6. ^ GLAM ROCKED PRINCE NASEEM HAMED'S GLITZ WAS NO MATCH FOR THE GRIT OF MARCO ANTONIO BARRERA IN THEIR FEATHERWEIGHT SHOWDOWN, Sports Illustrated article, 2001-04-16 Retrieved on 2020-01-12
  7. ^ Hamed Fighting Shy of Barrera Rematch, Telegraph article, 2001-06-16 Retrieved on 2020-01-12
  8. ^ Prince Naseem Announces Comeback, Irish Times article, 2002-02-01 Retrieved on 2020-01-12
  9. ^ Barrera Spurns Title, Telegraph article, 2001-04-12 Retrieved on 2020-01-12