(NOV 13) María José "Panterita" ('the Little Panther') Núñez, 113 ¼,
got her professional career off to a successful start last night in
Chajarí (Entre Rios, Argentina) when she stopped the more experienced
Lourdes González de Ocampo, 113 ¼, in the second round. Although
in fact Uruguayan, Núñez has been living in Paraguay for the last seven
years. González, who was stepping in for the injured Nancy Silvia
Piccini and is the wife of the ex South American champion and now
trainer Luis Alberto Ocampo, was the centre of controversy in Germany
earlier in her career when her hospitalisation after a fight with Regina
Halmich triggered a bizarre anti-boxing diatribe in Der Spiegel. She
last saw action in Bolivar (Buenos Aires, Argentina) in 2003, when she
succumbed with equal rapidity to the current WIBA world champion at
bantamweight, Marcela Acuña. Her record now stands at 8 wins (3 by KO)
and 4 losses.
In an article for ABC Digital entitled
(succinctly) “The Little Panther with the Face of an Angel and Fists
that Kill”, the paper’s special correspondent describes how the air of
innocence and humility with which Núñez had charmed the press and public
in the build-up to the fight evaporated instantly as the bell sounded,
and her eyes assumed a cold stare as she set about the destruction of
the local woman.
González, who had been greeted with chants
of ‘Lourdes!’ and ‘Argentina! Argentina!’ as she entered the ring, was
staggered by a left cross in the course of an opening exchange that
signalled the future course of the fight and drew a gasp of dismay from
the 4,000 mainly Argentinian fans packing the arena, but managed
nonetheless to fight back bravely and begin trading punches with the
debutante.
Several times more, though, in the course of the opening round, Núñez
got through with the left hand, and as she made her way unsteadily back
to her corner at the end of the first round, dazed and demoralized, the
welts were already beginning to show on González’s face.
Smelling blood, and lacking the lucidity and
experience in only her first fight to pick her shots more carefully,
Núñez took longer perhaps than she needed to finish it, but in the end
she got the job done. With her opponent’s right eye now closing, she
connected with a succession of clean shots and suddenly the
Argentinean’s head was jerking from side to side as her defence
collapsed completely.
The fight ended as it had begun. Just as the
Colombian referee, Dr Francisco Hernández, was about to separate them
and award the TKO, Núñez pre-empted him with a peach of a left that
caught González flush on the jaw and sent her crashing to the canvas in
her own corner. There was no point in counting. She wasn’t getting up.
As Hernández signaled the TKO and the
Argentinian spectators, sportingly, gave her a standing ovation, the
Uruguayan rushed back to her corner and clasped her trainer, Marco
Antonio Chea Rodríguez of Cuba, in a euphoric embrace that lasted
several minutes. It was a gesture of gratitude, she explained, towards a
trainer whose dedication and sacrifice over the last four months has
involved getting out of bed at the crack of dawn to supervise her
training and imposing on her a regime that few male fighters could
withstand.