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Boxing: Top Prospects Peterson, Martirosyan Win Unanimous Decisions

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  • Boxing: Top Prospects Peterson, Martirosyan Win Unanimous Decisions

    TOP PROSPECTS PETERSON, MARTIROSYAN WIN UNANIMOUS DECISIONS IN WARMUP FIGHTS

    CBSSports.com
    June 27 2008

    LAS VEGAS -- Lightweight prospect Anthony Peterson easily outpointed
    Fernando Trejo on Thursday, maintaining his perfect record in a dull
    unanimous decision.

    Junior middleweight Vanes Martirosyan also remained unbeaten with
    a more punishing effort, whitewashing Angel Hernandez in another
    unanimous decision at the Orleans Arena.

    Peterson (27-0, 19 KOs) was tediously effective in his Las Vegas debut
    and his first appearance for Top Rank, which hopes to put Anthony
    and his brother, Lamont, on a fast track to title contention after
    signing them in April. The Petersons were homeless on the streets of
    their native Washington, D.C., a decade ago before getting into boxing.

    After Trejo started quickly, Peterson gradually wore down his Mexican
    opponent with a colorless jab and a high work rate -- all with a
    Monica Seles-like grunt on nearly every punch. Peterson remained
    active to the final bell, and two judges gave every round to Peterson,
    who landed nearly twice as many punches.

    "It's definitely a guy I should have taken out," Peterson
    said. "There's disappointment on my part. I hurt my left hand in the
    fifth, but it's still no excuse. I'm a throwback fighter, and I really
    wanted to get it cooking. I'm real disappointed in my performance."

    Martirosyan (20-0, 13 KOs), the 2004 U.S. Olympic welterweight,
    has been steadily groomed into a 154-pound title contender, his
    progression slowed only by minor injuries. Armenian-born Martirosyan
    then hurt his left hand while jabbing Hernandez, but otherwise cruised
    through a one-sided victory against a once-respected contender.

    Martirosyan knocked Hernandez to his knees 70 seconds in with a deft
    right uppercut, and the Olympian peppered his opponent's head in every
    round. He did everything but flatten Hernandez, who landed only 11
    percent of his 505 punches, yet still taunted Martirosyan with dance
    moves and defiant gestures through the blood from his nose and cheek.

    Martirosyan finished his first career 10-round fight with an
    earsplitting left hook. All three judges awarded all 10 rounds to
    Martirosyan with identical 100-89 scores.

    "I was surprised he was taking my power like that," said Martirosyan,
    who's hoping for a coveted HBO appearance on the undercard of Zab
    Judah's welterweight title fight with Joshua Clottey in Las Vegas on
    Aug. 2. "It's just my third fight with (trainer) Ronnie Shields. We're
    getting there, little by little. I'm excited to get back in the gym
    and learn from this fight."
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