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Boxing on the up and up in Australia

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  • Boxing on the up and up in Australia

    Boxing on the up and up in Australia
    Adrian Warren, AAP News - Australasia
    Feb 25, 2007


    SYDNEY, Feb 25 AAP - At a time when Australian boxing is going through
    an up phase and has a bright future, it will finally pay homage to its
    heroes of the past. In the space of a few weeks, Australia now looks
    poised to have as many world champions as at any stage in its
    chequered history. The peak period was back in early 2005, when Kostya
    Tszyu, Vic Darchinyan and Robbie Peden each enjoyed world champion
    status. Flyweight Darchinyan and junior welterweight Lovemore Ndou
    presently hold IBF world title belts, with Anthony Mundine or Sam
    Soliman to be crowned the WBA super middleweight champion next month
    when they fight for the vacant title in Sydney. Just marginally behind
    in status is Queensland excitement machine Michael Katsidis, who won
    the WBO interim lightweight title with a thrilling stoppage win over
    Britain's Graham Earl last weekend. Throw WBF women's featherweight
    world champion Sharon Anyos into the mix and Australia is enjoying
    unprecedented success on the international boxing scene. "It's most
    probably the richest we've been in boxing since the glory days of the
    sport, I don't think I've ever seen it in a healthier state," esteemed
    trainer Johnny Lewis said. "I suppose we sort of started to go into a
    backflip with the closure of the Sydney Stadium in 1970, I think it
    almost sounded the death knell of boxing. "We certainly had good
    fighters sparingly. In every decade (since) we've had a good fighter."
    Those glory days, which Lewis felt were back in the 1950s and `60s,
    are set to receive lasting recognition, along with the rest of
    Australian pugilism's colourful history, with a boxing section at
    Melbourne's National Sports Museum opening next year.

    "We've had 11 world champions in this country, we've got a tremendous
    history in boxing which surpasses any other sport in my prejudiced
    view," Australian National Boxing Hall of Fame President Gus Mercurio
    said. "It's been said that you shake any family tree in Australia and
    a boxer will fall out." The list of quality pugs in the present era
    doesn't end with the handful of current world champions. Recent world
    title holders like Peden and Gairy St Clair and frequent world title
    contenders Paul Briggs, Danny Green, Shannan Taylor, Nader Hamdan and
    Hussein and Nedal Hussein flesh out a strong supporting cast, all of
    whom still have aspirations of winning the ultimate prize. Katsidis
    heads the younger brigade of emerging stars which also includes
    featherweight Billy Dib, junior middleweights Rob Medley and Daniel
    Geale, super middleweights Victor Oganov and Jamie Pittman and
    lightweight Leonardo Zappavigna. While Lewis bemoaned the reduction in
    the previously prolific production line of great Aboriginal fighters
    bar Mundine and Peden, he noted other communities were stepping into
    the breach. "You've got to have the hunger, that's what makes the
    fighters and at this point of time the hungriest kids in this country
    are the Lebanese kids," Lewis said. "The Husseins and Nader Hamdan,
    those guys have really done well for us over the last decade." Lewis
    recently shifted his training base to the famous old City of Sydney
    Police Citizens Youth club in Woolloomooloo, the club which spawned
    former world bantamweight champion Jimmy Carruthers. Another gym fast
    gaining recognition for its professionalism and depth is south-western
    Sydney's Grange Old School Boxing club where Ndou is
    based. Ironically, the man in the vanguard of the current revival,
    Darchinyan, remains one of Australian sport's best kept secrets. An
    exciting power puncher now earning acclaim in the US, Darchinyan has
    an impressive 27-0 record (21 KOs), but the personable Armenian-born
    boxer barely registers a blip on Australia's overworked sporting
    radar. Darchinyan, who defends his IBF and IBO titles against Mexican
    Victor Burgos next month, hoped the expanding list of world champions
    would help boost his unjustifiably low profile. "It's great, it's very
    good," Darchinyan said of the recent rise in Australian boxing
    fortunes. "When I was by myself and the only world champion, I
    couldn't see much support from Australia. "I think if we have more
    champions Australia is going to support me.' Triple world champion
    Jeff Fenech, who formerly trained Darchinyan, said his old charge was
    the leader of Australian boxing and called him for to be granted the
    recognition his feats deserved. "He's a proven commodity in the US,
    it's a pity that we don't give him the credit he deserves in his own
    country," Fenech said. AAP aw/jds
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