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Boxing: Pounding at the Box Office

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  • Boxing: Pounding at the Box Office

    Los Angeles Times, CA
    June 4 2006

    Pounding at the Box Office

    Sparse crowd attends card a day after title bout was canceled because
    of Castillo's failure to make weight. Promoters will take a financial
    bath.
    By Steve Springer, Times Staff Writer
    June 4, 2006


    LAS VEGAS - As the two preliminary fighters circled each other in the
    ring at Thomas & Mack Center, Diego Corrales watched from a tunnel,
    his infant daughter, Daylia, in his arms, agony in his eyes.

    "It's tough watching people throw punches," Corrales said, "knowing I
    can't hit anybody because of him."

    By "him," Corrales was referring to Jose Luis Castillo, who was back
    home in Mexico on Saturday night instead of in the ring battling
    Corrales for the World Boxing Council lightweight title. The fight
    was canceled Friday afternoon when Castillo weighed in at 139 1/2
    pounds, 4 1/2 pounds over the lightweight limit. Corrales came in at
    exactly 135.

    "Why didn't he call me up and tell me, 'I can't make the weight?' "
    Corrales said. "This fight could have been salvaged. I would have
    done [an agreed-upon] weight of 137 pounds, 136 pounds if we had
    known earlier. This is heartbreaking, being here and not being able
    to fight."

    Instead, the scheduled semi-main event between International Boxing
    Federation flyweight champion Vic Darchinyan, an Armenian living in
    Australia, and Luis Maldonado of Mexico became the main event on a
    card that included six other fights.

    But the public wasn't buying. Certainly not, for the most part, at
    full price.

    Arena officials would not release a crowd figure, but there appeared
    to be between 2,000 and 2,500 people scattered among the great
    expanse of empty red seats and that might be a generous estimate.
    Gary Shaw, Corrales' promoter, estimated the crowd would have been
    between 10,000 and 12,000 had Castillo and Corrales fought.

    With the hotels dropping their price to one quarter of face value,
    Shaw estimated the live gate at $30,000. Shaw, who is suing Castillo,
    figures both he and Bob Arum, Castillo's promoter, will lose about
    $250,000 each.

    And that's not counting a $175,000 penalty due the Showtime cable
    network, according to one source.

    A reporter seeking fans who'd laid out actual money for tickets went
    through two sections before finding two paying customers from
    Arkadelphia, Ark.

    "We had never seen a live fight," said Fred Owens.

    "We were here in town anyway. And some is better than none," said
    Randy Wade.

    Coincidentally, among those in the crowd was Eddie Mustafa, who
    failed to make weight for his 1981 fight against Michael Spinks. That
    was the only other instance longtime boxing observers could remember
    when a fight failed to materialize because of a weight issue.

    Mustafa, who weighed in at 177 in Washington, D.C., for the 175-pound
    match, continued to maintain Saturday night, a quarter of a century
    later, that, unlike Castillo, he was the victim of a rigged scale.

    The crowd finally made its presence felt during the
    Darchinyan-Maldonado fight with Australian, Armenian and Mexican
    flags battling for supremacy in the stands.

    Darchinyan retained his title and remained unbeaten (26-0, 21
    knockouts) by handing Maldonado (33-1-1, 25) his first loss. The
    fight was stopped at 1:38 of the eighth round by referee Joe Cortez
    after Darchinyan had previously knocked Maldonado down in the sixth.

    Most fans may not have paid full price, but some were still willing
    to buy Corrales-Castillo shirts, said David Goldfarb, whose company
    produces them.

    "They think they could be collectors' items," Goldfarb said.

    Keith Kizer, executive director of the Nevada State Athletic
    Commission, reiterated Saturday that penalties against Castillo could
    be announced this week, which would be followed by an appeals
    process. Castillo could be fined and/or have his license suspended or
    revoked. A revocation would mean Castillo could not reapply for a
    license for a year.

    That would be fine with Shaw.

    "Something like this breaks down the fabric of the sport," Shaw said.
    "This is a flagrant violation. The public has been defrauded."

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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