LAS VEGAS – – A Panamanian contender imploded and passed on in his lodging Monday, nearly 36 hours after he was halted in a title battle.
Pedro Alcazar was bringing a shower and preparing to fly back home when he out of nowhere fallen. A Nevada boxing specialist said Alcazar had shown no side effects of being harmed until he fell around 6 a.m. at the MGM Excellent inn club.
“He had mind expanding from a purpose,” said Dr. Flip Homansky, who is likewise an individual from the state’s athletic bonus. “It was an all out shock and we don’t know why it worked out. Be that as it may, you can’t disregard he was in an expert fight Saturday night.”
The 26-year-old Alcazar, who was halted in the 6th round of his 115-pound WBO title battle with Fernando Montiel, had been analyzed in the ring following the battle and later in the changing area.
Two specialists saw as nothing out of sorts and didn’t actually prescribe he be taken to an emergency clinic for prudent tests, as frequently occurs.
“I’ve seen nothing like it,” Homansky said. “As far as anyone is concerned, there has never at any point, been something like this happen so lengthy after a battle.”
Homansky said Alcazar felt fine on Sunday, going through the day touring on the Las Vegas Strip with his cornermen. He said he had a slight migraine around 6 p.m. Sunday and took a Tylenol, however had no different side effects.
Alcazar, who was making the second protection of his WBO junior bantamweight title, brought a 25-0-1 record into the ring however was no counterpart for Montiel.
Alcazar took various hard head punches before the battle was at long last come by arbitrator Ken Bayless with him actually remaining in the 6th round.
Homansky said Alcazar cried in the ring a while later on the grounds that he lost, yet gave no indications of any cerebrum harm. He was quickly analyzed by Dr. Margaret Goodman, a nervous system specialist, and later in the changing area by Dr. William Berliner.
The prior night, at a more modest card at one more lodging five warriors were taken to the clinic for prudent tests, Homansky said. Specialists for this situation never felt they were required.
“There was nothing therapeutically off the mark,” he said. “I was completely amazed by this. Assuming that anyone had shown even the slightest bit of concern we would have sent him to the emergency clinic.”
Alcazar, from Panama City, was making his U.S. debut in the battle, which was on the undercard of the Marco Antonio Barrera-Erik Spirits featherweight title battle at the MGM Terrific.
Alcazar had keep going battled on April 19 in Panama, where he halted Alfredo Toro in the fourth round.
A solitary parent of two, Alcazar initially started boxing at 10 years old and was the Panamanian Brilliant Gloves champion and a gold medalist in the Focal American Games.