Account
Don’t have an account? Sign up
Help and preferences
Help
Settings & privacy
Kelvin Davis Edges Peter Dobson By Split Decision In Ugly 10-Rounder
Article hero background
Kelvin Davis Edges Peter Dobson By Split Decision In Ugly 10-Rounder
Link copied!
22 hrs ago
22 hrs ago
3 min read
Kelvin Davis succeeded in his return to his hometown Saturday night.
The southpaw was far from impressive, however, in beating Peter Dobson by split decision in their 10-round welterweight fight at Scope Arena in Norfolk, Virginia.
Davis didn’t deliver the knockout he predicted and allowed Dobson to remain competitive on a card headlined by his younger brother, Keyshawn, vs. Nahir Albright.
Judge Jim Ansbro scored eight rounds for the Bronx’s Dobson, who won 98-92 on his card. Judges Bill Clancy (99-91) and Brian Costello (97-93) scored nine and seven rounds for the much taller Davis, who improved to 16-1 (8 KOs).
CompuBox counted more punches landed for Dobson (131 of 422) than Davis (109 of 301).
Davis, 29, lost a majority decision to Albright in his previous fight, also a 10-rounder, 11 months ago at Scope Arena.
He insisted his return to the ring would be different, but he wasn’t assertive during the second half of the fight after getting off to a solid start.
Davis occasionally connected with straight lefts, yet Dobson was more active and was the regular aggressor. Davis seemed content to try to potshot while working off his back foot.
Dobson, 36, dropped to 17-4 (10 KOs). The New York City firefighter has lost four of his past five fights, each on points.
Santana Scores Controversial Win Over Cruz
Dominican featherweight contender Yan Santana stayed undefeated thanks to a wider win over Cristian Cruz on two of the scorecards than he seemed to deserve in a 10-round bout.
Santana, a 14-1 favorite according to several sportsbooks, won a unanimous decision but Cruz pushed him. Judge Jim Ansbro had it the closest, 96-94, but Brian Costello (97-93) and Bill Clancy (98-92) scored seven and eight rounds for Santana (17-0, 13 KOs)
Tijuana’s Cruz (24-8-2, 12 KOs), the son of former IBF featherweight champ Cristobal Cruz, took Santana’s power well, fought off his front foot for much of their closely contested bout and landed almost as many punches overall. CompuBox credited Santana for connecting on 153 of 482 attempts, just five more than Cruz, who landed 148 of 553.
Santana is the WBO’s No. 7 contender for its 126-pound champ, Rafael Espinoza, and brashly spoke out knocking out WBC champ Bruce “Shu Shu” Carrington before he encountered Cruz. Nothing about this performance indicated, however, that the 26-year-old is ready to challenge those two unbeaten champions.
Santana went 10 rounds for the third time in his past four fights. Cruz hasn’t been knocked out in 34 professional fights.
Keon Davis Dominates Humaine
Keon Davis, Keyshawn’s younger brother, easily outboxed Edwine Humaine in the six-round junior middleweight match.
The 6-foot-3 Davis had an eight-inch height advantage, superior skill and athleticism that enabled him to consistently hit Humaine with various power punches. Judges Mark D’Atillio, Troyce Stamey and Paul Wallace favored Davis’ combination punching, eye-catching right hands and regular body work, and credited the 24-year-old prospect with a 60-54 win.
Davis (5-0, 3 KOs) went the distance for the first time in four fights since the Norfolk native made his pro debut in November 2024. The Haitian-born Humaine (9-3, 7 KOs), of Springfield, Massachusetts, lost a third straight fight, all on points.
Humaine scored with two right hands with just under a minute to go in the fourth round, but Davis prevented him from gaining any momentum by going on the offensive. Davis’ hard right snapped back Humaine’s head and knocked him into the ropes with about 10 seconds to go in the fourth.
Davis dominated the fifth and sixth rounds to ensure a shutout on the cards.
Crocklem Comfortably Outboxes Howard
Junior lightweight prospect Dedrick Crocklem remained unbeaten by outclassing Eric Howard in the opening fight.
Crocklem (7-0, 3 KOs), a 21-year-old southpaw from Tacoma, Washington, shut out Howard by the same score, 60-54, on the cards of D’Atillio, Stamey and Wallace. Crocklem couldn’t hurt Howard (7-5, 2 KOs), of Lutz, Florida, but he completely controlled the action with his jab and straight left hand and slipped most of his 36-year-old’s punches.
Keith Idec is a senior writer and columnist for The Ring. He can be reached on X @idecboxing
Results
Article thumbnail
Next
The Idec Index: Can Keyshawn Davis Atone For Hometown Meltdown?
RELATED ARTICLES
The Fight Preview: Keyshawn Davis vs. Nahir Albright II
News
The Fight Preview: Keyshawn Davis vs. Nahir Albright II
Davis: Albright beat Martin, but neither on my level
News
Davis: Albright beat Martin, but neither on my level
Brian Norman begins revival with Ronnie Shields
Featured Article
Brian Norman begins revival with Ronnie Shields
RELATED ARTICLES
The Fight Preview: Keyshawn Davis vs. Nahir Albright II
News
The Fight Preview: Keyshawn Davis vs. Nahir Albright II
Davis: Albright beat Martin, but neither on my level
News
Davis: Albright beat Martin, but neither on my level
Brian Norman begins revival with Ronnie Shields
Featured Article
Brian Norman begins revival with Ronnie Shields
Can you beat Coppinger?

Lock in your fantasy picks on rising stars and title contenders for a shot at $100,000 and exclusive custom boxing merch.

Can you beat Coppinger?
Partners
  • Strategic
    Partners
  • Strategic Partners partner logo
  • Heavyweight
    Partners
  • Heavyweight Partners partner logo
  • Heavyweight Partners partner logo
  • Heavyweight Partners partner logo
  • Heavyweight Partners partner logo
  • Heavyweight Partners partner logo
  • Heavyweight Partners partner logo
  • Heavyweight Partners partner logo
  • Heavyweight Partners partner logo
  • Heavyweight Partners partner logo
  • Heavyweight Partners partner logo
  • Heavyweight Partners partner logo
  • Heavyweight Partners partner logo
  • Heavyweight Partners partner logo
  • Heavyweight Partners partner logo
  • Heavyweight Partners partner logo
  • Heavyweight Partners partner logo
  • Heavyweight Partners partner logo
  • Heavyweight Partners partner logo
  • Heavyweight Partners partner logo
  • Heavyweight Partners partner logo
  • Middlewight
    Partners
  • Middlewight Partners partner logo
  • Middlewight Partners partner logo
  • Middlewight Partners partner logo
  • Middlewight Partners partner logo
  • Middlewight Partners partner logo
  • Middlewight Partners partner logo
  • Lightweight
    Partners
  • Lightweight Partners partner logo
  • Lightweight Partners partner logo
  • Lightweight Partners partner logo
  • Partners
  • Partners partner logo
  • Partners partner logo
  • Partners partner logo
  • Partners partner logo
  • Promoters
  • Promoters partner logo
  • Promoters partner logo
  • Promoters partner logo
  • Promoters partner logo
  • Promoters partner logo
  • Promoters partner logo