Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Boxing: Darchinyan Undisputed Champion

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Boxing: Darchinyan Undisputed Champion

    DARCHINYAN UNDISPUTED CHAMPION
    Peter Kogoy

    The Australian
    Nov 3 2008
    Australia

    VIC Darchinyan was at his devastating brutal best, scoring a stunning
    knockout win in a historic super flyweight world title unification bout
    against Mexican champion Cristian Mijares in Los Angeles yesterday.

    Armenian-born Darchinyan, who held the IBF version, knocked Mijares
    down with a vicious uppercut in the first round and finished him off
    in the ninth with a stunning pile-driving left.

    Darchinyan destroyed the much-hyped Mexican opponent to record his
    25th win by knockout in a 31-fight professional career.

    In the end referee Lou Moret had little choice but to end the fight
    with the badly beaten Mijares, 28, lying flat on his back.

    "Nobody gave me a chance, but I believe I'm a much smarter fighter
    today than I was a few years ago," a jubilant Darchinyan said in a
    phone hook-up yesterday.

    "There was little point in rushing him after I got him good in the
    first round.

    "I was just as happy to pick him off one punch at a time until I got
    him with a good punch in the ninth.

    "As I found out later all three judges had me well in front on their
    scorecards before I delivered the knockout punch."

    Mijares, boxing's new pin-up boy and a Mexican television personality
    when not fighting, was the short-priced favourite, with bookmakers
    from Alice Springs to Las Vegas not giving the hard-hitting Darchinyan,
    a southpaw, much of a chance.

    The only time Mijares seemed to trouble Darchinyan during the bout came
    in the fourth round when he had the Sydney-based fighter doubled over
    from a low blow that prompted a warning on the run from referee Moret.

    Going into the unification fight, Mijares was rated by the respected
    journal Ring Magazine as the seventh-best boxer in the world
    pound-for-pound.

    The US media had also written off Darchinyan. The lack of respect
    leading up to the bout was like waving a red flag in front of the
    fighter dubbed Raging Bull.

    Darchinyan had vowed to prove the doubters wrong and from the opening
    round Mijares could not match Darchinyan's power.

    The upper-cut that flattened Mijares came with 20 seconds left in round
    one, allowing Mijares to stumble to his feet and be saved by the bell.

    The bout-ending left came late in the ninth, with just eight seconds
    left, but Mijares was unable to get up.

    The fight was historic because it was the first time the super
    flyweight division has been unified, almost seven years to the
    day since Kostya Tszyu unified the lightweight division by beating
    Zab Judah.

    Darchinyan went into the bout as the International Boxing Federation
    champion while Mijares was the reigning World Boxing Council and
    World Boxing Association title-holder.

    Earlier at the Los Angeles venue Darchinyan's Sydney stable-mate
    Victor Oganov was controversially beaten in his super middleweight
    world title elimination fight against American Andre Direll.

    Russian-born Oganov protested angrily when referee Ray Corona stopped
    the fight 30 seconds into the sixth round.

    Oganov was hit with an upper-cut before the stoppage and had taken
    a barrage of blows in the earlier rounds, but was still on his feet
    and ready to continue when the fight was halted.

    "The main thing is the safety of the fighter," Corona said. "He took
    some heavy blows."

    Oganov was also not given much of a chance of victory, with
    unbeaten Direll, a bronze medallist at the 2004 Athens Olympics,
    the overwhelming favourite and promoted as one of the division's
    top prospects.

    The win gives Direll a shot at the World Boxing Organisation's super
    middleweight title.
Working...
X