(JUNE 5) Every
professional fighter who participates in the sport of boxing, no
matter how long, or what level of success they achieve in the
ring, share many experiences as their careers unfold: long hours
training in the gym for a short burst of the spotlight in a
professional ring, the necessity to block out the pain that
comes with that training and the pain, that inevitably exists in
a sport where infliction and absorption of pain are necessary
measurements of the success that is achieved in those brief
interludes of intense competition. One other aspect familiar to
all boxers is that at various times during their careers they
arrive at, and must deal with, a crossroad which will go far
towards determining the direction of their careers. Alicia
Napoleon came to such a crossroad Friday Night in what was
termed a "special feature attraction" on Lou DiBella's nine bout
card at the Resorts World Casino in Queens, NY.
Napoleon, being groomed as a
fighter with a promising future as a super middleweight, was
facing, in the sixth bout of her nascent career, Latasha Burton,
a Houma LA fighter she had already beaten, via a second round
stoppage, nine months earlier. This time, Burton came to the
ring a significantly different opponent compared to the previous
outing, beginning with a nine pound advantage, 162 to 153, over
Napoleon. Burton also established, in the opening two minutes,
that she intended to stick around longer, much longer, this
time. Both fighters exchanged long range jabs and power punches
in the first stanza, a close round with Burton appearing to earn
a slight edge. The second and third rounds were likewise
bell/bell action, with both fighters trading long range jabs and
short punishing blows in frequent bursts of infighting. Two
trends seemed to emerge, Napoleon was intent on making Burton
pay for her infighting tactics with a focused body attack and
that strategy seemed to be noticeably wearing on the Louisiana
fighter.
The middle rounds followed the same pattern with Napoleon not
quite taking control of the bout but maintaining, at the very
least, a slight edge in each round. A surprising, continuing
scenario was that each time it appeared the Long Island fighter
was on the verge of taking over the fight, Burton would reach
down for some, yet untapped, reserve and take the momentum,
briefly, away from Napoleon. In fact, these rallies by Burton
resulted in the bloodying of Napoleon's nose as the bout wended
through the middle rounds. With one round to go, Napoleon was,
from my view, comfortably ahead on points, but comfortable was
hardly an appropriate adjective for the toll those seven rounds
had taken on each fighter. Burton seemed spent, but she had come
back time and again during the bout and the eighth round
represented a final two minute chance for her to pull out an
unlikely win.
Napoleon, on the other hand, had the option of coasting through
the final round, given the lead she had built up in the previous
rounds. However, as the fighters touched gloves in the center of
the ring for the final round, Napoleon seemed to glare at
Burton, actually baring her mouth piece and as the bell rang,
the Long Island fighter was the one who, this time, seemed to
reach to tap into a reserve of strength and it was Napoleon who,
attacking in all four corners of the ring, seemed to take the
role of the fighter who needed to pull out a win. Instead, what
I believe she was doing was making a final, conclusive statement
regarding this bout, this tough bout, probably one tougher than
anticipated. At a crossroads point, probably the first of many
in her career, Alicia Napoleon reached the decision that an
emphatic win was the statement she wished to make.
And this time, the gallant Burton had no answer, the seven
previous rounds had taken their toll. Napoleon followed Burton
around the ring throwing punches from all angles, finally
trapping Burton on the ropes and raining punches that had ring
officials standing on the apron urging a stoppage, which referee
Eddie Claudio did at 1:43 of the final stanza.
Unfortunately, this bout, in a scheduling quirk, followed the
ten round main event and when the first bell rang for Napoleon
and Burton many in the night's large crowd who had enjoyed the
previous bouts had departed. Those fans missed a good bout.
Those fans missed the opportunity to possibly say in the future,
"I was there when Alicia Napoleon started living up to what she
is today." Is there greatness in Napoleon's future? Who knows.
Boxing is a tough sport, maybe the toughest. Nothing is
guaranteed, but Friday night at Resorts Casino, Alicia Napoleon,
came, as all fighters must, to probably the first of many
crossroads she'll confront in her career. Did she get through?
Just check with any of those fans lucky enough to stick around
and watch the final eight rounds of the night. Alicia Napoleon
did considerably more than raise her record to 6-0.