(MAR 29) Cindy Serrano and
Fatuma Zarika battled to a six round draw in the co-main event
of New Legend's sixteenth International Fight Night, a nine bout
card Saturday night at Resorts World Casino in the borough of
Queens, in the city of New York. The three judges' scorecards
reflected, accurately, just how close the bout was: Jim Pierce
had it 58-56, Serrano, Ron McNair 58-56, Zarika and Robin Taylor
accentuated the evenness of the bout with a 57-57 count. Those
are essentially the basic facts of the penultimate bout of the
evening, but the back story of the fight properly adheres to a
couple of long time boxing adages.
"Styles make fights" and "Never
Jab with a Jabber" probably probes into a deeper tale of just
what these six rounds of classic "stick and move" boxing was all
about. Both Serrano and Zarika have come close to perfecting the
value of a stiff left jab combined with ring movement and both
fighters have employed that style against some of the best
opposition in the lightweight ranks: Zarika has been in with
Jelena Mrdjenovich, unbeaten Eva Wahlstrom, Delfine Presoon and
Diane Prazak and many boxing fans still talk of Serrano's
memorable "fight of the year" (Ring Magazine) with Rhonda Luna
in December 2005.
The first round of the bout seemed to acquaint both fighters
with the awareness that their styles are mirror like. Both
Serrano (131 lbs) and Zarika (132.4) spent the first two minutes
probing in a classic "feeling out" strategy. The second and
third round, while still fought at long range, provided both
fighters with momentary chances to take an aggressive stance but
both seemed to feel that "what works" was the best course. In
both rounds, Serrano appeared to gain a slight edge by finishing
strong in the final half minute. Zarika seemed to seize the
advantage in the fourth and fifth stanzas with the more
effective counter punching. But, like all previous rounds, these
two segments of action were composed primarily by what these two
boxers probably do as well as anyone in the sport, sticking and
moving, constantly utilizing both an effective left jab combined
with deft ring movement. The final round was, again, a replay of
the previous five. It was close, neither fighter deviating from
their "jab and move" game plan. If I had to make a call, I would
award the round to Serrano "by a nose" (mixing sports metaphors,
with a nod to nearby Aqueduct racetrack).
But the fact is that the official results, which have been
recounted earlier, are, as in every boxing match, the numbers
that count. Three very competent boxing judges called it,
collectively, a draw and that's the way it stands.
Disappointing? Certainly to the fighters, to the fans, to the
"teams" of each boxer. But the consolation, if there is one, is
that for twelve minutes on Saturday night, two very talented
boxers, who happen to be women, put on a pretty good display of
boxing that was one of the highlights of a night of the sweet
science in the southeast edge of Queens. It's almost enough,
almost, to overcome any anguish associated with a draw.