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LAS VEGAS (AP)

Boxer Floyd Mayweather Jr. was sentenced Wednesday to 90 days in jail after pleading guilty to reduced battery domestic violence and harassment charges before a Las Vegas judge.

The 34-year-old Mayweather also was ordered to complete 100 hours of community service and pay a $2,500 fine.

The plea deal avoids trial on felony allegations that he hit his ex-girlfriend and threatened two of their children during an argument at her home in September 2010.

Prosecutor Lisa Luzaich told Judge Melissa Saragosa that Mayweather has been in trouble before and hasn't been punished.

''He just continually gets himself into trouble and he is able to get himself out of it as well,'' she said. ''Essentially it is because he is who he is and is able to get away with everything.''

"The only thing that's going to get this man's attention is incarceration,'' the prosecutor said.

Mayweather stood still in a striped olive vest and made no reaction when the judge imposed the sentence. He was told to report to jail on Jan. 6.

Mayweather and his manager, Leonard Ellerbe, declined comment outside the courtroom.

Attorney Karen Winckler had argued that the public would benefit more if Mayweather performs 100 hours of community service with children.

Winckler said she wanted to confer with Mayweather before deciding whether to appeal.

The judge said she was swayed by Mayweather's admission that he hit Harris and twisted her arm, and that two of their children, ages 9 and 10 witnessed the attack.

Saragosa noted that police reported Mayweather threatened to kill or make Harris ''disappear,'' and that their 10-year-old son ran from the house and jumped a back gate to fetch security. Mayweather had taken cell phones belonging to Harris and the two boys, she said.

''Punishment is appropriate,'' Saragosa said. ''No matter who you are, you have consequences to your actions when they escalate to this level of violence.''

 

CANFIELD, OHIO (AP)

Former middleweight champion Kelly Pavlik has pleaded not guilty to a misdemeanor count charging him with driving an all-terrain vehicle while drunk.

The Vindicator newspaper in Youngstown reports Pavlik's attorney, Damian Billak, entered the plea on his behalf in a Mahoning County court. Billak says they look forward to addressing the issues in court.


Deputies say the 29-year-old Pavlik was arrested Wednesday night at his home outside Youngstown after a neighbor reported he crashed the ATV into a telephone pole and lamppost.


Pavlik in January finished two months of alcoholism treatment at the Betty Ford Center in Rancho Mirage, Calif. Earlier this month, trainer Jack Loew announced they had split ways.


Billak says Kelly plans to relocate to California.


A pre-trial hearing is set for Jan. 13.

ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. (AP)
 
Andre Ward staked his claim as the top super middleweight fighter in the world after defeating Carl Froch in a unanimous decision in the Super Six World Boxing Classic final on Saturday.
 
Ward retained his WBA championship and won the WBC super middleweight belt in the final bout of the unique tournament that stretched out over two years.
 
''One of the strongest assets I have is my mind. I kept my composure, I kept things under control. And we pulled it off,'' Ward said. ''I hope I did a good job. But we can still get better, believe it or not.''
 
Ward (25-0, 13 KOs) dictated the pace from the opening round, connecting on a series of left hooks to rattle his English opponent. One judge scored it 118-110 for Ward and two others had it 115-113.
 
''We wanted to fight inside and outside, and we pulled it off,'' Ward said. ''I was actually surprised at how slow Froch was. He was as slow as he was on tape.''
 
Froch (28-2, 20 KOs) did not get going until late, finally showing some overdue aggression in the 10th round.
 
''I wanted to put my shots together, but he moves around, and slips and slides. He's very good at that,'' Froch said. ''And that's why it was a bad night for me.''
 
Ward entered the six-man, 168-pound (76-kilogram) tournament as the underdog to the more experienced Froch, Mikkel Kessler and Arthur Abraham, but dominated the field en route to taking the title.
 
He won Saturday's bout despite injuring his left hand in training, and then again in the sixth round.
 
''Give credit to Andre. I never found myself in the zone where I could get my shots off and do what I wanted,'' Froch said. ''That's something I'm going to have to work on in the gym.''
 
