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Boxing Outcomes: Jamaine Ortiz Destroys Cristian Mino


Jamaine “The Technician” Ortiz (18-2-1, 9 KOs) obtained again to his profitable methods with a blistering fourth-round knockout of veteran Cristian Mino (24-10-2, 17 KOs) of a scheduled ten-round contest on Friday night time on the Caribe Royale in Orlando, Florida.

The large-looking Ortiz dropped Mino 4 occasions within the struggle, knocking him down in every spherical. Within the fourth, Ortiz backed Mino up towards the ropes and unloaded a lightning-fast barrage of pictures, ending with two left arms that put his opponent down.

The referee then stepped in and halted the competition. The official time of the stoppage was at 2:00 of spherical 4.

Jamaine Ortiz, 28, had misplaced his final struggle to WBO mild welterweight champion Teofimo Lopez by a controversial 12-round unanimous on February eighth in a struggle that many boxing followers felt he did sufficient to win.

Tonight, Ortiz wasn’t going to go away it to the judges, as he went after Mino in spherical one, unleashing a flurry of punches to place him down on the canvas. The final two punches the Massachusetts native Ortiz had Mino with had been rabbit pictures, however the referee didn’t say something.

In spherical two, Ortiz dropped Mino with a sledgehammer punch to the physique. Ortiz appeared like a smaller model of Sonny Liston with the shape that he confirmed with that physique shot. It was stunning that Mino was capable of stand up from the punch.

Ortiz knocked Mino down with a left to the pinnacle in spherical three. Apparently, Mino landed a proper hand as quickly because the motion resumed. He loaded on the punch, hoping to catch Ortiz without warning, which he did, however there wasn’t sufficient energy on it to harm him. The way in which that Mino was attempting to show the struggle round with a single punch was fascinating.

Within the fourth spherical, Ortiz shouldered Mino to the canvas. The roughhouse tactic angered Mino, who picked up Ortiz and body-slammed him on his again in a wrestling transfer that Olympic gold medalist Dan Gable would have been pleased with.

The referee stopped the motion and penalized Mino a degree for the foul, which was an inexpensive factor to do. He ought to have penalized Ortiz as properly or his shouldering and rabbit punching, however he didn’t select to with the A-side fighter.

Moments later, Ortiz completed off Mino with two lefts to the pinnacle that put him down on the canvas for the fourth time. The referee then stopped the struggle.

After the struggle, Ortiz known as out 140-lb champions Jose ‘Rayo’ Valenzuela, Liam Paro and Teofimo Lopez. He took a shotgun method by calling out three of them. Teofimo in all probability needs nothing to do with Ortiz after the issues he gave him final February. I watched that struggle and had Ortiz profitable 117-111. It wasn’t even shut.

If Ortiz can’t get a title shot towards any of these champions, he ought to take into account shifting up in weight to 147 or 154. Ortiz appeared sufficiently big tonight to struggle at 154 simply. He was big within the ring in comparison with the tiny Mino and appeared like he didn’t belong preventing somebody that small.

It’s comprehensible why Ortiz wouldn’t wish to transfer as much as 154 as a result of these guys can punch, and he wouldn’t be capable of get as a lot mileage out of his profession as he can at 140, preventing smaller guys.

Hopefully, Ortiz will step up the extent of his opponents as a result of he’s too good to be preventing veterans like Mino. Contemplating how properly he had carried out in that struggle, he didn’t want that stage of opponent after his controversial loss to Teofimo. Ortiz didn’t want a confidence booster after that loss. If something, it was Teofimo who wanted one, which is why High Rank matched him gentle in his final struggle.

 

John Anderson
John Andersonhttps://usdailysports.com
John Anderson is a seasoned sports journalist with over 15 years of experience covering the NFL, NBA, and MLB. A graduate of Northwestern University’s Medill School of Journalism, John has worked with ESPN, Sports Illustrated, and The New York Times. His insightful analysis and in-depth reporting have earned him multiple awards in sports journalism.

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