[clari.sports.misc] Camacho wants Pryor next

clarinews@clarinet.com (DAVE RAFFO, UPI Sports Writer) (02/05/90)

	ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. (UPI) -- Just when he started acting macho
again, Hector Camacho announced who he wanted to fight next.
	Aaron Pryor.
	Camacho picked apart Vinny Pazienza Saturday night to win a
unanimous decision in his best fight since 1985. Instead of next
challenging one of the best boxers in the junior welterweight or
welterweight divisions, however, Camacho said he wanted to fight Pryor.
Then he may fight a rematch against Ray Mancini before getting around to
the winner of the Julio Cesar Chavez-Meldrick Taylor March 17 bout.
	``I have a fight with Aaron Pryor,'' Camacho said after beating
Pazienza at the Convention Center. ``After that, whether it's Mancini,
Chavez, Taylor, I don't know.
	``A lot nf,people aren't going to be high on this (Pryor) fight,
but a lot of people weren't high on this one (Pazienza) either.''
	Camacho's 12-round decision over Mancini last March was among the
dullest of his recent bouts. Like Pryor, Mancini was a star of the early
1980s whose best days are long past.
	Pryor, a former great 140-pound champion whose career was ruined by
cocaine, has not fought since he underwent surgery for cataracts on his
left eye a year ago. The surgery came days after he was dropped from a
Rochester, N.Y., card and his license was lifted in New York because he
failed the eye exam.
	He has yet to reapply for a license and New York State Athletic
Commission chairman Randy Gordon Saturday night said he would not allow
Pryor to fight in the state.
	But Camacho and Pryor say they have signed contracts to meet in a
bout promoted by a group from Tennessee. They want to fight in May, but
no date or site is set.
	Pryor said he has been in the gym with trainer Richie Giachetti,
and boxed an exhibition with 1976 Olympic champion Howard Davis Dec. 26.
	``I can't wait to get into training,'' said Pryor, who watched
Camacho-Pazienza at ringside. ``Camacho's not a great fighter and what
he wants to do is be great, so he has to beat a great fighter. I'm a
real name. I'm a legend.''
	Dan Duva, who promoted Camacho-Pazienza and wants to work with
Camacho again, said he will stay clear of a Pryor bout.
	``Hector Camacho is a terrific fighter and if he's fighting Aaron
Pryor, I don't think there's a commission in the country that would
sanction it,'' Duva said. ``I really hope that fight doesn't come off.''
	Camacho was guaranteed $800,000 and Pazienza $400,000 Saturday
night.
	Camacho, a former  World Boxing Council junior lightweight and
lightweight champion, kept his lightly regarded World Boxing
Organization 140-pound title against Pazienza. He improved to 39-0 and
revived a career that had been sagging because of a series of fights
marred by his running and holding.
	``I'm just going to get better,'' Camacho, 27, said. ``I'm not back
yet but this was the best I fought in a long time. I'm the only Mr.
Excitement out there today.''
	Pazienza, a former International Boxing Federation lightweight
champion from Cranston, R.I., fell to 28-4. He was cut on his nose,
right cheek and both eyes and outclassed by the speedy, left-handed
Camacho.
	``Hector fought a good fight, I just couldn't come up with a big
shot,'' Pazienza said. ``I fell a little short.''
	Pazienza's handlers had a tough night, too. When trainers Kevin
Rooney and Lou Duva were treating Pazineza in the dressing room, a
federal marshall entered to hand Rooney a summons. A brief scuffle
followed between the trainers and Atlantic City police. Dino Duva -- son
of Lou and brother of Dan -- was taken into police custody but released
without charges after the incident.
	Pernell Whitaker won a unanimous decision over Fred Pendleton to
retain his WBC and IBF lightweight titles, and WBO light heavyweight
champion Michael Moorer stopped Marcellus Allen in nine rounds to
improve to 19-0 with 19 knockouts on the pay-per-view undercard.