(APR 3) In boxing, there are
unanimous decisions and then there are UNANIMOUS decisions. Alicia
"Slick" Ashley's six round win over a game, but outclassed, Jackie
Trivilino on the O'Shea Brothers six bout card at the Masonic Temple
in the Fort Greene section of Brooklyn on Friday, April 2, was,
assuredly, in the upper case category. The ring announcer's post
fight declamation that all three judges scored the bout, for Ashley,
60-54, had a "blinding flash of the obvious" ring to the assemblage
packing the floor and balcony of the Brooklyn venue.
Both fighters came to the bout weighing in at 124 pounds and that
was where the similarities ended. Ashley, a stylish southpaw whose
boxing skills befit her nickname, is a veteran of 24 (14-9-1) bouts
over an eleven year professional career against some of the top
female fighters, worldwide, in the featherweight division. Trivilino,
who made her pro debut slightly over a year ago came to this bout
with a 3-1-1 record and with the reputation of being a tough,
straight ahead fighter, coming out of a successful amateur career.
Ashley controlled both the pace and the action of each round of the
fast paced bout. Her primary tools are speed and ring movement. She
has won thirteen of fourteen bouts via decision (a stoppage of Elena
Reid on cuts in March 2005, the lone exception). Ashley's quickness
has both a forward and reverse gear and she utilizes every piece of
the ring, gliding, at once, back and away and then suddenly coming
forward with a very effective bolo/uppercut left hand, a weapon that
"found a home" in almost every round against Trivilino. Ashley also
seems to fight considerably taller than her listed five foot four
and a half inch stature, due mainly to her rapier right jab.
While she was clearly outclassed in this bout, Trivilino is
certainly not without class. Like any professional fighter who
deserves that valued sobriquet, the upstate New Yorker (Albany) came
forward in every round, even occasionally catching Ashley on the
ropes or near a corner. But each time the winner, utilizing her
smooth, quick movement, managed to step quickly away from any
potential trouble, winding up in the middle of the ring where she
would resume, once more, her motion offense. It was a skillful
exhibition of a sometimes overused boxing phrase; but on Friday
night, "sweet science" aptly applied to Ashley Ashley's six rounds
of boxing.
Ashley improved her record to 15-9-1, while Trevilino, who should be
heard from again in the featherweight ranks, dropped to 3-2-1.