USA TODAY International Edition

Hurt Donaire earns win

- By Bob Velin USA TODAY

Despite hurting his powerful left hand early in the fight, Nonito Donaire knocked down Wilfredo Vazquez Jr. once and outworked the Puerto Rican to win a split decision and the vacant WBC junior featherwei­ght title Saturday at the Alamodome in San Antonio.

That the fight was a split decision was puzzling. Donaire won 117- 110 on the scorecards of two of the judges, Levi Martinez and Don Trella, but Ruben Garciagave the fight to Vazquez 115- 112.

Donaire, known as the “Filipino Flash,” greatly outworked Vazquez, landing 68 more punches, and landed at a 42% connect rate. Donaire also landed 91 more power punches than Vazquez, who is trained by his father, Wilfredo Vazquez, one of Puerto Rico’s finest fighters.

In the third round, Donaire almost put Vazquez away when he pinned him in the corner and threw a flurry of punches that seemed to daze Vazquez a bit.

In the ninth round, Donaire connected on a nice combinatio­n to put Vazquez on his butt. It was the only knockdown of the fight.

Donaire and Vazquez came in with bad blood between them after shoving and knocking each other’s hats off during the final news conference Thursday, with Donaire saying Vazquez disrespect­ed him. In addition, their wives had waged a war of words on Twitter leading up to the fight.

After the fight, however, Vazquez ( 21- 2- 1, 18 KOS) and Donaire hugged and seemed to work out their hard feelings.

Asked about his hand injury, Donaire ( 28- 1, 18 KOS) said he wasn’t sure if it was broken but said he hurt it between the second and fourth rounds. “I was prepared for anything, but it was early on that I hurt it,” he said.

“There’s something wrong with ( the hand). I don’t know if it’s broken, but it hurts bad, that’s for sure.”

Donaire was fighting for the first time at 122 pounds after spending his career at 118 or below. They fought for the vacant belt that Vazquez had lost to Jorge Arce in May.

“They’re definitely more tougher than expected,” Donaire said of fighting at the higher weight. “I thought my power would be able to take him down, but I couldn’t find the rhythm. Maybe I got caught up in all the stuff that happened before, but … we have to go back to the drawing board and work hard and do the best that we can as always and be thankful for everything.”

Chavez victorious:

“Raging Bull.” That’s how HBO playbyplay announcer Jim Lampley described middleweig­ht champion Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. as he constantly came forward, walking through the punches of Marco Antonio Rubio on his way to a unanimous- decision victory Saturday to retain his WBC title belt and remain undefeated.

Chavez ( 45- 0- 1, 31 knockouts) dominated Rubio ( 53- 6- 1, 46 KOS) from the start at the Alamodome. Chavez punished a game Rubio with powerful body shots and in the last few rounds seemed stronger than in the beginning, going more to Rubio’s head.

Chavez, who a few days before the fight was 5 pounds over the 160- pound weight limit, struggled to make weight at Friday’s official weigh- in.

Judge Glen Crocker scored it 118- 110, Duane Ford 116- 112 and Jack Woodburn 115- 113.

 ?? By Edward A. Ornelas, AP ?? Split decision: Nonito Donaire, left, accepts congratula­tions from Wilfredo Vazquez Jr. after their bout Saturday.
By Edward A. Ornelas, AP Split decision: Nonito Donaire, left, accepts congratula­tions from Wilfredo Vazquez Jr. after their bout Saturday.

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