| |
|
|
Joseph Agbeko
Reclaims IBF Title From Yonnhy Perez; Bloody Abner Mares
Split Decisions Vic Darchinyan
Agbeko & Mares to Meet in Finals of The Bantamweight
Tournament: Winner Takes All
Darchinyan and Perez Headed to Consolation Bout in 2011
Photos: Tom Casino - SHOWTIME
After an action-packed
doubleheader, Joseph King Kong Agbeko and Abner Mares
emerge as the finalists in The Bantamweight Tournament:
Winner Takes All on SHOWTIME®. In a rematch of their
Halloween 2009 meeting, Agbeko reclaimed the IBF
bantamweight world championship he lost from Yonnhy “El
Colombiano” Perez via unanimous decision with an equal
parts aggressive and calculated performance. Mares won a
gritty split decision over the veteran Vic “Raging Bull”
Darchinyan in a fight that thrilled fans in attendance
at Emerald Queen Casino in Tacoma, Wash.
After overworking the punch stat machine in their first
bout last year, Agbeko (28-2, 22 KOs) surprised Perez
(20-1-1, 14 KOs) and impressed the SHOWTIME boxing
analysts with an excitingly effective strategy
throughout the fight. Displaying excellent defense and
choosing his shots wisely, Agbeko dictated the fight’s
direction through the early rounds with hard right hands
and quick combinations. By the fifth round, the
defending champion Perez had a cut over his left eye and
began to fight with a sense of urgency.
In a potential Round of
the Year sixth round, Perez, of Santa Fe Springs,
Calif., turned the match into a brawl as the punches
began to fly at a pace much closer to Perez’ normal work
rate. The men ditched defense for offense for the full
three minutes and were rewarded by a standing ovation at
round’s end. By the seventh, Agbeko, of Bronx, N.Y., by
way of Ghana, regained his composure and continued with
his game plan through most of the bout’s final six
rounds. Judges scored the fight a unanimous decision for
Agbeko with scores of 115-113, 116-112 and 117-111 to
hand Perez his first career loss.
Referencing the IBF belt now in his hands, Agbeko
exclaimed. “This is my meal ticket and I’m glad I got it
back. I am presenting it to Ghana as a Christmas bonus.”
When asked about the upcoming tournament final with
Mares, he said, “I’ve watched Abner Mares. He is a very
smart kid. King Kong is always King Kong. I’m going to
get the crown from him.”
Respectful in defeat,
Perez offered, “Agbeko had an intelligent fight today
and he won fair and square. I did not expect this game
plan from Agbeko.”
SHOWTIME boxing analyst Al Bernstein noted, “Round seven
was an important round. Agbeko stemmed the tide of the
Perez onslaught.” Showing not a speck of ring rust after
a 13-month break from boxing, Agbeko’s victory not only
put the IBF title back in his position but earned him a
spot in the tournament’s finals in 2011 against
tonight’s other winner Mares. Mares said of the fight,
“It was a hard fight, my hardest fight ever.”
In the thrilling opening
bout, Darchinyan (35-3-1, 27 KOs) and Mares (21-0-1, 13
KOs) produced a bloody, back-and-forth battle for 12
rounds in front of a spirited crowd in the Pacific
Northwest. Despite being cut along his hairline in the
first round, Mares displayed his mettle and chin by
withstanding the mighty two-division champion’s
destructive left hand.
Darchinyan dropped Mares for the first time in his
career with a flash knockdown in the second round.
Capping off Mares’ adversity-filled start, referee Bobby
Howard deducted a point from him in the fourth round for
low blows.
Showing the qualities of
a champion that Mares may soon become, he shrugged off
the incident-filled start and forged on with blood
pouring down his face and behind on points. To start the
sixth round, Mares came out punching in combinations and
landing big right hand shots. By the seventh round,
Mares knocked down an off-balance Darchinyan with a
glancing blow and felt the tide was beginning to turn.
“Our plan was to push him back because we know he likes
to bully people. He has a tremendous punch. I proved
that I could take punches,” said the emerging Mexican
star who hails from Guadalajara and lives in Montebello,
Calif. “I kept pushing him back. I heard him moan every
time I landed a body shot.”
Although known for his
power, Darchinyan surprised many with a display of
untapped boxing skills by using the ring and
counterpunching for most of the fight before reverting
back to hunting for a big left punch as his energy
faded. By the fight’s final rounds, Darchinyan looked
tired and attempted to hold on to Mares – and his points
lead – to no avail. The well-conditioned Mares continued
to stalk Darchinyan as the fight’s aggressor and
eventually did enough to win an exciting split decision
with scores of 115-111 and 113-112 for Mares and 115-111
for Darchinyan.
The close fight and split decision loss did not leave
Darchinyan pleased. “It’s very disgusting, very bad ref.
I think, of course, I won. He didn’t let me do what I
wanted to do,” said Darchinyan before conceding about
Mares, “He is a tough kid.”
The night’s action delivered just what it intended:
exciting, competitive and compelling fights for SHOWTIME
viewers. The night also delivered the makings of another
incredible night of 118-pound action in 2011 as Agbeko
and Mares will compete for weight class supremacy and
the IBF title. In the consolation bout, Perez and
Darchinyan will look to bounce back from tough, hard
fought losses.
Absent from the fight was Agbeko’s promoter Don King,
mourning the loss of his wife Henrietta. The telecast
honored King and his late wife with a 10-count moment of
silence.
The replay of tonight’s telecast will air on Tuesday,
Dec. 14 at 10 p.m. ET/PT on SHO2 and be available On
Demand from Dec. 14 through Dec. 27.
The bantamweight tournament is promoted by Gary Shaw
Productions, Golden Boy Promotions, Thompson Boxing
Promotions and Don King Productions in association with
Brian Halquist Productions.
|
|