Ward, 27, hasn't lost as an amateur or a professional since he was 14. He capped an outstanding amateur career by winning a gold medal for the U.S. in the 2004 Athens Olympics.
 
Ward and Froch had been slated to meet Oct. 29 before Ward was injured and the fight was rescheduled.
 
Ward smothered Froch when they were close, then was elusive enough to keep his distance from Froch for most of the bout. He landed 243 of 573 of his punches (42 percent), while Froch was a miserable 23 percent (156 of 683).
 
Froch, who lost and regained his WBC belt during the inaugural Super Six tournament, averaged only 56 punches per round after averaging 69 in his previous four fights.
 
''I never found myself in the zone where I could get my shots off and do what I want. That's something I'm going to have to work on in the gym.''
 
Froch, 34, went 4-1 in the previous rounds of the tournament. He opened with a 12-round decision over Andre Dirrell on Oct. 17, 2009, then rebounded from the first loss of his career — a 12-round decision to Kessler on April 24, 2010 — with decision victories over Abraham and Glen Johnson, respectively.
 
The tournament took a bit of a hit with various boxers dropping out because of injuries. Ward had wins over Kessler and Allan Green to reach the semifinals against Abraham, who advanced despite losing twice.
British fighter Amir Khan lost his appeal Sunday over his controversial loss Dec. 10 to Lamont Peterson in Washington, DC, that cost him his IBF and WBA light-welterweight titles.
 
Khan was penalized two points by referee Joe Cooper for pushing — charges the Englishman denied.
 
But on Sunday, the International Boxing Federation said it was happy with the decision taken by the referee.
 
"We found no discrepancies that would affect the outcome or the result of the fight," IBF championships chairman Lindsay Tucker said, according to the BBC.
 
"We decided not to order an immediate rematch on the basis of the fact that in the rules, if the referee feels that it's a foul, then that's his call to take a point. He did warn Khan several times before he actually took the first point."
 
Khan said after the majority decision defeat that he felt robbed of a rightful triumph and has put his plans to move up to the welterweight ranks on hold until he can fight a rematch against the American.
 
Cooper deducted points from Khan for pushing in the seventh and 12th rounds; those proved the difference in a fight in which two judges saw Peterson a 113-112 winner and the third gave it to Khan 115-100.
 
"It was like I was in there against two people, the referee and Lamont," Khan said.
 
"I had to push him away because he was coming in so low with his head. There was nothing I could do. It was either push him away or get head-butted."
WBO featherweight world champion Orlando Salido (37-11-2, 25 KOs) survived two knockdowns and a real scare to eventually stop Filipino Weng Haya (14-5, 8 KOs) in the eighth round of a scheduled 10-round non-title bout in Mexico.
 
For the first 2 3/4 rounds, Haya was completely on his bike, almost flat-out running from the stalking Salido. Then, with seconds left in the third round a perfectly-timed counter left hand dropped Salido hard. The featherweight titlist beat the count, but he was clearly dazed and saved by the bell.
 
Salido came out for the fourth, still on unsteady legs, and was dropped again, this time by a straight left hand.
 
The crafty veteran was able to fall back and rely on his deep knowledge of boxing fundamentals to play defense while regaining his composure. By the fifth, Salido had his legs back under him and began to box a more sound, intelligent fight.
 
The end of the contest came in the eighth, when a shot from Salido sent Haya to the ropes, obviously hurt. Salido rushed his injured opponent and dropped him. Haya would beat the count, but would be ruled unable to continue by the referee.
 
In the co-feature, former super flyweight world titlist,Cristian Mijares (44-6-2, 20 KOs), making his junior featherweight debut, stopped Alejandro Valdez (25-7-2, 19 KOs) at the 1:24 mark of the third round.
 
In the third, Mijares landed a combination that sent Valdez hard to the canvas. Somehow, the former world title challenger managed to beat the count and make it to his feet, but only long enough to sustain a few more heavy shots. At the end, it was a foot race between Valdez’s corner and the ref to save a helpless Valdez.

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