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Roy Jones Jr. vs. Clinton Woods

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Rumble at the Rose Garden
DateSeptember 7, 2002
VenueRose Garden, Portland, Oregon, U.S.
Title(s) on the lineWBA, WBC, IBF, IBO, WBF, IBA, NBA and The Ring light heavyweight titles
Tale of the tape
Boxer Roy Jones Jr. Clinton Woods
Nickname Junior
Hometown Pensacola, Florida, U.S. Sheffield, South Yorkshire, U.K.
Pre-fight record 46–1 (37 KO) 32–1 (19 KO)
Age 33 years, 7 months 30 years, 4 months
Height 5 ft 11 in (180 cm) 6 ft 2 in (188 cm)
Weight 175 lb (79 kg) 174 lb (79 kg)
Style Orthodox Orthodox
Recognition WBA, WBC, IBF, IBO, WBF, IBA, NBA and The Ring
Light Heavyweight champion
The Ring No. 2 ranked pound-for-pound fighter
3-divison world champion
WBC/WBO
No. 1 Ranked Light Heavyweight
WBA
No. 3 Ranked Light Heavyweight
Result
Jones wins via 6th-round technical knockout

Roy Jones Jr. vs. Clinton Woods, billed as Rumble at the Rose Garden, was a professional boxing match contested on September 7, 2002 for the WBA, WBC, IBF, IBO, WBF, IBA, NBA and The Ring light heavyweight titles.[1]

Background

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Having opened 2002 with a dominating victory over his IBF-mandated challenger Glen Kelly in early February, unified light heavyweight champion Roy Jones Jr. mulled his next fight. Cable network HBO pushed Jones to face long-time middleweight champion Bernard Hopkins, whom he had previously defeated nine years earlier, but Jones refused to budge on his demands that he should be paid more than Hopkins and that fight fell through. Dariusz Michalczewski, the WBO and lineal light heavyweight champion was also discussed as a possible opponent, but neither he nor Jones would agree to fight in each other's respective countries. With Jones two biggest fights squashed, Jones turned to another mandatory challenger, Clinton Woods, the WBC's number-one ranked contender. Woods was in attendance for Jones' fight against Kelly and said at the press conference, "I've been told I'm the best in Europe, I think I deserve a shot. He's the greatest fighter. I hope to be the greatest fighter."[2]

In early May 2002, Woods was officially announced as Jones' next challenger. Original plans called for Jones, who had yet to fight professionally outside of his native U.S., to travel to Woods' native United Kingdom to face him in either his hometown Sheffield Arena or London's Wembley Arena.[3] However, Jones would do an about face in late July and decided against fighting in England and opted to stage the fight in the U.S. at Portland, Oregon's Rose Garden. The venue change had come about due in large part to Jones' partnership with the Oregon-based Nike's Air Jordan brand. Air Jordan president Larry Miller disclosed that Nike had "provided an undisclosed amount of money to make the fight happen." adding that Nike was not entering the boxing business and the Jones fight was a "one-time deal."[4]

Jones made a lengthy, extravagant entrance performing his song "And Still" from his recently released debut album Round One: The Album.

The fights

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Wright vs. McKart III

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Rumble at the Rose Garden:Winky Wright vs. Bronco McKart III
Title(s) on the lineIBF light middleweight title
Tale of the tape
Boxer Ronald Wright Bronco McKart
Nickname "Winky" "Superman"
Hometown St. Petersburg, Florida, U.S. Monroe, Michigan, U.S.
Pre-fight record 43–3 (25 KO) 45–3 (29 KO)
Age 30 years, 9 months 31 years, 5 months
Height 5 ft 10 in (178 cm) 6 ft 0 in (183 cm)
Weight 153+34 lb (70 kg) 153+12 lb (70 kg)
Style Southpaw Southpaw
Recognition IBF
Light Middleweight Champion
IBF
No. 1 Ranked Light Middleweight
Result
Wright defeats by 8th round DQ

The co featured bout saw IBF Light middleweight champion Winky Wright face No. 1 contender Bronco McKart.[5]

Wright had twice faced McKart before, winning a split decision in May 1996 and an unanimous decision in September 2000, although this was the first with a major world title on the lime.[6]

This was the first world title bout to be held in Portland since Denny Moyer defeated Joey Giambra for the inaugural light middleweight title in October 1962.

