#sam crossed

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by Seamus McNally

Mykal “The Professor” Fox (11–0, 3 KOs) of Forestville, Md. gave a lesson in the sweet science to Somner “Magic Man” Martin (5–3, 3 KOs) of Martinsville, Va., dominating from the opening bell en route to a third-round technical knockout victory. The scheduled eight-round junior welterweight clash served as the main event of the King’s Promotions card at the Hilton Crystal City in Arlington, Va. on Friday night.

Fox, who is 6’4”, towered over Martin and smartly used his massive height advantage to keep Martin out of punching range. Fox, a southpaw, used an educated right jab and slick footwork to stay on the outside and pepper Martin with punches while Martin was lunging in trying to close the distance. Fox stunned Martin in the opening two frames with straight left hands and uppercuts thrown behind his jab. In the third round, Fox clipped Martin with a straight left to the temple that threw off Martin’s equilibrium and had him on shaky legs. Fox followed it up with a barrage of punches that sent Martin stumbling across the ring and the referee stepped in at the 1:53 mark to end the contest.

In the co-feature bout, Mike “Silverback” Balogun (7–0, 6 KOs) of Upper Marlboro, Md. handed Luther “Lights Out” Smith (5–1, 4 KOs) of Bowie, Md. the first loss of his professional career with a vicious second-round stoppage in a matchup of undefeated Maryland heavyweights. 

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Balogun, a former NFL linebacker, was the aggressor in the first round, landing some hard body blows that bothered Smith. Balogun continued his pressing attack in the second round. Balogun caught Smith with a thunderous uppercut on the chin that sent Smith crashing to the canvas. A dazed Smith barely beat the count, and Balogun pounced on the badly damaged Smith. Balogun backed Smith up against the ropes and pounded away with heavy leather until the referee jumped in at the 1:52 mark to save Smith from further punishment.

Washington, D.C. super bantamweight Jordan “Shortdog” White (3–0, 3 KOs) had a successful first fight in his home region, forcing Sergio Aguilar (0–5) of Homestead, Fla. to retire on his stool after the first round. Eager to impress his home fans, White came out to start the fight with a blistering pace. Aguilar survived the initial onslaught, but ended being dropped three times in the round. In a weird sequence, Aguilar went down a fourth time in the closing seconds of the round, but the referee ruled it a slip. Shortly after, the bell rang, and both fighters thought the ref waved the fight off, but was actually waving it a slip. White and Aguilar both started taking their gloves off but then realized the referee had not ended the fight. But given the extra time to think about it, Aguilar decided he had enough and ended the fight himself.

Greenbelt, Md. cruiserweight Sam “The Vanilla Gorilla” Crossed (4–0, 2 KOs), who appeared in a Super Bowl commercial with Mike Tyson back in February, scored the knockout of the night with a devastating left hook that flattened Mike Estus (0–4) of Ames, Iowa. Estus tried to put forth his best imitation of Emanuel Augustus, sticking his tongue out at Crossed, dancing and showboating, but ultimately paid the price. Crossed did not get frustrated by Estus’ antics and showed patience, picking his shots. He connected with a flush left hook to Estus’ jaw that sent him flat on his back, his head bouncing off the canvas. A gutsy Estus miraculously got up before the count of ten but was in no condition to continue, and the ref waved the fight off at the 2:03 mark of the first round, much to the delight of the crowd.

Super middleweight Devar “Jengawar” Ferhadi (7–0, 6 KOs) of Frederick, Md. scored a third-round technical knockout over a very game Christopher Petty (0–3) of St. Louis, Mo. Ferhadi, a Kurdistan native who is in medical school in his homeland when not fighting, was able to drop Petty with strong right hands in both the first and second rounds. Petty was able rise to his feet both times and land some hard counter shots of his own. Early in the third round Ferhadi caught Petty with a left hook that sent him down a third time. Petty got up but was finished soon after by a crunching left to the body from Ferhadi. The referee ended the fight at the 2:35 mark.

