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| Perez (left) shrugged off Agbeko's pre-fight promise of a KO win. He never let his foot off the gas and judges gave him the UD. |
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TSS Take 1: SWEET FEAT ON HALLOWEEN--Perez Takes Crown From Agbeko
By Michael Woods
Boxing fans were treated to a Halloween thriller at Treasure Island in Las Vegas on Saturday night, with two fighters exhibiting the energy of a pair of 5-year-old hopped up on fistfuls of candy swapped leather for 12 rounds. When the cards were tallied, challenger Yonnhy Perez made off with the IBF bantamweight crown held by Joseph "King Kong" Agbeko, as Jerry Roth (116-111), Glenn Trowbridge (117-110) Barry Druxman (117-110) liked the Colombian's work rate and power quotient more than Agebko's constant tossing.
Showtime televised two fights from the card, which was presented by Don King. Perez (19-0, with 14 KOs; from Colombia, lives in California) and Agbeko (now 27-1; from Ghana, living in NY) will likely glove up in a rematch; Perez told Jim Gray afterwards that he's ready and willing whenever Agbeko wants to dance again.
It was back and forth, a tight horserace, in the early going. In the fourth, Agebko's D broke down a bit. Perez went to the body with regularity, but so did Agbeko, and a viewer had to figure we'd be seeing the 12th round in this one. Agebko's sharper right and his body work took the fifth. Perez stepped it up in the sixth, and this came about because he moved his feet more. Then Agbeko came on, as he backed Perez up into the ropes, and looked to impose his will on the opponent. An accidental head butt by Agbeko on Perez caused a gash in that round. In the seventh, it was more of the same—high volume from both men, toe to toe action. In the eighth, the handspeed of both men had diminished. Neither was winging a bounty of crisp shots, but that doesn't mean there wasn't scoring. Perez especially, with a close-in right, was impressive, but Agebko knew he needed to steal the round, and upped his output down the stretch.
In the ninth, neither man showed an inclination to back down. Perez had gashes between his eyebrows on both sides but looked like he was ready for more rumbling after the frame. In the tenth, Agebko's superior head movement stood out, against the stiffer Colombian. With 30 seconds to go, Agbeko went down. He said it was from a butt, but it was ruled a knockdown, the first of his career. On replay, viewers saw both men coming towards each other, bang heads, and Agbeko turn his back, and drop to a knee. Ref Robert Byrd was not in position to see the cause of the knockdown. On to the 11th. We saw a tradefest, with the odd pause in action thrown in. You will not see many, if any, busier 11th rounds than this one. Would love to see Showtime finally come out with a punch-count application, see we could've quantified the scene. In the 12th, Steve Albert and Al Bernstein both agreed that this fight featured possibly the most punches they'd both seen in their careers. It was another round in which the judges earned their pay. We'd go to the cards.
In the TV opener, in a scrap for the WBC interim lightweight belt, top rated Antonio DeMarco (23-1-1, 17 KOs) stopped No. 2 Jose Alfaro (23-5, 20 KOs) in the tenth round. The Mexican DeMarco was in command throughout, and sent the Nicaraguan Alfaro to the mat three times in round ten before referee Joe Cortez stopped the bout. Perez waved it off with Alfaro taking a knee rather than absorbing more punishment.The time of the stop was 2:07. The lefty DeMarco is now set to face off with WBC lightweight champion Edwin Valero.
Stay tuned for David Avila's ringside report. The DA was honored with the duty of scoring from press row, FYI.
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The Watcher:
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Good action fight, its always nice for the viewing audience when you get to guys in there with no defense. Demarco is a little too defensive to a point where you get that Andre Dirrell feeling of just yelling out "FIGHT DAMMIT!"
Saturday Oct 31, 2009 09:52:20 PM
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adom:
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regroup agbeko
Saturday Oct 31, 2009 11:14:46 PM
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DaveB:
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I wish Showtime had the punch count that HBO does because it would have been very interesting to see what the punch rate was. It was just ridiculous to see such an output. I thought Perez won too. Joseph "the Billy Goat" Agebko's own headbutt (I thought he initiated it) worked against him in this instance although it did cause another gash in Perez's forehead. Agebko had a tougher time fighting someone at his own weight, but it was a great fight and he is a great fighter nonetheless.
Sunday Nov 1, 2009 12:17:19 AM
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brownsugar:
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I didn't like watching Agbeko in the Darchinyan fight,.. I thought he was moving around very spastically,,,while diving in with his head,.. but this fight was very pleasing to watch,, I was very surprised,... it was also surprising that Perez could find the target so often,.. with Agbeko folding over at the waist and giving constant head and upper body movement... good to see a boxer from Columbia that didn't enter the ring as just another overhyped opponent for a change... I'd like to see some sharper,. crisper punching from Perez in the later rounds,.. if he had put a little more peppa on some of those shots,.. I think he could have hurt Agbeko enough to have gotten him out of there,.. but a very satisfying contest anyway,.. Agbeko had gotten away with leading with his head all night long,.(and the cut up Perez didn't even complain once). Agbeko was 50% responsible for the butt that put him down,.. even without the headbutt contraversy,.. I still had Perez ahead...let's see the rematch,. Agbeko can bring his cheerleaders back... it was refreshing to hear singing fans that weren't British for a change...very spirited contest and that crowd was really into it...
Sunday Nov 1, 2009 12:43:28 AM
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Isaiah:
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Yey DeMarco won his fight, but he did look a little to Mayweatherish for my taste, just NOT NEARLY as good at it. As far as the Agbeko/Perez fight, it looked like Agbeko was trying to cry to the Referee there just a bit too much for my taste. He needed to suck it up and keep on going. Good win for Perez. I liked the fight and the right man got the win, although at least Agbeko's ring entrance was entertaining. By the way, it is good to hear fans screaming for someone besides Ricky Hatton. Sometimes they annoy the heck out of me. Got to give them credit though for still cheering insanely for their man even if he's lying on the canvas, I GUESS... HA!
Sunday Nov 1, 2009 03:29:30 PM
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Master Snake:
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It would take a full investigation to determine when and how those cuts formed on Perez's forehead. Replays after RD6 did not look to find the cause. Both men had their heads in the game. Literally. Agbeko was butted sharply in the eye just before he turned to the ref to complain, was hit a few times and went down. What's up with boxer's from Ghana? Remember the tenet, "Protect yourself at all times". DeMarco's last opponent was from Ghana and let himself be counted out for a KO while playing possum to protest what he thought was an illegal blow. Rediculous. The Agbeko v Perez fight was really too close to call. Definitley not a UD. I scored it a draw. Hopefully they fight again with a more conclusive outcome. Entertaining bout though. Agbeko would do well to lay off the smack talk and ring antics to become as great as he thinks he is.
Monday Nov 2, 2009 07:56:49 AM
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Is It Only Money That Matters?
"Who refuses to take a drug test worth $40 million?" For the American psyche, money is everything. It transcends what is right or what is wrong. For a certain amount of money, I'll do anything. Manny is Filipino, and he cannot fathom that kind of thinking. Is that what capitalism should be? I can't understand why $40 million should dictate your personality. Simply put, Pacquiao has his own dignity and refuses to be manipulated into taking $40M and giving his (butt) to anyone who wants it." ---TSS reader "Tony" informs readers of a possible cultural difference which causes certain peoples to interpret Pacquiao's refusal to cater to Mayweather's testing demands (photo by Chris Cozzone)
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