Robert "The Ghost" Guerrero celebrates with the crowd after defeating Joel Casamayor on Saturday night in Las Vegas. (Photo by German Villasenor)

In the biggest fight of his career, Robert

The Ghost

Guerrero was larger than life. With his wife Casey sitting
ringside at a bout for the first time since her February bone
marrow transplant, Guerrero defeated Joel Casamayor (37-5-1) by
unanimous decision Saturday night from inside the Mandalay Bay
Events Center in Las Vegas.
LAS VEGAS

In the biggest fight of his career, Robert “The Ghost” Guerrero was larger than life.

With his wife Casey sitting ringside at a bout for the first time since her February bone marrow transplant, Guerrero defeated Joel Casamayor (37-5-1) by unanimous decision Saturday night from inside the Mandalay Bay Events Center in Las Vegas.

“You know, it was a good win, a huge win for me against one of the craftiest lefties out there,” Guerrero said after the fight, still bouncing with energy amid a jubilant camp in the locker room.

Aside from the inevitable career implications that will assuredly stem from this victory, the triumph by Guerrero reached far beyond the ropes.

With Casey ringside, the win had special written all over it.

“I told him congratulations and that I was proud of him,” said a relieved Casey Guerrero, who is continuously making positive progress in her battle with Leukemia. She added that she was pretty fidgety throughout the fight.

“Usually I have gum to chomp on (during a fight). I didn’t have any this time,” she said.

A patient Guerrero, who recorded his first junior welterweight victory with the win Saturday, avoided being sucked into the shifty veteran’s awkward and often times confusing antics to earn the one-sided decision (98-89, 98-89, 97-90).

“Right out of the gate I hit him and I hurt him, and all he wanted to do was survive,” Guerrero said.

Guerrero was visibly the stronger of the two southpaws, and made his presence known early and often. Guerrero controlled and dictated the bout through the first two rounds before Casamayor showed any eagerness to box.

After a feel-it-out first round, Guerrero came out swinging in the second.

Casamayor was deducted a point for grabbing/wrestling. But not succumbing to the distraction, Guerrero landed a vicious right cross, which sent the 39-year-old into the ropes then down into Guerrero’s legs — face first.

“I felt that the way he was moving, and the way I was sticking my jab and using my reach, I could tell he didn’t want to fight,” Guerrero said.

A precise, calculated and meticulous performance, Guerrero (27-1-1) rarely shied away from his game plan, staying defensive yet remaining technically sound in his attack.

“As a veteran, guys like him are smart,” Guerrero said. “He will wait, try to take you into deep waters and land a big shot.”

Casamayor seemed to find his footing in the third and fourth rounds, connecting with a pair of solid left jabs in each round.

Not phased, Guerrero continued to execute according to what he wanted to do and re-asserted his authority.

“He was wanting me to engage on him so he could counterpunch me, so I had to be smart,” Guerrero said. “But I got him out of that and dominated the fight.”

Casamayor, however, delivered a parting gift to the 27-year-old Gilroy native, catching the fleet-footed Guerrero with a lightning-fast over-hand right that sent The Ghost to his knee midway through the 10th and final round.

“He landed a good shot on me, but I wasn’t hurt,” Guerrero said.

In fact, once Guerrero’s left knee hit the canvas, a coy grin appeared on his face.

With a victory in his debut at 140 pounds, Guerrero said he will focus his attention on the lightweight division and a possible head-to-head with Saturday night’s main event winner and WBA and WBO titleholder, Juan Manuel Marquez.

“Down at 135 pounds, hopefully I can get a shot at Marquez,” Guerrero said.

Despite shouts of “Guerrero and Marquez” that bellowed out during the post-fight news conference, Marquez did not address the matter.

Notes:

Prior to Guerrero’s fight, HBO lost its TV feed after losing power in the control truck. The fight was delayed about 15 minutes before resuming … In the evening’s main event, Juan Manuel Marquez defeated Juan Diaz by unanimous decision to retain his WBA and WBO lightweight titles. A furious flow of punches highlighted the 12-round rivalry bout that went a few seconds beyond the final bell. Marquez knocked out Diaz in the pair’s first fight in 2009 … The first fight of the night went to Jorge Linares of Venezuela, who withstood a late-round charge from Rocky Juarez for a unanimous decision victory … Linares staggered Juarez with a left upper cut in the fifth round, sending Juarez stumbling backward and to the mat. Juarez connected with a strong right cross in the ninth, prompting Linares to respond with a mockingly yet delightful tap dance … In the final undercard bout before the main event of Juan Manual Marquez and Juan Diaz, Dmitry Pirog rocked Daniel Jacobs with a powerful right at 57 seconds of the fifth round, flattening him on the mat to earn the WBO middleweight world title via technical knockout.

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A staff member wrote, edited or posted this article, which may include information provided by one or more third parties.

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