The upset occurred in Newcastle, England, when former Olympian Josh Kelly upset Bakhram Murtazaliev to win the IBF version of the title via majority decision.
Kelly entered his pro career with plenty of hype, but was stopped by David Avanesyan and while on a seven fight winning streak, had beaten no one of note, while Murtazaliev had destroyed Tim Tszyu in three rounds fifteen months ago.
Kelly was the quicker and sharper fighter and when he survived a fourth round knockdown, Kelly began to take control and even scored a flash knockdown of his own in the ninth.
My issue is the scoring of Steve Gray, not for his scoring of the fight which was 114-113 Kelly same as mine.
It's for his scoring the final round even.
I hate even rounds and to score the final round of a close fight even is a travesty.
Had Gray scored the final round for Murtazaliev, the fight would have ended in a draw with thee champion retaining the title.
The other scores were 115-111 for Kelly, a bit wide for my tastes, and even at 113-113.
The other title bout in the 154 pound division was in San Juan, Puerto Rico as Xander Zayas unified the WBA and WBO championships with a split decision over Abass Baraou.
Neither fighter was seriously hurt in the fight but I thought Zayas had the better of the action and agreed with the 116-112 scores on two cards for Zayas and the score for Baraou of 116-112 was surprised.
Sunday was the second card for Paramount+ and Zuffa Boxing for a very strong card.
In the main event, former WBC junior welterweight champion Jose Valenzuela fought through a severe cut to win a unanimous decision over Diego Torres.
Torres had his moments, including wobbling Valenzuela in the sixth round but his superior skils allowed him to counter the walk-down aggression of Torres.
All three scores were 99-91 for Valenzela, which I agreed with.
The co-feature was a cracker as Serhii Bohachuk rebounded from his second defeat to Brandon Adams, to win a split decision over Radzhab Butaev.
This fight was contested in front of the other throughout the fight with Bohachuk landing the harder punches and Butaev scoring more often.
Scorecards read 96-94 twice for Bohachuk and 96-94 for Butaev.
My scores was 95-95 even.
In the opener, former WBC light heavywweight champion Oleksandr Gvozdyk knocked down Radislav Kalajdzic down in the first and fourth rounds and badly hurt him in the fifth to build a huge lead on the cards before a stunning seventh round with Kalajdzic dropping the former champion and finishing him off in the seventh.
Kaladzic has always been an exciting fighter and his win might move him into contention in the division.
Gvozdyk's comeback will have to start over and at his age (38), I wouldn't be surprised to see "The Nail" consider retirement.
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