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Hopkins held to draw by Pascal
BERNARD Hopkins missed a chance to become the oldest boxer to hold a major world title, fighting to a technical draw with Canadian Jean Pascal in their light heavyweight bout on Saturday.
The 45-year-old Hopkins (51-5-2) rallied after being knocked down in the first and third rounds in Quebec City.
American judge Steve Morrow scored it 114-112 for Hopkins, but Canadian Claude Paquette (113-113) and Belgium's Daniel Van de Wiele (114-114) had it even, which made it a technical draw and allowed Pascal (26-1-1) to keep his WBC and IBO light heavyweight titles.
Hopkins will be 46 on January 15. George Foreman was 45 years, 10 months when he knocked out heavyweight champion Michael Moorer in 1994. Hopkins said he wants a rematch, but not in Canada.
"I come to Canada and face a 28-year-old guy and I get a draw, at 45 years old?" Hopkins said in amazement. "You saw a young guy running from an old grandpa."
Hopkins complained that it was a blow to the back of the head that caused him to go down in the final seconds of the first, but Montreal referee Michael Griffin scored it a knockdown. The knockdown was more clear-cut in the third when Pascal tagged the former middleweight king from Philadelphia with a left. Hopkins dropped to the canvas and got up quickly.
Wore down
The Haiti-born Pascal, making the fourth defense of the WBC belt he won from fellow Montreal fighter Adrian Diaconu in June 2009, wore down and was hit repeatedly in the final six rounds.
"I thought I won," said Pascal, whose face was swollen and red after the bout while Hopkins came away with just a few scrapes. "It wasn't my best fight, but Bernard likes to fight dirty. I dropped him twice..."
Hopkins launched a desperate flurry in the final round but failed to put Pascal down. "The 12th round was vicious," Hopkins said. "He looked to be tired from the sixth round. He was gasping. He held every time I got close. And I just kept coming forward throwing punches. He was holding on for dear life."
Hopkins reluctantly accepted a draw on Pascal's turf, even if he felt he won, and insists he would if they fought again. "Look at my record, anyone I fought twice I destroyed," he said.
The 45-year-old Hopkins (51-5-2) rallied after being knocked down in the first and third rounds in Quebec City.
American judge Steve Morrow scored it 114-112 for Hopkins, but Canadian Claude Paquette (113-113) and Belgium's Daniel Van de Wiele (114-114) had it even, which made it a technical draw and allowed Pascal (26-1-1) to keep his WBC and IBO light heavyweight titles.
Hopkins will be 46 on January 15. George Foreman was 45 years, 10 months when he knocked out heavyweight champion Michael Moorer in 1994. Hopkins said he wants a rematch, but not in Canada.
"I come to Canada and face a 28-year-old guy and I get a draw, at 45 years old?" Hopkins said in amazement. "You saw a young guy running from an old grandpa."
Hopkins complained that it was a blow to the back of the head that caused him to go down in the final seconds of the first, but Montreal referee Michael Griffin scored it a knockdown. The knockdown was more clear-cut in the third when Pascal tagged the former middleweight king from Philadelphia with a left. Hopkins dropped to the canvas and got up quickly.
Wore down
The Haiti-born Pascal, making the fourth defense of the WBC belt he won from fellow Montreal fighter Adrian Diaconu in June 2009, wore down and was hit repeatedly in the final six rounds.
"I thought I won," said Pascal, whose face was swollen and red after the bout while Hopkins came away with just a few scrapes. "It wasn't my best fight, but Bernard likes to fight dirty. I dropped him twice..."
Hopkins launched a desperate flurry in the final round but failed to put Pascal down. "The 12th round was vicious," Hopkins said. "He looked to be tired from the sixth round. He was gasping. He held every time I got close. And I just kept coming forward throwing punches. He was holding on for dear life."
Hopkins reluctantly accepted a draw on Pascal's turf, even if he felt he won, and insists he would if they fought again. "Look at my record, anyone I fought twice I destroyed," he said.
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