Washington, D.C. middleweight Phillip Hooker (1–0, 1 KO) made a successful pro debut, scoring a first round stoppage of David Rohn (0–7–1) of Villa Park, IL. The two fought on even terms until Hooker found a home for his left hook that dropped and badly hurt Rohn. Rohn was able to beat the count but his legs were gone and the referee halted the bout at the 2:28 mark.

Super bantamweight Marcus “Dreamcrusher” Bates (4–0–1, 4 KOs) of Washington, D.C. had not fought in 22-months coming into his bout but it seemed like he never left. He looked in pristine condition and showed no signs of ring-rust, scoring an impressive first round knockout of Daniel Hernandez (0–2–1) of Queens, N.Y. in just 44 seconds. Bates, anxious to be in the squared circle once again, came charging out at the sound of the first bell. Bates immediately had Hernandez reeling on the ropes and landed blazing combinations until Hernandez went down. Hernandez realized he was in over his head and sat on his butt until the referee counted to ten, suffering the first stoppage loss of his career.

MiddleweightPatrick Rivera (1–0, 1 KO) of Edgewood, Md. dazzled in his pro debut, fending off a game effort from Dustin Caplinger (2–9, 1 KO) of Akron, Oh. before finishing him in the fourth round. Rivera landed punishing combinations to the head and body throughout the contest. Rivera dropped Caplinger in the second with a right hand, but Caplinger got up and continued to absorb a beating while throwing some heavy leather back himself. Rivera was able to end the fight in the fourth with a flurry of punches in the beginning of the round that sent Caplinger staggering towards the ropes and on the canvas. The referee stopped the fight 4 seconds into the final frame.

The big boys took center stage in the first fight of the evening, and Colby Madison (3–0, 2 KOs) of Baltimore, Md. ended the fight with the first significant blows landed to the debuting Bryson Haubrick (0–1) of Lewiston, Pa. who weighed a whopping 331 lbs. Haubrick was counted out at the 2:05 mark of the first round in what was a sign of things to come the rest of the night.

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Photo by Jessica Chen for StiffJab.com

by Seamus McNally

WASHINGTON, D.C.–Unbeaten welterweight Dusty Hernandez-Harrison (29–0–1, 16 KOs) took on his toughest opponent to date in Mike Dallas Jr. (21–3–2, 10 KOs) Friday night and it showed, as he was lucky to escape with a split draw on BETat the D.C. Armory.

Despite fighting in front of a hometown crowd of 2,633 for the first time in 18 months, the 2012 Stiff Jab Prospect of the Year Hernandez-Harrison did not receive a warm homecoming from Dallas. Dallas was the aggressor throughout the contest as he repeatedly got off first and dictated the pace of the fight before a late rally by Hernandez-Harrison.

Dallas, who hails from Bakersfield, California, set the tone in the first round by working much harder than Hernandez-Harrison, who walked straight forward with earmuffs on and hardly threw any punches. That theme continued the next two rounds, as Dallas would throw three or four punches for every punch that Hernandez-Harrison threw. Hernandez-Harrison’s face quickly showed signs of the punishment he was absorbing.

Hernandez-Harrison recently spent five weeks of training camp in San Diego as a sparring partner for middleweight champion Saul “Canelo” Alvarez and was working with trainer Barry Hunter for the first time after a split with his father Buddy Harrison. The Southeast D.C. native had a successful fourth round as he let his hands go more and landed a few heavy blows.

His success was short-lived. During one of the many exciting exchanges in the fifth round, Dallas caught Hernandez-Harrison with a left hook that sent him down with about 30 seconds left in the round. The hometown crowd that had started the fight chanting “Dusty! Dusty!” now sat in stunned silence.

Hernandez-Harrison did his best to make a rally in the second half of the fight and impose his size advantage by walking Dallas down and looking to land powerful shots. In the eighth round, Hernandez-Harrison returned the favor of the earlier knockdown, albeit controversially, as he landed two left hands that appeared right on the belt line. It was tough to tell if they were low blows or not. 

Dallas insisted the shots were low, but referee Malik Waleed ruled it a knockdown, which gave Hernandez-Harrison a much needed 10-8 round.

