Mayweather vs cotto how many rounds
The fight really started to open up in the third round. Cotto connected well in the middle of the round, but overall Mayweather out-landed him once more.
He spent a lot of time in the middle of the ring and sat down on his punches, lancing Cotto's guard with straight punches and crashing from around the outside with hooks. But Cotto took the punishment and kept coming, even bloodying Mayweather's nose near the end of the round. He managed to push Mayweather back into the ropes and bloodied him up again. Most of his punches did not land, but I felt he did the more significant work and I had him winning that round on my card, which at was closer than any of the judges.
The sixth round was another competitive and exciting round, with Cotto fighting hard again and Mayweather once more bloodied. It was a very close round that I scored for Mayweather. Round 7 was again competitive, but Mayweather really re-asserted himself here.
This was a familiar pattern in the fight. Whenever Cotto would make a move and win a round or two, Mayweather would answer strong. Round 7 was close, but in my opinion clearly belonged to Mayweather. But Cotto was not going away and he demonstrated that with an exclamation point in the eighth. It was possibly the fight's most thrilling round. Mayweather landed early but Cotto muscled him into the corner and started to pound combinations to the body and head. Mayweather stayed cool and began to time some nasty uppercuts up the middle on Cotto, but Cotto remained dogged, letting his hands go.
He stayed right on Mayweather's chest for most of the round, pushing him along the ropes and out-landing him. He landed eight combinations of the left jab followed by the right hook in a row. Like a matador with a cape, Mayweather lured Cotto towards the ropes. Which many people did not understand. The fifth round would be very frustrating for Cotto because he believed with his power he could hurt Mayweather on the ropes.
Yet, this was not the case. One of the trickiest defense tactics in boxing, which he mastered. Chin tucked behind the shoulder, right arm protecting the lower abdominal section from body shots and left arm used to parry off shots. In the picture above, Mayweather is on the ropes, Cotto is leaning in once again and is throwing sh ots, but this was to no avail.
Mayweather was rolling with the punches to limit the number of shots Cotto can land, despite being in a vulnerable position. What was fascinating, was that when many would appear to be at their weakest, Mayweather was at his strongest.
Mayweather bouncing off the ropes also allowed him to utilize his right uppercut. This was not a walkover fight though. In the next round, the sixth, Cotto would win his first round of the fight. He took the frustrations of the previous round and had a bit of success with his shot selecti on.
The round resulted in a busted and bloody nosed Mayweather. Why Dodgers believe Andrew Heaney is primed for bounce-back season. All Sections. About Us. B2B Publishing. Business Visionaries. Hot Property. Times Events. Times Store. Facebook Twitter Show more sharing options Share Close extra sharing options. Floyd Mayweather Jr. By Lance Pugmire.
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