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Scheduled Event

Gabriel Campillo v. Beibut Shumenov II (FSN)

Jan 29, 2010 11:00 PM EST
Hard Rock Hotel and Casino - Las Vegas, NV
Shumenov SD-12

CompuBox: Campillo-Shumenov II Numbers

The folks at CompuBox sent over the numbers and their analysis for last night's controversial rematch between Gabriel Campillo and Beibut Shumenov.

One of the fantastic things about the CompuBox program is its ability to not only break down a fighter's offense by the kind of punches he throws but also provide a minute-by-minute summary of a fighter's effectiveness.

For the fight, Campillo out-landed Shumenov 320-219 -- a 101-punch gap -- but in many rounds Shumenov built a huge lead in the first minute to force Campillo to fight from behind in most rounds. That may have been the reason behind last night's decision. Here is the total breakdown minute by minute:

First minute: Shumenov 100/317, Campillo 60/157

Second minute: Shumenov 62/208, Campillo 130/308

Third minute: Shumenov 57/232, Campillo 130/301

In the first minutes of rounds 1, 2, 3, 4, 10 and 12, Shumenov out-landed Campillo 47-13, which conceivably could have given him enough of a push to capture the round in the judges' eyes. In rounds 5, 6, 7, 8, 9 and 11 -- where Campillo offered a more balanced offense throughout all three minutes -- Shumenov had only a 50-48 connect edge in the first minute.

As seen above Campillo was the master in the second and third minutes and while he had a commanding edge on the total stats his tendency to fight in spurts -- and the fact that the fight was in Shumenov's adopted home town -- may have cost him the title.

Full numbers after the jump.

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Campillo to protest loss to Shumenov

Gabriel Campillo couldn't believe the scores in Las Vegas last night. Now, he'll protest the decision. (Reuters Photos, via daylife.com)

Though little rarely comes of anything in these situations, former WBA light heavyweight titlist Gabriel Campillo will file an official protest regarding his highly controversial loss last night in Las Vegas to Beibut Shumenov. Rick Reeno has the quotes from Campillo's manager, Sampson Lewkowicz:

"I demand a full investigation on the judge who scored 117-111 [Patricia Morse Jarman]. It was another travesty for boxing. I want a full investigation on the judge. That judge put a black eye on boxing and a black eye on all of the judges in Nevada and all the people of Nevada. She can never come back to judge again. She is either blind or got paid off - one of the two. Keith Kizer is one the best commissioners and he will never allow that [for her to judge again]."

Bad Left Hook scored the fight 117-111 for Campillo, which is more or less in line with every score I've seen besides the two Vegas judges that scored the fight for Shumenov.

Lou DiBella also weighed in, because Lou DiBella likes to weigh in on things, and has been quite vocal about the bad scoring we've seen too much of lately in boxing:

"Jerry Roth had one of the worst nights of his life. The other judge that had it 9 rounds to 3 for Shumenov, they should immediately sit down and have a chat with her and take a close look at her scorecard. I can accept Roth had a bad night. I can't accept the other scorecard under any circumstance. Every day that passes we are shooting ourselves in the foot as a sport and an industry. How can you make new fans when they watch a fight that end with a decision like that?  Anyone who says Shumenov won doesn't know a f***ing thing about boxing. Explaining this to the fans makes me embarrassed to be in this industry. The fight was not even close."

It's unlikely that Morse Jarman will receive any actual penalty for her scorecard, but a review of the fight could at least get Campillo a third fight with Shumenov. I'd call it "well-deserved," but from watching the fight on DVR this morning, it's not a fight anyone really deserves. It's a fight that shouldn't be in discussions, but now has to be. I didn't keep score, but the fight was clearly Campillo's. It's not even a discussion. I don't throw around "robbery" too often because when you do it loses all meaning, but this was a robbery. Campillo outclassed, outboxed and outfought Shumenov.

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Shumenov "defeats" Campillo and other Friday Results

Say hello to your new light heavyweight strapholder.  via www.goldenboypromotions.com

In what was likely both the best and the most controversial fight of the night, Beibut Shumenov scored a split decision victory over Gabriel Campillo, winning his first major light heavyweight title only ten fights into his career.  For a number of rounds, the fight was a wildly entertaining affair, with nonstop action and momentum swings galore.  Through the fight, Shumenov would lunge forward with maximum effort punches, putting the full force of his weight behind just about every punch he threw.  Campillo on the other hand, not only proved to be very slippery but also adept at countering and trading when his opponent threw leather in his direction.

