Jose Torres vs Eddie Cotton 15.08.1966

Las Vegas, 15 August 1966 – Jose Torres held onto his WBA and WBC light-heavyweight titles after a gruelling fifteen-round duel with veteran challenger Eddie Cotton, but the decision sparked as much debate as it did admiration.

At 30 years of age, Torres was the younger, faster man and entered the ring as a heavy 7–2 favourite against the 40-year-old Cotton. Yet the seasoned challenger showed no signs of fading into the background. In front of an announced crowd of 4,300 at the Convention Centre, Cotton matched the champion punch for punch, forcing Torres into one of the toughest contests of his career.

When the final bell rang, referee Nat Torres scored it 70–67 to the champion, with judges Mike Petrovich and Ron Amos also favouring him by narrow margins. The official verdict read a unanimous decision for Jose Torres, but the reaction inside the arena told a different story. Boos echoed as fans felt Cotton had done enough to snatch the crown.

Controversy deepened when it was revealed that the 14th round ended 20 seconds early, a mishap that denied Cotton a crucial opportunity in a fight already balanced on a knife’s edge. Cotton immediately lodged a protest, demanding the bout be ruled a no contest. He went further, rallying nearly 4,000 signatures in a petition sent to Senator Warren Magnuson, but both the Nevada State Athletic Commission and the WBA rejected his appeal.

The press was equally divided. The Associated Press called the fight a draw at 69–69, while UPI sided with Torres at 70–67. Local journalists split as well, with Royce Feour tallying 69–68 for Torres, and Jimmy “The Greek” Snyder recording 70–68 for the Puerto Rican champion. It was a razor-thin verdict whichever way the numbers were read.

Despite the controversy, there was no disputing the drama. The exchanges were fierce, the pace relentless, and neither man backed down across fifteen punishing rounds. Cotton, with his cagey defence and accurate counters, pushed Torres into deeper waters than many expected. The champion, however, rallied with combinations and ring movement, doing just enough in the eyes of the judges to preserve his belt.

The significance of the bout was not lost on the boxing world. The Ring magazine crowned it the 1966 Fight of the Year, a testament to the grit and courage both men displayed.

For Torres, it marked a successful second defence of his light-heavyweight crown, though his grip on the division looked shakier than the odds had suggested. For Cotton, it was a gallant final bid for world glory—one that left fans convinced he deserved more than history ultimately granted him.