IRELAND'S John Duddy moved a step closer to a world middleweight title shot with a ninth-round stoppage of American Anthony Bonsante at the Madison Square Garden Theatre.
Duddy made it 19 straight victories when the referee stopped their fight in the ninth round due to blood streaming from Bonsante's head, damage which had been caused by an accidental clash of heads in the second round.
Due to the accidental nature of the damage the decision went to the scorecards and the New York-based Derry man won a unanimous verdict and retained his IBA middleweight title before a sell-out crowd.
Headlining, for the second time a St Patrick's Day show at the Garden, Duddy didn't disappoint as he picked apart the courageous challenge of 'The Bullet' Bonsante. In the opening round it was Duddy who came out the sharper and stronger of the two fighters. He went about establishing his jab, which he did successfully, and clocked Bonsante with crisp power shots - most notably with the left hook, which landed frequently against the challengers jaw. Bonsante took the shots well and avoided a majority of what was coming his way by using his footwork and planting his own jab in the face of the Irishman.
Round two continued where the first left off with Duddy again landing big power shots, set up perfectly by his jab. The 27-year-old landed a powerful right hand midway through that forced the Minnesota native to cover up and, sensing that his man was in trouble, Duddy went headhunting. The gritty challenger soaked up everything that was thrown at him, however, and came out for the third round with a little more gusto.
The Irishman declined to re-employ the jab that had set up so much of his early power attack and instead reverted back to his old habit of slugging with an opponent that he could surely outbox if he chose to. Although clearly the stronger man, Duddy was caught by numerous combinations and he threw back, wildly at times, as the action went back and forth.
Bonsante was cut on the forehead in the fourth round - the result of an accidental clash of heads and, bothered by the stream of blood rolling down his face; he ate a blistering left hook that wobbled his legs. The Derryman pounced and battered the bloodied 36-year-old for the remainder of the round.
The former Contender star showed his grit as he blasted back at Duddy in the fifth round, throwing and landing with his fare share of punches - most of which came as the fight was contested in close quarters. Duddy, seeing blood, and focusing squarely on the head of Bonsante, landed the more telling shots and was never really troubled by his opponent's power.
In the sixth round, the Irish star decided that he would show his chin quality by dropping his hands and allowing Bonsante to land four of his best shots. Duddy retaliated with a straight right hand of his own and it was clear, at this stage, that Bonsante was being outpowered.
The cut on the forehead of the challenger was becoming more of a problem in the seventh and eight rounds.
Blood leaked into the Bonsante's eye sockets, forcing him to paw at his eyes continuously. Ringside doctors and referee Steve Smoger inspected the wound closely in between rounds and it was obvious that he was on borrowed time. The courageous American came out swinging in the eighth and ninth - a desperate attempt to land something that would chip the granite coating on the Derryman's chin. Duddy countered well and again had his opponent in trouble in the ninth by a huge left hook that halted Bonsante's momentum.
With his vision clouded by his own blood, 'The Bullet' spent the rest of the action trying to hop out of the way of the oncoming Duddy assault.
It was no surprise that his game challenge came to an end between the ninth and tenth as he was deemed unfit to continue.
On the same card, upcoming Irish middleweight Andy Lee dismantled former world champion Carl Daniels inside three rounds and, in the process, treated fans to what is clearly an early candidate for 'Knockout of the Year' honours. Lee controlled the action after establishing his jab early on and sporadically unleashed picturesque body and head combinations for which Daniels had no answer.
After eating a stinging right hand late in the third, the Irish southpaw connected with a thunderous right hook to the jaw which knocked Daniels out cold 2:36 into the round.
Making his pro-debut, Irish light middleweight Henry Coyle knocked out fellow first-timer Jason Collazo with a right hand to the body in the first round.
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