Although no world title was at stake, the scheduled 12-round catchweight contest carried major significance. The winner would move into position for a shot at WBA junior middleweight champion Davey Moore. Duran weighed 152 pounds, while Cuevas came in at 149. Both fighters were guaranteed $50,000 plus a share of the closed-circuit television revenue, and the event produced a live gate of $408,000.
From the opening bell, Duran boxed with the precision that had made him one of the sport’s all-time greats. He established a sharp left jab, controlled the distance and repeatedly beat Cuevas to the punch, preventing the hard-hitting Mexican from setting his feet.
Cuevas tried to force exchanges, but Duran calmly slipped punches, answered with crisp combinations and showed little concern for his opponent’s feared power. By the end of the second round, it was clear Duran was dictating every aspect of the fight.
Duran took complete control in the third round. A crushing left hook rocked Cuevas, and a right uppercut moments later left the former champion badly shaken. Cuevas continued pressing forward, but his punches lacked their usual authority as Duran picked him apart with superior timing, accuracy and ring generalship.
The end came at 2:26 of the fourth round. A powerful right hand badly hurt Cuevas and drove him toward the ropes. Duran poured on the attack, scoring the first knockdown and forcing referee James Jen Kin to administer a count. When the action resumed, Duran wasted little time, drilling Cuevas with a right-left-right combination that sent him to the canvas for the second time.
Cuevas climbed to his feet, but manager Lupe Suarez immediately threw in the towel to spare his fighter further punishment. The official result was a fourth-round technical knockout, the 56th knockout victory of Duran’s remarkable career.
The victory answered lingering questions about whether Duran remained an elite fighter after the Leonard and Laing setbacks. Rather than being remembered as another faded former champion, “Hands of Stone” had reminded the boxing world why he was regarded as one of the sport’s greatest competitors.
Duran improved to 75-4 and earned the opportunity he wanted. Later that year, he challenged the unbeaten Davey Moore for the WBA junior middleweight championship and stopped him in eight rounds to capture a world title in a third weight class, completing one of boxing’s finest career revivals.
Cuevas fell to 29-8. Once one of the sport’s most feared punchers, he never again reached championship level, fighting only sporadically before retiring in 1989.
Today, Duran’s destruction of Cuevas is remembered as the performance that reignited his Hall of Fame career. It erased much of the doubt surrounding his future and set the stage for his memorable championship triumph over Moore later that year.

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