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While Peter Manfredo Jr. may never be among the elite of the division, he certainly looked impressive as he took apart fellow middleweight Matt Vanda over 10 rounds. Vanda (of St. Paul, MN) looked good during the early going as he sunk body shots to the midsection of Manfredo (Providence, RI.) But Manfredo quickly answered back with body shots of his own and in the second began to incorporate his most important punch of the fight; a short right uppercut aimed at the head of Vanda. This punch would begin to land with scary accuracy over the coming rounds and seemed to completely bewilder Vanda every time he attempted it. Manfredo also began working a double jab, right hand combo that was often the starting point for 4, 5 and 6 punch combos which were the norm during rounds 3-8. Despite his best efforts, Vanda never seemed to be in range to land his punches. He was either too far out and missing wildly or smothering himself on the inside while he ate uppercuts from Manfredo. In the sixth, Vanda charged in and was met with a perfectly placed left hook to the liver from Manfredo which put him on the canvas. Vanda rose and was battered around the ring for the remainder of the round. He survived on sheer heart and at times it seemed the fight was only mere seconds away from being stopped. Vanda knew just when to throw though and was able to keep the referee convinced that he was still in the fight. The seventh round was more of the same with Vanda doing just enough to keep himself from being stopped. Vanda had his greatest success in the 9th and 10th where he truly gave it his all, throwing every punch in his arsenal in an attempt to catch Manfredo. Unfortunately for Vanda, it was too little too late and when the final bell sounded, the outcome was never in question. People were heading for the exits when the scores were announced: 99-90 and 100-89 all for Manfredo who is now 34-6 18Kos. Vanda (42-10 22Kos) showed great heart throughout the fight but at this point should probably consider hanging up his gloves for good. Neither fighter was ever among the truly elite of their weight class but if tonight’s fight showed anything, it’s that Manfredo still has reason to believe he can be among he best, while Vanda should start taking a serious look at his reasons to continue fighting.

Local Featherweight prospect Matt Remillard of Manchester, CT needed one round less to dispatch outgunned Irvington, NJ native Rafael Lora in a rematch of their bout back in September of 09. Lora seemed intent to overturn his first loss to Remillard and came out working a stiff jab which seemed to have Remillard perplexed. Lora’s success ended after the first when Remillard began to open up with a jab of his own. .Remillard used the jab as a set up to push Lora to the ropes where he would unleash vicious shots to the body. During the third, Remillard began going both upstairs and downstairs with his left hook and was soon ripping of 3 and 4 punch combos on the wilting Lora. Right at the bell for round 3, Remillard got in two punishing body shots which had Lora limping back to his corner. He wisely decided to stay there instead of coming out for round 4, handing Remillard the TKO victory. Still unbeaten, Remillard runs his record to 21-0 12Kos while Lora, having lost his second fight to “The Sharpshooter” is now 11-2 5Kos.

A swing bout between welterweights Joseph Elegele of Melbourne, FL and Chris Russel of Shaddock OK was over a mere one minute and thirteen seconds after it began. Both fighters circled and felt each other out for the first minute before Elegele snuck in a left uppercut to the body of Russel which paralyzed Russel for the full ten count. Elegele improves to 3-0 2Kos while Russel slips to 1-1.

To a cascade of boos, lightweights Arash Usmanee of Alberta Canada and Jorge Ruiz of Miami, FL fought 4 and ½ rounds mired by incessant grappling and wild, inaccurate punches. Usmanee held a slight advantage in effective punching when, in a fitting end to such an ugly bout, the fighters heads came together and prompted referee Dick Flaherty to call a halt to the fight. Because 4 rounds had been competed, the scorecards were tallied and Usmanee came out on top; winning by scores of 48-47, 50-45 and 49-45. Usmanee remains unbeaten at 5-0 2 Kos while Ruiz drops to 7-11-2.

Welterweight fan favorite Adelita Irizarry (6-4 2KOs) of Hartford, CT was on the losing end of a split decision when she was out crafted over 6 rounds by Fayetteville, NC’s Rachel Clark (5-3-1 3KOs.) In her typical come forward style Irizarry started fast and began winging punches at the head of Clark, who initially was content to retreat and counter punch from her southpaw stance. Perhaps realizing that Irizarry was not going to stop moving forward, Clark began fighting back to good effect. She began to land a straight left hand that would halt Irizarry’s attacks long enough for her to move and reset. The defining moment in the fight came in the fourth when Irizarry, charging in as usual, walked into another straight left and was dropped to the Canvas. The knockdown proved to be pivotal as Clark narrowly took two of the judges scorecards 58-55 and 57-56 while Irizarry got the nod from only one 57-56.

In a four round lightweight bout, local up and comer Joseph Perez of Hartford, CT narrowly out pointed Luis Quezada of Caguas, Puerto Rico. Perez had a good opening round in which he scored with left hooks to the head of Quezada. The middle two rounds were highly competitive as the fighters took turns backing each other to the ropes and unleashing the best they had. Perez managed to steal the fight in the fourth as he backed Quezada along the ropes and scored well with both hands. Quezada had little to offer in return and let the fight slip away in the final minute and a half. When the scorecards were read, Perez snuck by with a majority decision: 38-38 and 39-37 twice. With the loss, Quezada fell to 1-2 which Perez improved to 3-0 1KO.

In the opening bout of the evening, Detroit MI super middleweight J’Leon Love made a successful pro debut by icing Philadelphia PA’s Vince Burkhalter in under two minutes. Wasting no time, Love went straight after Burkhalter from the bell. About a minute into the fight, Love dropped a left hook to the body and followed with a crisp right hand that dumped Burkhalter to the canvas. Burkhalter rose but was quickly pinned on the ropes and ate another right hand that dropped him face first to the canvas. Ten seconds later, the fight was over and Love had notched his first professional victory. Burkhalter dropped his third in a row and now stands at 0-3.

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