For a full 12 rounds, both guys fought their hearts out.  At no point in the fight was there an extended lull in the action, and both guys deserve credit for that.  However, as the fight progressed, Shumenov tired, and Campillo's short hook counterpunches started to rock Shumenov.  During several of the later rounds, Campillo appeared to hurt Shumenov, and Campillo was putting on a clinic until he took his foot off the gas in the last couple of rounds.  However, two of the judges seemed to watch a different fight than I did, with Levi Martinez scoring the bout 117-111 for Campillo (the same as the official Bad Left Hook score), Jerry Roth scoring the bout a puzzling 115-113 in favor of Shumenov and Patricia Morse Jarman scoring the bout a completely indefensible 117-111 in favor of Shumenov. 

What's especially sad is that this was Campillo's US debut. The United States is quickly becoming 'the new Germany' when it comes to questionable scoring - just ask Chris John and Ali Funeka.  In Campillo's last three fights, he had won decisions as an underdog on his opponents' home turf of Denmark, Argentina and Kazakhstan, respectively.  Now, in the supposed boxing capital of the world he gets the short end of the stick from seemingly incompetent judges.  Just remember this one before complaining next time about how some European fighter deserves no respect because he never comes to the U.S.

Despite the bad taste the ending the fight left in my mouth, I really do hope both of them get more opportunities to fight on U.S. television.  They've both proven to be exciting fighters who are at a high skill level.  Either of these guys against Jean Pascal or Tavoris Cloud would be a great fight.

  • On the Shumenov-Campillo undercard, Erislandy Lara scored a 10th round TKO of Grady Brewer.  Lara looked good but not great in the fight, which is about what one would expect against a spoiler like Brewer.  Lara at times seemed to have trouble letting his hands go, and Brewer's odd punching angles meant that he was able to find his target more than Lara would have liked.  Eventually, Lara found that a turtle shell defense with a style like that of Arthur Abraham was pretty effective, and from that point on he dominated.  With about 40 seconds left in the fight and Brewer going for a knockout, Lara caught him with a perfect uppercut that sent down Brewer.   When Brewer got up, he pounced on Brewer and referee Tony Weeks stopped the bout after a shoeshine combination with about 10 seconds to go in the fight. 
  • Jesse Brinkley won by unanimous decision over Curtis Stevens.  While it was somewhat even early, Brinkley pulled away over the course of the fight, rocking Stevens a number of times, although Stevens showed good heart to end the fight on his feet.  This too was a great fight, even though one guy mostly dominated the action.  Brinkley is now the IBF #2 contender, or in other words, this was an eliminator for an eliminator. 
  • On the Shobox card, Chris Avalos won by 4th round knockout over Jose Nieves, and Archie Ray Marquez won a 10 round decision over Derrick Campos.
  • In Connecticut, Peter Manfredo Jr. won a unanimous decision over Matt Vanda.  On the undercard, Matt Remillard stopped Rafael Lora early, again.  I still haven't seen a decent explanation for why he was rematching someone he just knocked out in 4 rounds. 
  • In Chicago, Don George, Andrzej Wawrzyk and Kenny Galarza all won their bouts.
  • In Mexico, Jesus Ruiz defeated Luis Lemendez by decision.
  • In Glasgow, Commonwealth lightweight titlist Lee McAllister beat Samuel Amoako. OliGold gave us a recap of that bout here.

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Open Thread: Campillo-Shumenov II, Friday Night Fights + Shobox

Gabriel_campillo_posa_con_el_cintur_c3_b3n_de_campe_c3_b3n_que_se_trajo_de_argentina

Tonight on Fox Sports Net at 11pm ET, two fights will be shown live from Las Vegas.

In the main event, Gabriel Campillo (19-2, 6 KO) defends his light heavyweight title against Beibut Shumenov (8-1, 6 KO) for a second time, as Shumenov attempts again to become a recognized major titlist within his first ten pro fights.

