Toronto Star

TKO reality check for Cook

Canadian’s long-awaited title shot ends early — derailing big plans

- MORGAN CAMPBELL SPORTS REPORTER

Brandon Cook returned to his corner after round one of Saturday night’s challenge for Jaime Munguia’s WBO junior middleweig­ht crown, and mumbled to his cornermen about being stunned by the heavy blows Munguia had unleashed just before the bell. The moment could have turned chaotic for the Ajax native, but trainer Mike Guyett responded with calm, counsellin­g Cook to slow the fight down if Munguia rattled him again.

“Take a little time,” Guyett said, “if he lets you.”

The 32-year-old Cook has grown used to taking time. He had waited nearly two years for a fight as massive as Saturday’s. Aworld title shot fell through in early 2017, as did a showdown with English star Kell Brook scheduled for July. Taking Munguia’s title would have launched the long-delayed next phase of Cook’s career.

Instead, in the four minutes of action following Guyett’s advice, Cook learned that elitelevel boxers don’t take time to let opponents recover. Munguia kept pressuring and, in a lopsided third-round TKO, illustrate­d the difference in pedigree between a contender a possible future superstar.

Cook and Munguia featured as the co-main event on a card headlined by the rematch between Saul (Canelo) Alvarez and Gennady Golovkin, a 50-50 pairing of pound-for-pound elites. The two fought to a controvers­ial draw last September, and Saturday night Alvarez won by the slimmest possible margin. One judge scored the bout a draw, while the other two favoured the Mexican by one round.

But the co-feature existed principall­y to prop up Munguia, the 21-year-old Tijuana native Golden Boy Promotions hopes will succeed Alvarez as an elite fighter, ticket seller and payper-view star. In Golden Boy’s scenario, Cook functioned less as a title challenger than as a prop. Golden Boy certainly didn’t pay Cook as though they expected him to win. Munguia earned $250,000 (all dollars U.S.), while Cook’s $30,000 guarantee was the smallest payout among the eight fighters on Saturday’s main card.

But Cook and his team expected a long-term payoff.

Last year, he sold his house and quit his job as a window installer, then invested the newfound time and money in his boxing career. Against Munguia he accepted short money, expecting dividends to roll in after an upset victory and a lucrative series of title defences. Golden Boy insured itself against a long-shot Cook win by taking options on his next three fights.

Cook felt a surge of confidence the Tuesday before the fight when, during an eight-kilometre run along the Las Vegas Strip, he spotted Munguia loping toward him, looking exhausted and struggling to shed pounds before Friday’s weighin. Ultimately, both boxers weighed in below the 154pound junior middleweig­ht limit. By Saturday night, Cook had gained 10 pounds, but the six-foot-tall Munguia had added more than 20, and quickly imposed his size advantage.

Compu Box credits Cook with landing 13 of 66 punches, several of them hard left hooks to the body that Munguia absorbed without breaking rhythm. Munguia landed 43 of147 shots, several of them hard left hooks to the body. A right hand to the head dropped Cook early in round three. He rose and resumed fighting but Munguia renewed his assault, pounding Cook until ref Tony Weeks stopped the fight.

Munguia needed just over seven minutes to show his promoters he’s ready for stiffer challenges. Over that same span, Cook and his team downsized both their ambitions and their definition of success.

During fight week, they spoke of dethroning Munguia and hoping to defend the title in Canada, knowing Golden Boy would likely exercise their new promotiona­l rights and compel Cook to compete in the U.S. By late Saturday night, success meant Cook had finished the fight on his feet and escaped without a serious injury.

 ?? ISAAC BREKKEN THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Ref Tony Weeks stopped Saturday night’s title bout soon after Jaime Munguia dropped Ajax’s Brandon Cook in the third round.
ISAAC BREKKEN THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Ref Tony Weeks stopped Saturday night’s title bout soon after Jaime Munguia dropped Ajax’s Brandon Cook in the third round.

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