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Quartey established himself early behind a piston-like left jab that repeatedly snapped De La Hoya’s head back. The challenger dictated much of the opening rounds, forcing the champion onto the defensive while swelling De La Hoya’s face with accurate straight punches.

Rather than becoming discouraged, De La Hoya gradually increased his work rate, began finding openings for his left hook and slowly worked his way back into the fight.

Everything changed in the sixth round.

De La Hoya caught Quartey with a perfectly timed left hook that dropped the Ghanaian for the first time in his professional career. Moments later, Quartey responded with a thunderous left hook of his own that sent De La Hoya crashing to the canvas. Neither man backed away after beating the count, turning the remainder of the round into a furious exchange that would later earn The Ring magazine’s Round of the Year honors for 1999.

The fight remained razor close throughout the second half. Quartey continued pumping out his jab and landing heavy right hands, while De La Hoya relied on quicker combinations and greater activity to edge the closer rounds. Neither fighter was able to seize complete control as the championship bout remained in the balance heading into the final three minutes.

With the fight hanging in the balance entering the final round, De La Hoya produced one last dramatic flourish.

Early in the 12th, another left hook dropped Quartey for the second time. Sensing the opportunity, De La Hoya pinned the challenger against the ropes and unleashed a furious assault, throwing nearly 70 punches during the closing round while Quartey fought back with everything he had left.

When the final bell sounded, neither fighter appeared certain who had done enough. The judges awarded De La Hoya a split decision by scores of 116-112 and 116-113, while the third judge scored the bout for Quartey. The verdict immediately divided opinion. HBO unofficial scorer Harold Lederman believed Quartey had earned the decision, and many ringside observers felt the challenger’s jab and cleaner power punching deserved greater reward.

More than 25 years later, the scoring remains one of boxing’s most debated decisions. The CompuBox numbers underscored just how little separated the two men. De La Hoya landed 206 punches to Quartey’s 201, while Quartey finished with the edge in power punches. The two knockdowns scored by De La Hoya—particularly the decisive one in the final round—proved critical in persuading two judges that the champion had done enough to retain his WBC title.

For De La Hoya, the victory became one of the defining performances of his career. Beyond preserving his unbeaten record and WBC championship, it answered lingering questions about his willingness to face elite opposition. Later that year, he suffered his first professional defeat in another controversial decision against Felix Trinidad before going on to share the ring with Shane Mosley, Bernard Hopkins, Floyd Mayweather Jr. and Manny Pacquiao.

Quartey never received the rematch many believed he had earned. Although he remained a respected contender and later challenged Fernando Vargas for a world title, he never again found himself on boxing’s biggest stage in quite the same way.

More than a quarter-century later, De La Hoya vs. Quartey remains a benchmark for elite championship boxing. It combined technical skill, knockdowns, dramatic momentum swings, controversy and extraordinary courage from both men. Whether fans believe De La Hoya deserved the decision or think Quartey was denied a career-defining victory, the fight stands as one of the greatest welterweight battles of the modern era.

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