On the undercard, Erislandy Lara (9-0, 5 KO) takes a step up against solid veteran Grady Brewer (26-11, 15 KO). It's also worth noting that off-TV, the fight between David Rodela (14-1-2, 6 KO) and Eloy Perez (15-0-2, 4 KO) found a new home on this show after the Mosley-Berto card was canceled.

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Tonight's Friday Night Fights on ESPN2 has a potential war of a main event between Jesse Brinkley (34-5, 22 KO) and Curtis Stevens (21-2, 15 KO) in a super middleweight eliminator.

On the undercard (never know what FNF will show on TV undercards, really), welterweight prospect Raymond Serrano (11-0, 6 KO) takes on Ronnie Warrior Jr. (13-2-1, 4 KO). Yes, that's really his name.

Chris_avalos_medium

Shobox is also on tonight (11pm ET) with a bantamweight main event, as Chris Avalos (14-0, 11 KO) takes on Jose Nieves (17-1-3, 8 KO). The co-feature will have Archie Ray Marquez (9-0, 7 KO) against Derrick Campos (20-7, 11 KO). You might remember Campos as the Kansas club fighter that Square Ring brought in to face Dmitriy Salita on the Calzaghe-Jones PPV, which wound up being the best fight of that pitiful card.

There's a card on Telemundo tonight, too. Bantamweight prospect Jesus Ruiz (19-2-2, 17 KO) will face Luis Melendez (26-4-1, 21 KO) for a vacant WBC regional trinket.

I'd like to apologize for the lack of good updates this week, but Brick and I have both been pretty busy. Next week I should be very much back in the swing of things.

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Erislandy Lara stepping up to face Grady Brewer

Erislandy Lara will take on savvy veteran Grady Brewer on January 29 in Vegas.

On the January 29 FOX Sports Net broadcast of Gabriel Campillo-Beibut Shumenov II, Cuban sensation Erislandy Lara will take a big step up in competition when he faces former "Contender" champion Grady Brewer in a 10-round junior middleweight feature from Las Vegas.

Lara (9-0, 5 KO) is one of the best prospects in the sport, and has already been featured several times on TV. He's been a regular on ESPN2, and also fought on the Hatton-Pacquiao undercard last May. He has wins over trial horses like Darnell Boone and Jose Varela, and his most recent fight was his first ten-rounder. Lara beat Luciano Perez via decision in that fight.

Brewer (26-11, 15 KO) hasn't been as active as he might have liked since winning the "Contender" series in 2006. He missed all of 2007, and has come back with the same fringe fights he was having before the series, really. He did fight and beat Cornelius Bundrage in one of the worst televised fights of 2008, the last time most saw him in action.

Brewer was set to face Winky Wright in Puerto Rico in December, but that fight predictably fell apart.

Lara-Brewer will be the opening fight of the broadcast on FSN, live on January 29 at 11pm ET.

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Oscar de la Hoya, Bernard Hopkins to host Campillo-Shumenov rematch

Gabriel-campillo-beibut-shumenov1_medium Light heavyweight titlist Gabriel Campillo will rematch Beibut Shumenov on January 29 at Las Vegas' Hard Rock Hotel & Casino, and "hosting" the event will be Golden Boy Promotions leaders and future Hall of Fame fighters Oscar de la Hoya and Bernard Hopkins.

FOX Sports Net will televise.

Campillo (19-2, 6 KO) beat Shumenov (8-1, 6 KO) by close decision in Kazakhstan last August. Shumenov, 26, was attempting to win a major title in just his ninth professional fight, after blowing through guys like Montell Griffin, Epi Mendoza and Byron Mitchell very early in his career. By all accounts, Shumenov made a fine showing for himself against Campillo, too.

What I find most interesting about Shumenov, though, is that he's clearly not overly concerned with unbeaten records. He wants titles and money (he also runs KZ Event, which has gone very well for him thus far) like all boxers do, but he's moved so fast that he was risking his record when he faced a journeyman like Donnell Wiggins in his fourth-ever pro bout. You don't see guys move that fast, really. Even Yuriorkis Gamboa was babied a bit more than that.

Oscar and Hopkins "hosting" the event will hopefully help them drum up some interest, as neither of them have any name whatsoever in the United States.

Tickets for the event are priced at $150, $125, $100, $50 and $40 and go on sale tomorrow morning. You can get tickets at the venue, all Ticketmaster locations, or at Ticketmaster.com.

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