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fightnews.com Peterson Brothers win easily, remain unbeaten

Photos by Scott Foster
- FightWireImages.com

BILOXI, Miss. (Jan. 5, 2008) – Brothers Lamont and Anthony Peterson of Washington, D.C., kept their undefeated records and hopes for a world title shot in 2008 in tact with convincing victories Friday in the co-featured bouts on ShoBox: The New Generation  at the Hard Rock Hotel & Casino.

A doubleheader promoted by Prize Fight Boxing aired on SHOWTIME at 11 p.m. ET/PT (delayed on the west coast).

Lamont Peterson, 23, and 14 months older than Anthony, improved to 24-0 with 11 knockouts with a unanimous 10-round decision over previously undefeated Brazilian Antonio Mesquita. Peterson outboxed and outpunched Mesquita (34-1, 27 KOs) to triumph by the scores of 100-89, 99-90 and 98-93.

fightnews.comAnthony Peterson upped his record to 26-0 with 19 knockouts with an eighth-round stoppage of Cuba’s Jose Izquierdo. He dropped Izquierdo (16-2-1, 13 KOs), a late substitute for Guadalupe Rosales, three times – once in the seventh and twice in the eighth. The bout was stopped at 2:54, shortly after the last knockdown.

“I thought I executed my game plan to perfection and managed to keep my poise and remain patient even though it was obvious that Mesquita was doing everything he could to get me to exchange and fight his fight,’’ said Lamont Peterson, a junior welterweight who is ranked No. 3 in the World Boxing Organization (WBO) and No. 6 in the World Boxing Association (WBA).

 “Honestly, I don’t think I lost a round. He did a lot of complaining but I think he was frustrated because he could never catch me.’’

Mesquita, of Las Vegas, Nev., by way of Guaruja, Brazil, had a point deducted in the final round for hitting after the break.

“He was faster than I thought and I could never really catch him like I wanted,’’ said Mesquita, who was unable to connect with his vaunted right hand with any consistency. “But the scoring was way out of line. I know I won some more rounds.

“The ref took a point from me at the end but he should have been taking points from Peterson for all the head butts. I kept trying to tell the ref to watch for his head coming in, but he never did a thing.’’

A lightweight who is ranked No. 1 in the WBO, No. 4 in the World Boxing Council (WBC) and No. 12 in the International Boxing Federation, Anthony Peterson was well ahead on the judges’ scorecards entering the eighth round of his fight.

Peterson did not appear to be dominating, however, particularly in the opening four or five frames.

 “It was a good victory for me. I always felt I was in charge,’’ Peterson said. “The guy was determined and a little awkward, but I made the adjustments I had to make. Fighting a last-minute sub, I didn’t really know what to expect. But I got the job done, which is what counts. I am ready to fight next whoever they put in front of me.’’

Izquierdo, a Cuban who lives in Chihuahua, Mexico, took the match on a few days’ notice after Rosales became ill. Izquierdo came out determinedly and was competitive during the first five rounds.

“I felt good,’’ he said, “but I am very disappointed. I felt I was fighting two guys in there – my opponent and the referee. I must have been hit at least six times in the back of the head, but the ref never did anything. That is what made me go down. I was off balance. I was never really hurt by his punches.’’

 Popular play-by-play announcer Nick Charles and expert analyst/boxing historian Steve Farhood called the action from ringside. The executive producer of ShoBox is Gordon Hall with Richard Gaughan producing and Rick Phillips directing.

Lamont Peterson vs. Antonio Mesquita
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Anthony Peterson vs. Jose Izquierdo
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Undercard results - by Damien St. Pierre

Combacking light heavyweight Will "Kid Fire" McIntyre (39-4-1) of Covington, Louisiana won his third straight bout by chopping down 6'3 Matthew Charleston (25-18) of Stone Mountain Georgia. McIntyre was the aggressor throughout the entire bout. Scores were 60-54, 60-55, 59-55.

Atlanta, Georgia's Curtis "KO" Smith (6-3) scored a 5th round TKO win over hometown favorite Gary Bergeron (7-2). The southpaw Smith used a consistent boxing/moving attack to his advantage. Smith connected with a combination that put Bergeron down, he was able to get up but the referee felt Bergeron had seen enough. The time of the stoppage was 1:50 into the 5th round.

Opening bout of the night saw Mobile, Alabama light heavyweight Joseph Smith (5-2-1) put a quick end to his rematch with "Smilin'" Martin Verdin (14-13-1) with a 3rd round KO victory. A big overhand right put Verdin down for the count.

 


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