honoluluadvertiser.com

Sponsored by:

Comment, blog & share photos

Log in | Become a member
The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Saturday, April 17, 2010

Boxing: Martinez beats Pavlik to claim middleweight titles


DAVE SKRETTA
AP Sports Writer

ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. — Nobody could deny Sergio Martinez this victory.

The junior middleweight champion dominated Kelly Pavlik over the final few rounds Saturday night, winning a bloody and impressive unanimous decision to claim the WBO and WBC middleweight belts at raucous Boardwalk Hall.

When the final bell sounded, Martinez ran for the corner and leaped onto the ropes, thrusting his arms into the air in victory. Pavlik solemnly raised his own arm before retreating back to his corner, his face awash in blood — just as it been at the end of the last four rounds.

Judge Roberto Ramirez scored the fight 116-111, Barbara Perez scored it 115-111 and Craig Metcalfe had it 115-112, all for Martinez. The Associated Press also scored it 115-112.

"It was a 12-round fight and I knew it would go the distance," said the new middleweight king, "and I knew at the end I had to close strong."

Martinez (45-2-2) moved up to 160 pounds to challenge Pavlik, who had never been defeated at his natural weight. The 35-year-old from Argentina put on marvelous display of speed and footwork, though, rallying from a questionable knockdown in the seventh round to batter and frustrate the pride of Youngstown, Ohio.

"He was a smart fighter," said Pavlik, his face a gruesome mess of bruises and cuts. "He doubled up on the jab a lot after he cut me. I just couldn't get anything going."

It was refreshing change for Martinez to finally win a clear decision, because judges sure haven't been kind to him lately.

The charismatic fighter with the Hollywood looks appeared to beat Kermit Cintron in February 2009, dropping his opponent in the seventh round and watching the referee count him out. But after a lengthy commotion, the fight was allowed to continue and Martinez wound up with a draw.

Then in December, Martinez battled feared puncher Paul Williams in the smaller ballroom at Boardwalk Hall in a Fight of the Year candidate. Both of them hit the deck in the first round and they stood toe-to-toe the rest of the way, but Williams earned the debatable decision.

No way Martinez was going to let it happen again.