Jermain Taylor vs. Bernard Hopkins II explained

Fight Name:No Respect
Fight Date:December 3, 2005
Location:Mandalay Bay Events Center, Paradise, Nevada, U.S.
Titles:WBA, WBC, WBO and The Ring middleweight championship
Fighter1:Jermain Taylor
Nickname1:Bad Intentions
Hometown1:Little Rock, Arkansas, U.S.
Purse1:$2,000,000
Record1:24–0 (17 KO)
Height1:6 ft 1 in
Weight1:159 lb
Style1:Orthodox
Recognition1:WBA, WBC, WBO and The Ring
Middleweight Champion
Fighter2:Bernard Hopkins
Nickname2:The Executioner
Hometown2:Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S.
Purse2:$10,000,000
Record2:46–3–1 (1) (32 KO)
Height2:6 ft 1 in
Weight2:160 lb
Style2:Orthodox
Recognition2:WBC/WBA/WBO
No. 2 Ranked Middleweight
The Ring
No. 1 Ranked Middleweight
Former undisputed middleweight champion
Result:Taylor wins via unanimous decision (115–113, 115–113, 115–113)

Jermain Taylor vs. Bernard Hopkins II, billed as No Respect, was a professional boxing match contested on December 3, 2005, for the WBA (Undisputed), WBC, WBO, and The Ring middleweight championships.[1]

Background

Just 4 and a half months prior, Jermain Taylor had surprised the boxing world by scoring an upset victory over the reigning undisputed middleweight champion Bernard Hopkins, who had not lost in over 12 years and had made 20 consecutive title defenses, needing only one more to surpass Larry Holmes to set the record as the fighter with the most.[2] [3] The fight was not without controversy as though Hopkins started off slowly, he took control of the later rounds and many in the media still had him as the clear winner. Hopkins took issued the scoring of the final round by judge Duane Ford. Ford had scored the 12th round in favor of Taylor 10–9 in contrast to the other two judges who had given Hopkins the round 10–9. Hopkins filed an official appeal with the Nevada State Athletic Commission contending that Ford was incorrect in scoring the round for Taylor and had he scored the fight in Hopkins favor, the fight would've been declared a split draw, allowing Hopkins to keep his titles. Hopkins explained "I'd be doing a disservice if I didn't challenge something that's in dispute around the world, based on a judge thinking Jermain Taylor won a round that everybody else says I won." NSAC Marc Ratner admitted that an overturned decision was unlikely as they had not found anything to conclude that the Ford had either scored the fight incorrectly or colluded with other judges, but nevertheless submitted Hopkins' appeal to a five man committee, who denied Hopkins' appeal three days later [4] [5] Though Hopkins was unsuccessful in his appeal, he still held a rematch clause from the previous fight's contract and had exercised it shortly after his defeat, officially putting the rematch on for later in the year.[6] Hopkins and his team originally eyed an October 1 date for the rematch, but Taylor's manager Lou DiBella refused, stating that Taylor needed more time to heal from a deep gash he had sustained to his head during the first fight and December would be the earliest that the rematch would take place.[7] [8]

On 15 October the IBF stripped Taylor of their belt.[9]

The fight

In what was another close fight, Taylor would again defeat Hopkins, this time by unanimous decision with three identical scores of 115–113. Like their previous fight, Hopkins started off slowly with Taylor taking most of the early and middle rounds before Hopkins rebounded to take the later rounds, though he had already put himself in too big a hole to earn the decision. The punch stats were extremely close with Hopkins narrowly outlanding Taylor, scoring 130 of his 371 thrown punches as opposed to Taylor, who landed 124 of his 391 punches.[10]

Aftermath

Following his second loss to Taylor, Hopkins decided not to retire but instead he jumped two weight divisions to face off against light heavyweight champion Antonio Tarver.

Fight card

Confirmed bouts:[11]

Weight ClassWeightvs.MethodRoundNotes
Middleweight160 lbs.Jermain Taylor (c)defBernard HopkinsUD12/12
Super Bantamweight122 lbs.Israel Vázquez def.Óscar Larios (c)TKO3/12
Middlweight160 lbs.Ike Quarteydef.Carlos BojorquezTKO10/10
Super Lightweight140 lbs.Demetrius Hopkinsdef.Jesse FelicianoKO4/10
Super Welterweight154 lbs.Joshua Clotteydef.Marcos PrimeraUD10/10
Super Welterweight154 lbs.Kofi Jantuahdef.Donny McCraryRTD3/8
Middleweight160 lbs.Andre Bertodef.Taronze WashingtonKO1/8
Super Welterweight154 lbs.Larry Mosleydef.Jeremy YeltonTKO4/8
Welterweight147 lbs.Rock Allendef.Calvin PittsTKO2/6

Broadcasting

align=center Countryalign=center Broadcaster
Sport 1
HBO

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Jermain Taylor vs. Bernard Hopkins (2nd meeting) . boxrec.com . BoxRec . 22 August 2024.
  2. https://www.nytimes.com/2005/07/17/sports/in-split-decision-taylor-dethrones-hopkins.html In Split Decision, Taylor Dethrones Hopkins
  3. https://www.nytimes.com/2005/07/17/sports/othersports/hopkinss-streak-halted-at-20.html Hopkins's Streak Halted at 20
  4. https://www.nytimes.com/2005/07/21/sports/othersports/hopkins-appeals-split-decision.html Hopkins Appeals Split Decision
  5. https://tulsaworld.com/archive/sports-fyi-hopkins-appeal-denied/article_e3bea385-341f-5a5e-9d6b-4c608cef14e3.html Hopkins' appeal denied
  6. https://www.baltimoresun.com/2005/07/18/feeling-robbed-hopkins-forces-taylor-rematch/ Feeling robbed, Hopkins forces Taylor rematch
  7. https://tulsaworld.com/archive/october-rematch-possible/article_0e431f6d-bb1c-5473-b8f2-816c2e5eedd3.html October rematch possible
  8. https://tulsaworld.com/archive/injury-will-delay-rematch-between-hopkins-taylor/article_486720c1-ebfb-53a8-9857-2ea23bb735f1.html Injury will delay rematch between Hopkins, Taylor
  9. Web site: CHRIS GIVENS . Taylor gives up his IBF title belt . PressReader . Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette . 22 August 2024 . 15 October 2005.
  10. https://www.espn.com/sports/boxing/news/story?id=2246953 Taylor wins Hopkins rematch by unanimous decision
  11. Web site: BoxRec - event.