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Boxing: Gabriel Tolmajyan falls on 'Friday Night Fights' via decisio

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  • Boxing: Gabriel Tolmajyan falls on 'Friday Night Fights' via decisio

    Glendale News-Press (California)
    Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Business News
    August 10, 2013 Saturday



    Gabriel Tolmajyan falls on 'Friday Night Fights' via decision

    by Grant Gordon, Glendale News-Press, Calif.


    Aug. 10--CABAZON -- With the vacant United States Boxing Assn. junior
    lightweight title on the line, bigger fights in the future at stake
    and an undefeated opponent across from him, Gabriel "The Ghost"
    Tolmajyan rarely took a step back Friday night.

    But after 10 hard-fought rounds, his budding career took a stumble, as
    he was on the losing end of a unanimous decision to undefeated Jose
    "Sniper" Pedraza at the Morongo Casino in Cabazon in the co-main event
    of ESPN2's "Friday Night Fights."

    All three judges scored the fight 97-93 for Pedraza (14-0, nine
    knockouts), who used a stiff right jab throughout to lead to the
    victory.

    "Always just a little bit off," said George Bastmajyan, Tolmajyan's
    manager and cut man, as his fighter lost for the third time to an
    undefeated foe, all via decision. "This time around, he was strong, he
    wasn't tired. We lost because we weren't active enough."

    Tolmajyan (14-3-1, three KOs), an Armenian native who fights out of
    Glendale and trains at the Glendale Fighting Club, was fighting an
    undefeated opponent for the sixth time in his career and the second
    fight in a row. Trying to follow up his defeat of the previously
    unblemished Jorge Maysonet Jr. in April, Tolmajyan was unable to find
    the same magic, although the two put on an exciting, back-and-forth
    action fight.

    "I know Gabe landed the cleaner punches, the harder punches,"
    Bastmajyan said. "[Pedraza] was pop-shotting him and running away."

    Much of the story of the fight was Pedraza using his range and popping
    out a stiff right jab that he began employing after losing the first
    round while fighting right-handed. Pedraza contested the remainder of
    the fight as a southpaw.

    "He threw us off," said Bastmajyan, who, along with lead trainer,
    Edmond Tarverdyan, brought in both right- and left-handers to spar
    with Tolmajyan. "We knew he switches, but you can't spar a guy who
    switches. We sparred with guys from both sides, but it's different
    when a guy switches."

    One surprise to Tolmajyan's camp was Pedraza's approach. Riding a
    string of three consecutive knockouts into Friday's bout, Pedraza
    didn't come out as aggressive as predicted, Bastmajyan said.

    "We thought he was gonna come out and try to get the knockout,"
    Bastmajyan said. "He boxed."

    And with a reach advantage, Pedraza's boxing was key, along with
    aggression. When it became a fight, Tolmajyan often got the better of
    it, landing the more effective power punches throughout. In the end,
    Bastmajyan believes the biggest factor was simply aggression and
    activity.

    "That's it, that's it," Bastmajyan said. "When Gabe was initiating
    action, he was catching the guy."

    The fighters opened slowly in the first, with Tolmajyan getting the
    round, as he was more active and landed more. Pedraza landed the best
    blow of the stanza though, connecting on a straight right counter and
    nicking the bridge of Tolmajyan's nose.

    Action opened up in the second round, with Esparza landing the better
    shots, though both had their flurries. Pedraza once more landed the
    most effective blow of the round, coming on a counter left hook as he
    switched to southpaw after fighting the first round from an orthodox
    stance.

    Working behind a stiff right jab, Pedraza looked to take the third
    round, putting together two good flurries and ducking under the
    majority of Tolmajyan's offense.

    Tolmajyan came out aggressively in the fourth round and used his right
    hook well throughout. Pedraza's output waned and a mouse began to form
    under his right eye, as well.

    In the fifth, Tolmajyan's right hook was once again his best weapon,
    but Pedraza fought with renewed aggression and worked his right jab
    well, also scoring with uppercuts and flurries in tight.

    Highlighted by a terrific left cross in the waning seconds, Tolmajyan
    looked solid in the sixth, slipping Pedraza's punches well and landing
    effectively on offense, as Pedraza had blood running down from his
    nose into his mouth by round's end.

    The seventh round was close, but Tolmajyan dictated the pace and
    landed the better power punches, as Pedraza's activity regressed.

    The back-and-forth feel continued with the eighth, as another tight
    round saw Pedraza work his jab well again and increase his output,
    landing more than Tolmajyan, though the latter landed three solid
    lefts, one a hook and two straights.

    An all-action ninth round went back and forth with Pedraza landing
    more, but Tolmajyan landing the more powerful shots.

    Pedraza closed the fight well in the 10th round, dancing and boxing
    well, sticking and moving as he appeared to be the much fresher
    fighter.


    From: Baghdasarian
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