Vitali Klitschko knocks out Juan Carlos Gomez

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Uploaded by on Jun 20, 2009

Vitali Klitschko stops Juan Carlos Gomez in the ninth round via a TKO to retain his WBC heavyweight title.

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Vitali Klitschko stopped Juan Carlos Gomez in the ninth round Saturday night, easily retaining his WBC heavyweight title.

The 37-year-old champion twice put down the Germany-based Cuban defector, in the seventh and ninth rounds, before the referee Daniel Van de Wiele stopped the fight with 1 minute, 11 seconds remaining in the round.

Klitschko (37-2, 36 KOs) was making the first defense of the title he reclaimed by stopping Samuel Peter in dominating fashion last October. The Ukrainian, whose brother Wladimir holds two other versions of the title, hasn't lost since getting knocked out by Lennox Lewis in 2003.

"I knew that he was a world-class boxer," Klitschko said. "I said before that the fight would not be easy."

At 6-foot-7, Klitschko had a size advantage of more than 3 inches and 19 pounds against his southpaw opponent, who tired in the middle rounds and eventually couldn't move fast enough to get inside of Klitschko's long reach.

Gomez (44-2) joked afterward that he had not expected to last so long.

"I thought I gave Vitali a very hard fight but I realized it wasn't enough," Gomez said. "He was so tall and so heavy."

Trainer Orlando Cuellar said it was his decision to send Gomez out for the ninth.

"I asked him, 'Can you try for one more round?' He was a very valiant fighter," Cuellar said.

The 35-year-old Gomez was the mandatory challenger and Klitschko's former sparring partner, and was trying to become the first heavyweight champion from Cuba.

Gomez managed to frustrate the champion early, keeping his hands high to fend off jabs and peppering Klitschko with right hands.

Klitschko landed his first big right midway through the second round, drawing a smile from Gomez, who showed he could push the bigger man back when he landed a few combinations.

The champion found success leading with his right in the fourth as he began to take control, and opened a small cut on Gomez's right eyebrow in the fifth.

A cut opened high on Klitchsko's forehead in the sixth, and he was forced to backpedal to the ropes in the seventh. But that effort seemed to tire the Cuban, who lowered his hands and provided a better target for Klitchsko, who dropped Gomez to a knee for a count of eight.

Gomez was trapped in the corner and took another big right, and the challenger pulled both fighters to the ground before ending the round defending himself in his own corner.

Gomez got some breathing space in the ninth when Klitschko was reprimanded for gouging, but Klitschko just launched into another assault, downing Gomez by the ropes with another right and finishing the fight a minute later.

"I was a little hectic," Klitschko said. "I wanted to end the fight earlier but I didn't get to hit him enough."

Klitschko said he wants to meet Russian giant Nikolai Valuev, who holds the WBA title, but his next battle might well be in the court room.

Klitschko has appealed to the Court of Arbitration for Sport in Switzerland, which will decided whether the WBC can force him into another mandatory defense against Russian former champion Oleg Maskaev.

Wladimir, who was in his brother's corner, holds the IBF and WBO versions of the heavyweight title and the Klitschkos have long talked about rounding up all the belts between them.

Wladimir Klitschko is in negotiations to face Britain's David Haye, the charismatic former cruiserweight champion, on June 20.

A three-time champion, Vitali retired because of injuries and vacated the WBC belt in 2005, only to return last October and reclaim when Peter decided not to come back for the ninth round.

Gomez previously held the WBC cruiserweight title for four years before vacating in 2002 to move up to heavyweight. He earned the right to face Klitschko by winning a unanimous decision over Vladimir Virchis last September.

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  • @DamienThe1st Was the TKO legitimate? Yes. Was it deseverd? No - Klitschko was better. Lewis was lucky and luck is an essential part of sport, but there's no way one can deny that Klitschko was better on that day.

  • @DamienThe1st Still inconclusive though, should have been a rematch seeing as Vit was ahead on all cards. Lewis pushed for a rematch both times when he lost, but he didn't want to give Vitali the same chance. He knew he was lucky that night and retired because of it.

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  • @carbonbodyworker ok that's cool.

  • @abedegebede Of course vitali was gonna win!

    I was simply saying i admire the guy who trades and doesnt drop to get an early paycheque.

    Im of irish descent,so its our kinda thing.

  • @carbonbodyworker but he lost right? not just that. he cried to the judge when HE ran into vitali....he's not a sportsman just a big mouth

  • Vitali is the number One in the Boxing history!!

  • @pelontorjunta no vitali would kill guys like patterson and marciano, I think Vitali is one of the best and would be the best at any time. Back in the day Ali had only 1 trainer who barely trained him and they werent in best shape compared to guys around this time but weight truly doesnt matter for Ali, Mike tyson was under 200 pound also when he fought at amateur level. If ali had to fight some one as big as Vitali he would come in 220 + and its easy for fighters to make weight

  • @324582782

    "No Ali was never a cruiser weight "

    From the 1st professional fight until Alejandro Lavorante fight he (then of course Cassius Clay) was under 200 lbs. It was Archie Moore fight, 15th of Nov 1962 he first time fought as a heavyweight division boxer of our time grading. As late as 1966 (in Karl Mildenberger fight) he was just 204,25 lbs.

    And think about tiny guys like Patterson, Johansson, Ezzard Charles, Wallcot and Marciano against Vitali Klitschko. Much better than Adamek?

  • Gotta hand it to gomez!

    He had earned his paycheque,but fought on till he could no longer.

    Credit goes to the man in the ring,not the winner!

  • I give gomez for staying in there like a trooper, but Vitali is the MACHINE. How many other currrently active boxers are world champs with PhD and Doctorate degree? That's why he's called Dr. Vitali Klitschko. Vitali is the greatest modern era Heavyweight boxer...even better than Lewis considering lewis got lucky and won by cut stoppage even though he was losing on all judges scorecards, then he conveniently retires after that fight lol.

  • @CTUKeyes Tell me when he was 190? Im saying he was over 200 pound after olympics he might be 190 in his first few fights and his prime weight is 214. Guess what even when he sucked as in old he beated the best out there. Prime Ali had the best chin, fastest legs, fastest hand speed, highest work rate, most conditioned and a heart of champion.

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