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Miguel Cotto defeats Yuri Foreman at Yankee Stadium

Miguel Cotto of Puerto Rico stopped Israel’s Yuri Foreman in the ninth round Saturday night to win the junior middleweight title, delighting thousands of fans in the first fight at Yankee Stadium in more than three decades.

Foreman slipped in the seventh round and badly twisted his right knee, then slipped to the mat again later in the round. He gamely survived to the end but could hardly move around the ring, limping on a right knee that was already covered by a black brace and getting tagged by Cotto at will.

“I proved this night, everybody who said Miguel Cotto was finished, everybody failed,” Cotto said.

Between rounds, Foreman’s wife leaned over the railing and implored his trainer to stop the fight. Someone in Foreman’s corner obliged and threw in the towel early in the seventh round, but referee Arthur Mercante Jr. angrily tossed the towel right back out. He asked Foreman if he wanted to continue, and the aspiring rabbi with the compelling back story elected to fight on.

The ring had filled with people and was cleared before the fight continued.

“I looked at the screen and I saw his trainer throwing the towel in the ring,” Cotto said. “The referee said someone from outside the corner threw the towel into the ring.”

Foreman (28-1) was able to move better in the eighth round and survived to the ninth, when Cotto caught him near the ropes and dropped him to the canvas once more.

“You see white towel and you think it was over,” Foreman said. “I didn’t want it to be over.”

Mercante stepped in and called off the fight at 42 seconds of the ninth round.

“I was making side to side movement and it gave out,” Foreman said of his right knee. “It was a lot of pain, a lot of sharp pain. Couldn’t do a lot of moves.”

It was somewhat of a vindication for Cotto, who had endured a pair of savage beatings at the hands of Antonio Margarito and pound-for-pound king Manny Pacquiao, who watched the fight ringside. Those losses and a few difficult wins had many people wondering whether Cotto still had it.

He proved that he certainly does, winning a title in his third weight division.

“My jab is back, my movement is back, my left hook to the body is back,” said Cotto, who had Hall of Fame trainer Manny Steward in his corner for the first time.

Cotto (35-2, 28 KOs) set the tempo with his left jab from the moment he stepped in the ring, showing that he’s perfectly comfortable at 154 pounds. Even before the bizarre middle rounds, when for a few moments it looked like the fight would go to the scorecards, Cotto was always in control.

He even had time early on to make sure that Mercante was OK after an errant hook nearly hit the referee during the fifth round. Mercante just smiled as the fight carried on.

“There was no need to stop the fight,” Mercante said of his decision after the towel hit the ring, when boos were raining down. “They were in the middle of a great exchange, a great fight.

“People came to see a great fight and I felt like I did the right thing.”

Cotto will receive a guaranteed $2 million for the fight—though he’ll have to give up his shoes, which are headed to the baseball Hall of Fame. Foreman was guaranteed $750,000.

The fact that Mercante was in charge of the fight was yet another string that tied the fight to the glory days of the old ballpark. His father, the late Arthur Mercante, refereed the final bout at the old Yankee Stadium in September 1976, when Muhammad Ali beat Ken Norton.

An early arriving crowd filled the field-level seats and into the upper reaches, just below the iconic facade that returned with the new stadium. As expected, it was heavily in favor of Cotto, who has sold more tickets to fights in New York City than any other boxer over the past decade.

His fans brought the same verve they usually bring to Madison Square Garden, cheering whenever he was shown on the video screen in center field and the smaller screens that were hoisted to the canopy covering the ring in right-center field.

Sprinkled among the thousands of people waving Puerto Rican flags were fans of Foreman, who was born in the former Soviet Union but raised in Israel. Naturally, they broke out blue-and-white signs adorned with the Star of David and waved their own Israeli flags.

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