CARSON, Calif. – Brandun Lee survived the toughest test of his ascending six-year career by sneaking past Pedro Campa with a unanimous decision victory. 

Judges scored the 143-pound catchweight clash 99-91, 98-92, and 97-93 for Lee despite Campa outlanding Lee 186 to 158 and being the busier fighter by throwing 240 more punches; Campa also outlanded Lee with 61 more body shots. Showtime commentator and unofficial scorekeeper Steve Farhood scored the fight a draw at 95-95. 

Lee (28-0, 23 KOs) was the faster and more explosive fighter who effectively counterpunched the charging Campa (34-3-1, 23 KOs), who was coming off a seventh-round knockout loss to Teofimo Lopez Jr. in August.

The first round started off furiously, as Lee left his corner and unleashed powerful right hands and a left hook that stopped Campa in his tracks. With 14 previous first-round finishes on his resume, Lee appeared to be looking to end it early, but to his credit, Campa also connected with several crushing shots. The first three minutes set the tone for the rest of the 10-round bout. 

Campa started swelling a bit in the second as his face reddened. Lee’s best punch in the round was a counter left hook that resulted in the ejection of Campa’s mouthpiece.

In the third round, Campa connected with a double left hook, one to the body, one to the head, but his face was getting increasingly busted. Campa’s mouthpiece flew out again, this time without absorbing a punch, but Lee immediately made him eat a left hook at full impact. 

Chants of “Brandun Lee” rained down for the native Southern California upstart in the fourth, and Lee acknowledged them by raising both of his arms, seemingly asking the fans to dial up the chants even more.

Campa rebounded remarkably in the fifth round with an assault that featured a total of 31 punches landed on Lee – including several lethal left hooks. 

Campa lost his mouthpiece yet again in the sixth due to a huge left hook, prompting referee Jack Reiss to give Campa a stern warning. Campa continued to dig in and delivered thudding combinations to the body. Proud of his attack, Campa raised both arms and returned to his corner.

As Campa was closing the distance and making the fight more even, Lee clipped Campa in the seventh round with yet another left hook that stopped his momentum. Campa lost his mouthpiece once again moments after, and Reiss said “no mas” as he put it back in his mouth. 

Both fighters appeared a bit fatigued in round eight, but it was Campa who remained relentless with his pressure. 

The ninth round was a spectacular one featuring the best back-and-forth action of the fight. Lee left his back foot and pressed on the gas to sustain a heavy attack as a defenseless Campa came forward. Campa connected with a barrage of body blows as well. Campa eventually outlanded Lee 26 to 17 but all three judges gave Lee the round.

The final round featured Lee utilizing plenty of movement and landing the more effective shots, and all three judges awarded him again.  

Lee closed the fight strong, seemingly needing to in order to survive on the cards, but the fight was already in the bank by the last two rounds – at least on the judge’s cards. 

The fight served as Showtime’s co-main event for the Premier Boxing Champions card headlined by Sebastian Fundora and Brian Mendoza.

Manouk Akopyan is a sports journalist, writer, and broadcast reporter. He’s also a member of the Boxing Writers Association of America and the MMA Journalists Association. He can be reached on Twitter, Instagram, LinkedIn, and YouTube at @ManoukAkopyan, through email at manouk[dot]akopyan[at]gmail.com, or via www.ManoukAkopyan.com.