Marlon Starling vs. Mark Breland II
Date | April 16, 1988 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Venue | Las Vegas Hilton, Winchester, Nevada, U.S. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Title(s) on the line | WBA welterweight title | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Tale of the tape | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Result | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Split draw (116–113, 114–115, 114–114) |
Marlon Starling vs. Mark Breland II was a professional boxing match contested on April 16, 1988, for the WBA welterweight title.[1]
Background
[edit]On August 22, 1987, then-WBA welterweight champion Mark Breland and top welterweight contender Marlon Starling had fought for the first time with Starling upsetting the undefeated Breland to capture the WBA welterweight title.[2] Breland hoped for an immediate rematch with Starling, but WBA rules at the time prevented a rematch from happening for the time being.[3] Breland would instead return to the ring in December, defeating Javier Suazo on the undercard of his former Olympic teammate Evander Holyfield's rematch with Dwight Muhammad Qawi.[4] In February 1988, in what was expected to be a precursor to their rematch, Starling and Breland both participated in a tripleheader event (along with Roberto Durán, who defeated Ricky Stackhouse) in a tripleheader event billed as Furious Friday. Breland would defeat Juan Alonso Villa by third-round TKO, while Starling would successfully defend his WBA welterweight title against Fujio Ozaki, winning by unanimous decision.[5] With their respective victories, Starling and Breland's rematch was set for April 16, 1988.[6]
The fight
[edit]In a largely tactical fight, Starling started off strong, pressing forward, dodging Breland's jabs and effectively counterpunching. Starling took a lead on the judge's scorecards through the first seven rounds, however, Breland would come on strong in the later rounds, losing only the 10th round from the eighth round on. After the fight went the fill 12-round distance, judge Jerry Roth had Starling the winner 116–113, another had Breland the winner 115–114 while the third scored it even 114–114, thus the fight was declared a split draw.[7]
Fight card
[edit]Confirmed bouts:[8]
Weight Class | Weight | vs. | Method | Round | Notes | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Welterweight | 147 lbs. | Marlon Starling (c) | vs. | Mark Breland | D | 12/12 | Note 1 |
Lightweight | 135 lbs. | Julio César Chávez | def. | Rodolfo Aguilar | TKO | 6/12 | Note 2 |
Heavyweight | 200+ lbs. | Buster Douglas | def. | Jerry Halstead | TKO | 9/10 | |
Super Middleweight | 168 lbs. | Julian Jackson | def. | Reggie Barnes | KO | 1/10 | |
Super Lightweight | 140 lbs. | Primo Ramos | def. | Kerns Ibarra | TKO | 1/10 |
^Note 1 For WBA Welterweight title
^Note 2 For WBA Lightweight title
Broadcasting
[edit]Country | Broadcaster |
---|---|
United States | HBO |
References
[edit]- ^ "Marlon Starling vs. Mark Breland (2nd meeting)". boxrec.com. BoxRec. Retrieved 18 October 2024.
- ^ Breland Stopped by Starling, NY Times article, 1987-08-23 Retrieved on 2024-10-16
- ^ Breland Must Wait For Title Rematch, NY Times article, 1987-08-24 Retrieved on 2024-10-18
- ^ Breland Returning, NY Times article, 1987-10-16 Retrieved on 2024-10-18
- ^ Marlon Starling admits his first World Boxing Association welterweight..., UPI article, 1988-02-04 Retrieved on 2024-10-18
- ^ The best thing Marlon Starling can say about his..., UPI article, 1988-02-06 Retrieved on 2024-10-18
- ^ Starling Holds Title on Draw, NY Times article, 1988-04-17 Retrieved on 2024-10-16
- ^ "BoxRec - event".