| |
|
|
Lateef Kayode's Knockout Streak
Continues;
Luis Franco Remains Unbeaten
Photos: Tom Casino - SHOWTIME
The knockout streak
lives on for Lateef “Power” Kayode, the Hollywood
cruiserweight from Nigeria who registered a sixth-round
knockout for the 14th consecutive fight on ShoBox: The
New Generation on SHOWTIME® Friday night from Chumash
Casino Resort.
In the co-feature, former Cuban Olympian Luis “La
Estrella” Franco remained undefeated moving his record
to 8-0 (5 KOs) with a disqualification (low blows) win
over Eric “Outlaw” Hunter at 2:34 of the eighth round.
In the main event,
Kayode (15-0, 14 KOs) defended his cruiserweight NABO
and NABF titles against a game Ed “The Georgia Thumper”
Perry, 34, of Frankfort, Indiana, a former high school
football player who drives a dump truck for a living.
Perry (18-5-2, 11 KOs) hung in there with Kayode, but
just like Kayode’s last 13 victims couldn’t last, taking
a knee at :51 seconds in the sixth round after a
devastating left uppercut right under the rib cage where
he was then counted out by referee Jack Reese.
“It was a good fight for me,” said Kayode, 27, who is
trained by Freddie Roach and was fighting at
cruiserweight for the fifth time in his career. “I
waited a round or two to gauge what he had. He took some
shots. Normally guys would have fallen after some of
those shots but he had a good chin and stayed in there.”
Kayode’s powerful body
shots impressed SHOWTIME announcer Antonio Tarver. “His
talent is immeasurable” said the heavyweight Tarver.
“But I commend Perry for staying in there as long as he
did.”
After the fight, Tarver told Perry he needed to work on
his condition and “stay in the gym.”
“The body shots took their toll,” said Perry, who had
never seen the canvas in his career but took a knee
after a lethal combination by Kayode in the fourth round
before standing at an eight-count. “I don’t know, I’ve
always been pretty tough. It takes a brave man to stand
in there and get hit like that, especially on national
TV.”
Added Kayode: “He tried to rush me and rough me in the
fifth round. He came at me, so I didn’t go with my jab
anymore. I went with my straight right because he was
bending to my right side and then I got him with the
left uppercut.”
In the co-feature, both
Franco and Hunter came out firing in a matchup for the
vacant WBO NABO featherweight title. The first two
rounds went to Franco easily with Hunter warned for a
head butt and two low blows. Referee John Shorley
stopped the fight at 2:34 of Round 8 after a third low
blow by Hunter giving Franco the win by
disqualification.
“It looks like he was
looking for a way out,” said Franco, who won every round
in the dominating win. “My body shots were just hurting
him and he didn’t want to get knocked out. He knew he
was going to get knocked out in the ninth round and so
he decided to take the disqualification. I out-jabbed
him and out worked him and finally got the DQ.”
Hunter, 24, who first
appeared on ShoBox back in 2007 and was a 2004 U.S.
Olympic alternate, was visibly upset after the
disqualification. “There was just too much complaining
going on the whole time,” he said. “I said before the
fight they better watch out for his complaining. Ah,
man. I don’t even want to talk about it. He played to
the crowd and the ref. It should have never been
stopped.”
“He didn’t act like a pro tonight,” SHOWTIME announcer
Steve Farhood said of Hunter.
The doubleheader was promoted by Gary Shaw Productions,
LLC.
Friday’s fights will re-air on SHO 2 on Thursday, Dec. 9
at 10 p.m. ET/PT (delayed on the west coast). The fights
will be available On Demand from Dec. 8 until Dec. 21.
The night of boxing was the second of four consecutive
weeks of fights on SHOWTIME. Next Saturday night, Dec.
11, it’s the bantamweights who will take center stage in
a “Winner Takes All” tournament. SHOWTIME will televise
the fights live at 9 p.m. ET/PT (delayed on the West
Coast) from the Emerald Queen Casino in Tacoma, Wash.
Four of the top 118-pound fighters battle it out in a
two-round, single-elimination tournament to determine
the world’s best in the division. In the opening bout,
undefeated, world-ranked rising star Abner Mares will
face two-division world champion Vic “Raging Bull”
Darchinyan. Then, former IBF 118-pound champ Joseph King
Kong Agbeko will try to earn back the title from the man
that won it from him, current IBF champ Yonnhy “El
Colombiano” Perez from Irapuato, Mexico.
On Dec. 18 on SHOWTIME CHAMPIONSHIP BOXING (9 p.m.
ET/PT), World Boxing Council 175-pound titleholder Jean
Pascal (26-1, 16 KOs) meets former world light
heavyweight and middleweight champion Bernard Hopkins
(51-5-1, 32 KOs) for the WBC light heavyweight title
from the Pepsi Coliseum in Québec City, Canada.
|
|