Perez beats 'King Kong' in Vegas

AFP - Sun, 01 Nov 09:48:00 2009

Colombia's Yonnhy Perez seized the IBF bantamweight title, dethroning Ghana's Joseph 'King Kong' Agbeko with a unanimous 12-round decision at the Treasure Island hotel in Las Vegas.

Yonnhy Perez of Colombia trades punches with IBF bantamweight champion Joseph Agbeko of Ghana in Las Vegas - 0

Perez, left, emerged from the action-packed bout still unbeaten, improving to 20-0 with 14 wins inside the distance.

He was credited with a knockdown late in the 10th round, sending Agbeko to the canvas when Agbeko had turned away to complain to referee Robert Byrd about a head-butt.

"I didn't see whether it was a head butt or a punch, therefore I had to rule it was from a punch," Byrd said.

Two of the ringside judges scored the bout 117-110 for Perez, while a third saw it 116-111.

Buoyed by the knockdown, Perez poured on the pressure in the last two rounds.

"I knew I was winning the rounds, and I deserved to get the victory," Perez said.

"I trained to throw a lot of punches. I know Agbeko likes to throw a lot of punches, so I knew I had to be better conditioned. All the hard work and preparation paid off."

Agbeko, who was making his third defence of a title he won two years ago, fell to 27-2 with 22 knockouts. He said the 10th round was the key to a contest that featured furious action from both fighters from the opening round.

"He head-butted me in round 10 and I didn't think that was fair," Agbeko said. "I thought I was fighting well toward that point. Perez seemed energized and I stayed the same."

Perez called the victory a "dream come true".

"I don't think he was in good shape. I think he went down to catch his breath," he said of the controversial knockdown. "I felt I was more consistent, more active and I pressed the fight throughout."

On the same card, Mexico's Antonio DeMarco dominated Nicaragua's Jose Alfaro en route to a 10th-round technical knockout in a fight for the WBC interim lightweight title.

Referee Joe Cortez stopped the fight at the 2:07 mark of the round after DeMarco knocked down Alfaro twice.

Alfaro beat the count both times, but as DeMarco continued to press Alfaro took a knee and Cortez called a halt.

"It's impossible to describe the feeling I have inside me right now," DeMarco said. "This is the second happiest day of my life. Only the birth of my daughter comes first."

The victory put DeMarco in line to challenge unbeaten WBC lightweight champion Edwin Valero of Venezuela.

AFP

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  1. In response to German referees being compared to the­ judges at the Froch v Dirrell fight...The difference is­ German-based fighters are so­­ obviously sided by the­ judges in Germany it's­ untrue! Ottke v­ Reid and­ even Holyfield v Valuev are­ prime examples.­ Froch v­ Dirrell was difficult to score­ for 8 of the 12 rounds­ so­ it could have gone either­ way. However, WBC Judges­ have always­ had a tendency to­ give the­ 'come-forward'­ fighter the vote in­ rounds­ that are awkward to score, so­ even though­ Dirrell­ walked and danced and jabbed the­ last 4 rounds­­ clearly, it's understandable why they­ gave Froch­­ the verdict. Just. Kessler v Froch is the­ next fight­­ I'm really looking forward to and we will see some­­ good action. Both have granite chins and hammer fists,­­ yet have no footwork at all. Bring it on!

    From The Xentertainer, on Mon 2 Nov 10:39AM
  2. get this tramp of the sports web and put her on a­ knocking shop web

    From Thomas, on Sun 1 Nov 3:35PM
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