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Times staff writers take a look back at the Centennial Games

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Did it take more than two seconds? Probably not.

But, in the daze and delirium of American featherweight Floyd Mayweather’s nervous victory over Lorenzo Aragon in the quarterfinal round--ending two decades of Cuban Olympic dominance over the United States--the poignant moment between legendary Cuban Coach Alcides Sagarra and Mayweather seemed to last a year.

A tap of hands. A nod from Sagarra. A stare. Then it was over.

I don’t know of many lasting soaring sights and scenes from this quirky competition. But something unexplainable was communicated from Sagarra to Mayweather, a flash of something dignified and proud and Olympian, and if the boxing rarely measured up to that moment, at least it happened, once, for about two seconds that seemed like a year.

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