The knockdown gave Hernandez-Harrison a sudden and much-needed sense of urgency, while Dallas clearly felt like he needed to close strong in his opponent’s hometown. The combination resulted in an action-packed finish. Both fighters emptied the rest of their gas tanks with punishing give-and-take exchanges that had the crowd on its feet. 

It appeared Hernandez-Harrison’s rally was too little, too late, but the judges saw it a different way, allowing the hometown fighter to remain unbeaten via a split draw by scores of 95-94 for Hernandez-Harrison, 96-92 for Dallas, and 94-94.

Both fighters felt they deserved the victory.

“I thought I finished it great,” Hernandez-Harrison said. “I finished it way too strong with that knockdown [not to get the decision]. I feel I pulled it out with that late knockdown.“ 

“In my opinion, we won in his hometown convincingly,” Dallas said.

As for a rematch, Hernandez-Harrison offered to return the favor and fight Dallas in his hometown.

"I’ll fight him in Bakersfield, California. I’ll fight him right now,” Dusty said. 

A potential rematch would be highly anticipated, as it was a very exciting and controversial main event.

In the co-feature, Roc Nation Sports newest signee Darmani Rock (1–0, 1 KO) impressed in his pro debut as he made quick work of Carlos Black (1–4) of Rockville, Maryland with a brutal first-round knockout. 

Rock, a Philadelphia native, showed patience in the early moments of fight, easily picking apart Black. The 2015 National Golden Gloves and U.S. National Amateur Heavyweight Champion unloaded a thunderous right hand that sent Black staggering towards the ropes, then ended it with a left hand just seconds later. Referee Michelle Myers reached the count of ten at 1:54 of the opening frame as a wobbly and dazed Black couldn’t get to his feet in time.

“I feel great. Hard work pays off,“ Rock said after. "This is just the beginning. I was a little nervous. I had to warm up a little bit. … I seen him bobble a little bit when I landed the right hand and then I got him with the left and that was it. But next time, I’ll start a little faster.”

In the first televised bout, junior featherweight Orlando Del Valle (22–2, 16 KOs) of Bayamon, Puerto Rico scored two knockdowns against the local fighter Thomas “K.O.” Snow (18–3, 12 KOs) of Capitol Heights, Maryland that were ultimately the difference in the fight as all three judges scored the fight 76-74 in favor of Del Valle. 

Del Valle pressured and stalked Snow before sending him down with a right hand with a minute left in the second round. Halfway through the third round, Del Valle caught Snow with a left hook that put him on the canvas for a second time. Del Valle, sensing Snow was hurt, followed it up with a heavy barrage of punches that staggered Snow but Snow made it out of the round. 

The rest of the bout was fought on even terms as Snow made a nice little rally the last couple rounds but it was not enough to score a victory.

“I had the edge from every judge because my boxing was superior,"Del Valle said."I applied pressure and I was the busier fighter. I dropped him twice, and it was a really dirty fight and hard to get through”

In the chief non-televised bout, Greenbelt, Maryland cruiserweight Sam “The Vanilla Gorilla” Crossed (3–0, 1 KO), who had a large contingency of fan support, was pushed by the tall, rangy southpaw Damion Reed (2–14–1, 1 KO) of Danville, Virginia before ultimately scoring a majority decision victory by scores of 40-36, 39-37, and 38-38.

Junior welterweight Abner Cotto (20–3, 9 KOs) of Caugas, Puerto Rico won a relatively easy six-round unanimous decision by scores of 60-54, 60-54, and 58-56 over the durable journeyman Samuel Amoako (21–11, 15 KOs), originally out of Ghana but now living in Baltimore, Maryland.

Cotto is the second cousin of Puerto Rican superstar Miguel Cotto. In other undercard bouts, Zhang Zhilei (9–0, 6 KOs), Mike Balogun (6–0, 5 KOs), and Junior Younan (9–0, 7 KOs) all won their bouts by first round technical knockouts over their overmatched opposition.

Correction: Abner Cotto is the second cousing of former middleweight champion Miguel Cotto. This story originally said he was Miguel’s first cousin. –GN

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