The fight gave Puerto Rican fans their first opportunity to see Gómez defend his newly won world title on home soil. A sellout crowd of more than 9,000 turned out to watch the unbeaten champion, who had stopped Dong-Kyun Yum in 12 rounds to claim the belt in May.
Gómez, 17-0-1 with 17 knockouts, was already regarded as one of boxing’s hardest punchers despite being only 20 years old. Tirado, a seasoned contender from Mexico City, entered as a top-10 challenger hoping to upset the hometown favorite and capture his first world title.
Tirado tried to box from the outside during the opening round, using his jab and lateral movement to avoid prolonged exchanges. Gómez patiently stalked him, cutting off the ring instead of following him in straight lines. When he got within range, the champion attacked with combinations to the body before bringing hooks and right hands upstairs.
The pressure continued through the second round. Tirado landed occasional single punches while circling away, but Gómez consistently answered with harder, cleaner shots. The challenger spent much of the round moving backward along the ropes as Gómez continued to press the action.
By the third round, Gómez had taken command of the fight. He closed the distance quickly, forcing Tirado to spend long stretches covering up against the ropes while absorbing hooks, straight rights and uppercuts. Every attempt by the challenger to reset was met by another wave of pressure from the champion.
The fourth round followed much the same pattern. Gómez continued mixing punches to the body and head, refusing to give Tirado room to establish his jab or create space. Although the Mexican challenger remained on his feet, he was taking steady punishment and had little success keeping Gómez from pressing forward.
The finish came in the closing seconds of the fifth round.
Gómez trapped Tirado near a corner and unloaded with another sustained combination, driving hooks into the body before snapping uppercuts and head shots through the challenger’s guard. Tirado was no longer returning meaningful punches and could not defend himself effectively as the barrage continued. Referee Chuck Hassett stepped in at 2:59 of the fifth round, awarding Gómez a technical knockout.
The victory was Gómez’s first successful WBC title defense and extended his knockout streak in front of the San Juan crowd. It also kept him on schedule for a quick return to the ring against former champion Royal Kobayashi in Japan the following month.
The defeat for Tirado ended his only world title opportunity. He continued his professional career but never received another shot at a major championship.
Gómez went on to establish one of the greatest championship reigns in the history of the super bantamweight division, successfully defending the WBC title 17 times, all by knockout. The run included his 1978 stoppage victory over Carlos Zárate, one of the defining wins of his Hall of Fame career.
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