The fight

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McKart was competitive with Wright in the early rounds, but Wright would landed the more accurate punches as the bout progressed. After warning McKart earlier (and after compliances from Wright) referee Mike Fischer would deduct two points from McKart in the 6th round for low blows. He would take another in the 7th and two more in the 8th. After the 5th point deduction McKart turned his back and appeared unwilling to continue, prompting the referee to disqualified him.[7]

At the time of the stoppage two judges scored the bout 68–62 the other has it 69–62. HBO's unofficial ringside scorer Harold Lederman scored the fight 69–61 for Wright. According to CompuBox, landed 155 of 505 punches thrown (a 30.7% connect rate) against landing 114 of 476 (a 23.9% connect rate).

Aftermath

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Speaking after the bout Wright said "I knew I was getting to him and I think that's why he was throwing the low blows. If I had taken one more low blow, I was ready to try out for the Sopranos" When asked about the winner of the upcoming unification bout between Oscar De La Hoya and Fernando Vargas (who defeated Wright in 2000) Wright responded "I'm rooting for Vargas, but if I were to bet I'd bet on De La Hoya".

Preceded by Winky Wright's bouts
7 September 2002
Succeeded by
Preceded by
vs. Alex Bunema
Bronco McKart's bouts
7 September 2002
Succeeded by

Main Event

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Jones dominated an overmatched Woods from the opening bell. Woods would land only 39 punches through six round while Jones punished him throughout, landing 140 punches, 122 of which were power punches. Jones did not score a knockdown during the fight, but the rounds were so lopsided in Jones' favor that all three judges scored several rounds 10–8 in Jones favor. The end came after a particularly lopsided sixth in which Jones landed 21 punches to Woods' zero, the fight was stopped midway through after Woods' corner, having seen enough, waved a white towel to signify surrender. Referee Jay Nady then stopped the fight, giving Jones the victory by technical knockout.[8]

Fight card

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Confirmed bouts:[9][10]

Weight Class Weight vs. Method Round Notes
Light Heavyweight 175 lbs. Roy Jones Jr. (c) def. Clinton Woods TKO 6/12 note 1
Junior Middleweight 154 lbs. Ronald Wright (c) def. Bronco McKart DQ 8/12 note 2
Lightweight 135 lbs. Lemuel Nelson def. Johnny West TKO 7/12 note 3
Lightweight 135 lbs. Emmitt Linton vs. Charles Whittaker NC 4/10

^Note 1 For WBA, WBC, IBF, IBO, WBF, IBA, NBA and The Ring Light Heavvyweight titles
^Note 2 For IBF Junior Middlweight title
^Note 3 For vacant NBA Lightweight title

Broadcasting

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Country Broadcaster
 United Kingdom BBC
 United States HBO

References

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  1. ^ "Roy Jones Jr. vs. Clinton Woods". boxrec.com. BoxRec. Retrieved 5 January 2025.
  2. ^ Jones Haggles Over Purse With Hopkins, N.Y. Times article, 2002-02-04, Retrieved on 2025-01-04
  3. ^ Sheffield steels itself to stage Jones v Woods, The Guardian article, 2002-05-03, Retrieved on 2025-01-05
  4. ^ Portland's Rose Garden Will Host Roy Jones Jr.-Clinton Woods, Sports Business Journal article, 2002-08-01, Retrieved on 2025-01-05
  5. ^ "Ronald Wright vs. Bronco McKart (3rd meeting)". boxrec.com. BoxRec. Retrieved 11 January 2025.
  6. ^ John C. Cotey (7 September 2002). "No. 3 vs. McKart is important to Wright". Tampa Bay Times. Retrieved 11 January 2025.
  7. ^ "Jones stops Woods in sixth, mulls challenging Ruiz". espn.com. ESPN. Associated Press. 7 September 2002. Retrieved 11 January 2025.
  8. ^ Jones Retains Undisputed Title, N.Y. Times article, 2002-09-08 Retrieved on 2025-01-05
  9. ^ "BoxRec - event".
  10. ^ Matt Sorenson (8 September 2002). "Jones rocks Woods, Portland!". fightnews.com. Fight News. Archived from the original on 1 December 2002. Retrieved 5 January 2025.
Preceded by Roy Jones Jr.'s bouts
7 September 2002
Succeeded by
Preceded by
vs. Clint Johnson
Clinton Woods's bouts
7 September 2002
Succeeded by
vs. Sergio Martin Beaz