Highly-regarded prospect Art Hovhannisyan (15-0-2, 8 KO) won via 
split decision (95-93, 95-93, 92-96) over former WBA lightweight 
titleholder Miguel Acosta (29-6-2, 23 KO) in ShoBox's lightweight bout 
held Friday night at the Chumash Casino Resort in Santa Ynez, CA.
The fight started with Art Hovhannisyan taking the fight to Miguel 
Acosta. The Armenian began unleashing his dreaded bombs but kept 
missing, while Miguel Acosta was circling and throwing counters but 
hitting nothing but air. Then with just less than 10 seconds left in the
 round, Hovhannisyan caught Acosta with a thunderous overhand right and 
dropped him like a log. Miguel Acosta, visibly dazed and on wobbly 
knees, managed to survive to fight another round and beyond.
The first round knockdown looked to be so devastating that many in 
the audience thought it would be a short night for Miguel Acosta, but 
the Venezuelan embarked on an escape and evasion mission and spent the 
entire three minutes of the second round trying to clear the cobwebs in 
his head, refusing to engage Art Hovhannisyan in a fight, but the 
Armenian fighter let him be.
In the next round or two, the audience saw Art Hovhannisyan's 
confident but ineffective swagger along with Miguel Acosta employing the
 pedal, as the former champion, wary of his opponent's power, began 
riding the bike, while the Armenian with the right hand at cocked and 
loaded, tried to unload the one haymaker that would matter, but to no 
avail.
The fight then went on into a lot of movements, albeit lacking in 
action: Miguel Acosta bobbing and weaving, throwing feints but not 
landing shots on Art Hovhannisyan, who seemed to be confused by the 
circling and head movements of his opponent, and eventually forgetting 
to take his own shots. There were a lot of posturings but no hard 
contacts.
But in the fifth round, Miguel Acosta snuck a right hand that buckled
 Art Hovhannisyan's knees, causing his right glove to touch the canvas. 
It was a flush knockdown with Hovhannisyan more embarrassed than hurt, 
as the referee gave him the mandatory count. The result was the 
rejuvenation of Miguel Acosta as he became more active and threw his 
jabs more frequently from then on.
The next round was the story of the right hands, with both fighters 
causing damage to each other, but Miguel Acosta had the edge, landing a 
chopping right hand on Art Hovhannisyan in one of the exchanges.
By the seventh round, Miguel Acosta was getting more confident with 
his ability to penetrate Art Hovhannisyan's defenses. The Venezuelan was
 quicker and landing punches, while Hovhannisyan was getting frustrated 
and one-dimensional, relying mostly on his right hand.
The 8th and 9th rounds showed Miguel Acosta evading Art 
Hovhannisyan's bombs while potshotting him with jabs and counters. His 
smarts frustrated Art Hovhannisyan as he brought the fight to the center
 of the ring, began to dart in and out, sniping him then getting out of 
range, and making himself an elusive target of his opponent's counters, 
visibly frustrating Art Hovhannisyan.
The 10th and final round saw both fighters engaging each other in a 
tit-for-tat, see-saw battle trying to make the last impressions on the 
judges' scorecards. The fight was good while it lasted and showed how 
Miguel Acosta was able to withstand his opponent's power and perform 
under constant pressure, while Art Hovhannisyan was ushered into a rude 
awakening that if he wanted to be a force to reckon with in the 
division, he needs to work and improve more on his skill set.
Miguel Acosta had the edge in jabs (60 of 401, 15% vs. 28 of 204, 
14%) and total punches landed (124 of 594, 21% against 104 of 407, 26%) 
but lost in the power punches department. Art Hovhannisyan landed 76 of 
203 (37%) power punches compared to Miguel Acosta's 64 out of 193 (33%),
 which in the eyes of the judges proved to be the difference in the 
fight.
The story behind the crossroads fight between a 30-year-old Armenian 
prospect and a former champion from Venezuela showed a battle between a 
one-dimensional fighter with tremendous power in his right hand and a 
wily and skillful veteran with average firepower in his fists.
The two fighters fought an intriguing but entertaining fight that 
could have made a case for either fighter winning the fight. In the end 
though, two of the three judges gave more weight on punching power than 
the pitty-pats to help Art Hovhannisyan keep his undefeated run in his 
quest for a world championship belt.
Miguel Acosta: "I was very sure I won. Although he caught me in the 
first round I landed more punches throughout the fight. I knew my 
conditioning was good and it would carry me though the fight. I felt I 
was robbed.''
Art Hovhannisyan: "I knew it was a little close, but I definitely 
thought I won. After I dropped him, I kept trying for the spectacular 
knockout. My corner was telling me between rounds to calm down, but I 
thought I had him for sure. He was lucky the bell rang when it did."
"I'm very happy to get the win. Acosta can still fight. I think my 
conditioning played a great role in my performance, but at this level 
you need to be good in all facets. This fight was definitely a great 
learning experience for me.''
Note:  This article was previously published on 
Detroit Fight Sports Examiner
photo credit: Tom Casino/SHOWTIME