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Heavyweight Lavar
Johnson Scores Devastating 18-Second KO; Rosa, Quach Also Win,
May
15, 2009, at 11 p.m. ET/PT on SHOWTIME, Save Mart Center, Fresno,
California
FRESNO,
Calif.
(May 15, 2009) – Previously unbeaten hometown
favorite Billy Evangelista lost by disputed,
controversial second-round disqualification to Mike Aina
Friday in the main event of the inaugural Strikeforce
Challengers telecast on SHOWTIME.\
At the finish,
neither fighter was satisfied with the outcome at the Save Mart
Center.
Evangelista (9-1), of
Fresno, was disqualified for “intentionally” kneeing Aina (12-6-1),
of Hilo, Hawaii, in the head while the Hawaiian fighter was down.
The rule is a fighter can knee a downed opponent to the body, but
not the head.
“I feel bad at what
happened, but I am definitely planning to protest,’’ Evangelista
said. “Nothing I did was on purpose. I thought I had timed the knee
perfectly and that he was on his feet when it was delivered.’’
Said Aina: “No one
likes a fight to finish this way. I don’t look at it as a win for
me, and he should not look at it as a loss for him. It should have
been a no contest.’’
The five-fight
telecast aired on SHOWTIME at
11 p.m. ET/PT
(delayed on the west coast).
In other SHOWTIME
fights: Sarah Kaufman (9-0) of
Victoria, British Columbia, Canada, remained unbeaten with a
hard-fought unanimous decision over determined Miesha Tate
(6-2) of Olympia, Wash., in a women’s match at 135 pounds;
Lavar Johnson (12-3) of Fresno scored an 18-second, first-round
knockout over Carl Seumanutafa (4-3), a Samoan based in
San Francisco, in a heavyweight fight; San Antonio’s Aaron
Rosa (12-2) registered a 4:29 first-round TKO (choke) over
Anthony Ruiz (21-13) of Coarsegold, Calif., takes on in
a light heavyweight bout and Bao Quach
(16-9-1) of Huntington Beach, Calif., won a unanimous decision over
Tito Jones (6-3) of Sacramento, Calif., in a
featherweight scrap.
In an eagerly
anticipated women’s bout, Kaufman outlasted Tate in a non-stop,
see-saw battle. It was the first time Kaufman was taken the
distance, but she was the stronger fighter at the finish and won by
the scores of 29-28 on all three scorecards.
A relentless puncher
with good stamina, Kaufman bloodied Tate’s nose, but was taken to
the mat twice, the first times she has ever been down.
“I give Miesha credit
but I am very happy with my performance,’’ Kaufman said. “I wish I
could have done more in the second round, but three rounds go by so
fast. I wish they’d let us fight five-minute rounds like the guys.
Tate took down
Kaufman in the closing seconds of the first round and in the first
35 seconds of the second. She kept Kaufman on her back for much of
the second but couldn’t sustain her momentum in the third.’’
Johnson, a standout
football player as an outside linebacker ay Madera (Calif.) High,
caught an off balance Seumanutafa with a quick, brutal right
uppercut that knocked the Samoan unconscious and sent him face down
to the canvas. Seumanutafa tried to shoot with his head down but was
nailed flush.
“This is exactly what
I had practiced. I had watched tapes of Carl and knew he might try
that kind of thing.
“This was an
important win for my. I had my two young sons with me. No way was I
going to let them see their Dad get beat up. No way they’d listen to
me after that.’’
Rosa rallied after
getting caught early. “He got me, but then I rocked him good with a
right hand off the cage,’’ Rosa said. “I feel
good. This was a big win and I am grateful for Strikeforce giving me
this opportunity. He was a slick guy but he didn’t do anything that
I wasn’t prepared for. did, slammed Ruiz, and was in control until
the referee stopped the bout.
The victory was the
second in a row for Rosa, who won the first 10 fights of his career.
In the telecast’s
opening bout, Quach survived two knockdowns in the final round to
win by the scores of 29-28 on the three judges scorecards. Winning
for the 10th time in 11 starts, Quach appeared hurt after
going down a second time but Jones didn’t follow up.
“I stuck to my game
plan, which was to stick (kick) and move, and I did,’’ Quach said.
“I know I won the first two rounds and he definitely got me in the
third. I was dazed but he didn’t capitalize. But until the third
round, he didn’t do anything. There was no doubt in my mind that I
won the fight.’’
Non-televised results:
Ben “The Teacher” Holscher (2-0) of Fresno submitted
(rear naked choke) Cody Cantebury (1-4-1) of Sacramento
at 2:47 of the first round (160 pounds); Thomas Diagne
(1-0) of San Jose, Calif., won a decision over Kaleo Kwan
(7-10) of Kailua, Hawaii (lightweights); Fabricio “Morango”
Camoes (10-4) of Brazil submitted (rear naked choke)
Torrance Taylor (7-6-1) of Cleveland, Ohio at 3:31 of the first
round (155 pounds) and Spencer Herns (1-0) of San Jose
won a majority three-round decision over Chad Sutton
(2-2) of Fresno in a bout at 185 pounds.
SHOWTIME will replay
Friday’s telecast on Thursday, May 21 at 10 p.m. ET/PT on SHOWTIME
TOO. It will be available ON DEMAND beginning Monday, May 18.
Mauro
Ranallo
called
the action from cageside with Stephen Quadros and
Pat Miletich serving as expert analysts.
The executive producer is David Dinkins, Jr., with
Richard Gaughan producing and Rick Phillips directing.
Photos: Daisy
Rosas/Strikeforce





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