I seen bits and pieces of it from the Trinidad-Jones undercard. Golata's eye was shut but from what little I seen, Golata was pushing the action. It was the 7th and 8th rounds that I saw.
P.S. Here is what ESPN had to say.
http://sports.espn.go.com/sports/boxing/news/story?id=320503 2
NEW YORK -- Heavyweight Andrew Golota, his eye swollen shut from the fifth round on, won a unanimous decision against Mike Mollo in a grueling action-packed brawl Saturday night on the Roy Jones-Felix Trinidad undercard at Madison Square Garden.
Mollo had called out Golota, a fellow Chicago fighter, in October, and they battled it out from the opening bell.
In the end, with both men utterly exhausted, Golota claimed the decision on scores of 118-109, 116-112 and 116-110. ESPN.com also had it for Golota, 115-113.
"I couldn't see anything after Round 8," Golota said. "I had to box more by feel than by what I could see. He was much faster than I thought he would be. He hit me too many times."
[+] EnlargeAP Photo/Julie Jacobson
Just when you thought you had seen the last of him, here comes Andrew Golota again.
Mollo went right at Golota, attacking him with both hands from the opening bell, clearly trying to put doubts in fragile Golota's mind.
Mollo (19-2, 12 KOs) stunned Golota (41-6-1, 33 KOs) with a right hand early in the second, but Golota rebounded to stun Mollo. Golota continued to fire away, and he had Mollo hurt and trying to hold on as the round ended.
In the fourth round, Mollo rocked Golota with a right hand and had him reeling before Golota came back at the end of the exciting round.
Golota's left eye began to swell dramatically in the fifth round after Mollo landed a flush right hand.
Golota, 40, could have used a few more seconds in the eighth because he had an exhausted Mollo in some trouble, but the bell ended the round.
The ninth was action-filled, but Mollo, 27, took some heavy leather. He was hanging on for dear life in the closing seconds of the round and walked toward the wrong corner as the round ended. But Golota's eye was in terrible shape -- it was swollen completely shut.
As the pair went to the 12th, the crowd was on its feet and both fighters were dead tired but trying to finish each other. Mollo was holding again just to keep from falling down from exhaustion but was still punching, and Golota also was doing all he could to score a knockout as the final bell sounded.
"I hope nobody will call me a quitter again," said Golota, who has quit several times in tough spots.
Said Mollo: "I couldn't believe the number of combinations he threw for an old man. I fought the best I could."
Mollo's only previous loss had been a fourth-round TKO to big puncher DaVarryl Williamson in May 2006.
Golota's career has been filled with disappointments -- two disqualification losses to Riddick Bowe, including one that ignited a riot inside the Garden in 1996, and an 0-3-1 record in title fights. But this win probably kept alive his chances for another meaningful bout.