Marquez stops Katsidis, demands 3rd Pacquiao fight
Las Vegas, USA - Mexican Juan Manuel Marquez recovered from a third-round knockdown to stop Australian Michael Katsidis in the ninth and retain his WBA and WBO lightweight titles in Las Vegas on Saturday (Sunday in Manila).
Immediately after the victory, Marquez called for a third fight with 8-weight world champion Manny Pacquiao of the Philippines. Pacquiao and Marquez drew their first bout in 2004, and Pacquiao won a split decision in a rematch 4 years later.
"We know Pacquiao is avoiding us," said Marquez afterwards. "A third fight is what the public wants."
After a fast-paced opening two rounds, in which Mexican Marquez landed blistering counter combinations as his Australian challenger pressed forward, Katsidis, 27-3 (22 KOs) dropped Marquez in round three with a short left hook.
The champion appeared badly hurt but was able to survive the onslaught and by the end of the round was troubling his opponent with pinpoint punches to body and head.
Katsidis continued to swarm forward aggressively, throwing a high volume of punches, but Marquez, 52-5-1 (38 KOs) responded with devastatingly accurate counters.
In the ninth, Marquez stepped up the pressure, landing with combinations and backing Katsidis across the ring. As Marquez continued to land at will, referee Kenny Bayless called a halt to the contest.
Katsidis was fighting despite the death of his brother, Stathi, last month. Stathi, a professional jockey, was found dead in his Brisbane home on October 19 from as yet undisclosed causes.
"I went through a lot to make it to this fight," Katsidis admitted afterward. "It was a hard thing to even make it through this fight," he added tearfully.
Earlier, in Oakland, undefeated American Andre Ward retained his WBA super middleweight title with a unanimous decision victory over Cameroon-born Sakio Bika.