Amir Khan vs. Lamont Peterson

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Date10 December 2011
Title(s) on the lineWBA and IBF Light Welterweight championships
Boxer United Kingdom Amir Khan
Capital Showdown
Date10 December 2011
VenueConvention Center, Washington, D.C.
Title(s) on the lineWBA and IBF Light Welterweight championships
Tale of the tape
Boxer United Kingdom Amir Khan United States Lamont Peterson
Nickname "King" "Havoc"
Hometown Bolton, Greater Manchester Washington, District of Columbia
Purse $1,100,000 $650,000
Pre-fight record 26–1 (18 KO) 29–1–1 (15 KO)
Age 25 years 27 years, 10 months
Height 5 ft 8+12 in (174 cm) 5 ft 9 in (175 cm)
Weight 139 lb (63 kg) 140 lb (64 kg)
Style Orthodox Orthodox
Recognition WBA and IBF
Light Welterweight Champion
The Ring
No. 1 Ranked Light Welterweight
IBF
No. 1 Ranked Light Welterweight
WBA
No. 12 Ranked Light Welterweight
The Ring
No. 6 Ranked Light Welterweight
Result
Peterson defeats Khan via split decision

Amir Khan vs Lamont Peterson, billed as Capital Showdown, was a boxing match for Khan's WBA (Super) & IBF light welterweight titles.[1][2] The fight took place in the Convention Center in Washington, D.C., United States, on 10 December 2011. Khan was making the first defense of his IBF belt against his mandatory challenger.[3]

Golden Boy Promotions CEO Richard Schaefer announced in a conference in London to officially kick off "Capital Showdown: Khan vs. Peterson".

The tour touts an HBO-televised bout featuring WBA (Super) & IBF light welterweight champion Amir Khan of Bolton, England, in the first defense of his IBF belt against mandatory challenger Lamont Peterson of Washington, D.C., which was slated for December 10 in Peterson's home town.

Khan had won eight consecutive fights, four of them by knockout. Peterson won an IBF eliminator with a 12th-round stoppage of Victor Cayo (26-2, 18 KOs) in July, earning the organization's No. 1 contender status and the right to challenge Khan.

The fight

The fight was fought in front of a packed house at the Convention Center, with an announced audience of 8,647. After an extremely close, evenly matched fight for 12 rounds, the heavily pro-Peterson crowd was thrilled by the split decision announced in Peterson's favor. Khan scored a knockdown in the first round, but was penalized twice by referee Joe Cooper, once for excessive shoving with the forearm and later for hitting on the break. The points proved to be the difference between the two scorecards that favored Peterson.[4]

HBO's unofficial scorer Harold Lederman had Khan the winner 113–112 while ESPN had it 114–111 for Khan.

Aftermath

Controversy

After the bout Khan, complained about the referee[5] and made accusations of impropriety that the judges' scorecards had been "interfered with"[6] by a man at ringside who celebrated with Peterson after the decision. This man was later identified as Mustafa Ameen, a figure affiliated with the IBF but who had no apparent reason to be involved. Khan's camp launched an appeal with the IBF in December, principally on the grounds of "miscalculation of the scoring," and "inappropriate conduct by officials" and in January 2012, after reviewing the evidence, the WBA ordered a rematch.[7]

Despite rumours, on 3 March 2012, the WBA did not reinstate Khan as the WBA Super Light-welterweight Champion.[8]

However, on 8 May 2012, it emerged that Peterson failed a drug test, testing positive for a banned substance thought to be synthetic testosterone.[9][10] The Nevada Athletic Commission denied Peterson a licence to box, and the fight was cancelled. The WBA reinstated Khan as champion, although the IBF did not.[11][12]

Main card

International broadcasting

References

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