WEYMOUTH ABC held their dinner boxing show at the Weymouth Pavilion in front of a full house, boasting a range of competitors in an action-packed evening.

Storm Look, 19, landed the punch of the night as he defeated Lee Davis of Bristol in the senior contest.

Look took the initiative straight from the off, landing a sequence of powerful strikes, putting Davis down for an eight count as he marginally saw out the round.

The momentum very much continued after the break as Look continued the ambush, hitting Davis with a straight right and sending him down to the canvas.

The referee had no choice but to stop the bout.

Weymouth’s super heavyweight Lee Thompson defeated Marcus Kelly of St Agnes.

Having beaten Kelly only six weeks ago in the Southern Division Novice Final, his opponent was after redemption.

He almost got his sweet revenge when a left hook resulted in Thompson going down for an eight count early on, settling the first round.

But the 28-year-old came back at Kelly with several jabs and uppercuts, taking the second.

The final round was free for all, seeing Thompson once again walk away the winner.

First up for the host club was William Mullen, 13, who faced off against Joshua Bennett from Dorchester in a schoolboy skills bout.

The next schoolboy contest saw another Weymouth local, Oliver Carr, come up against Lenny Butler of National Smelting Club in Bristol.

Butler went on the attack from the off and didn’t look back as he ran out with a unanimous points victory.

In the junior girl bout, Yeovil’s Megan Murphy-Kaute marginally edged out Weymouth’s Maisey Wickham on a split decision.

In what was an enthralling contest, it was Murphy-Kaute who took advantage of Wickham’s slow start to secure the first round.

This acted as a wake-up call for the 15-year-old who clawed it back to a round apiece after an impressive combination of quick punches.

Victory hinged on the final round but it was Murphy-Kaute who impressed the judges and eventually won the contest.

Weymouth junior Jack Barlowe, 16, was also victorious when he faced off against Charlie Watt of Heart of Devon.

Barlowe’s strategy was to seemingly occupy the outside, a method which cost him the first round.

He took the same approach in the second round, but this time demonstrated quick combinations and fast counter punching to level the scores.

Once again, it came down to the third and final round where the skill of Barlowe proved enough to earn a close split points win.

Elsewhere, Weymouth’s Lewis Chambers lost out to Adam Birch from Golden Ring Southampton on a very close points decision.

Chambers was competing in his first bout for almost a year and it showed, as his work rate was not enough to win the first round.

His performance level rose and he was rewarded when he landed several combinations, levelling up the scores.

The final round was relatively equal, but Birch saw his arm raised in the end. Weymouth-based Polish boxer Macies Sieradzi beat Dan McClure of Wessex after the referee stopped the bout following a four-punch onslaught.

Michas Jankowiak, also from Poland, equally found success when he ran out a split points winner against Sturminster Newton’s Craig Brownhill.

Having both won their first bouts last week, maintaining their undefeated streaks meant it was all to fight for.

With Browngill pushing Jankowiak all the way, it was the Polish fighter who narrowly claimed the bout.

President David Nelmes thanked the sponsors, helpers and competitors on the night.