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Boxing: The Critics Only Remembered 10 Seconds Of Darchinyan's Caree

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  • Boxing: The Critics Only Remembered 10 Seconds Of Darchinyan's Caree

    THE CRITICS ONLY REMEMBERED 10 SECONDS OF DARCHINYAN'S CAREER
    Paul Upham Content Editor

    SecondsOut
    http://www.secondsout.com/World /news.cfm?ccs=225&cs=36492
    Nov 4

    Vic Darchinyan, out of the shadows: Tom Casino/Showtime

    By Paul Upham: Going into last Saturday's junior bantamweight world
    title unification match between Cristian Mijares and Vic Darchinyan in
    Carson, California on Showtime, many boxing writers had the Mexican
    a huge favourite to win. Some even suggested that Darchinyan would
    not even win a round. A reckless statement considering his past
    achievements, as if Darchinyan landing a punch on Mijares would be
    like trying to nail jelly to a wall.

    In a pre-fight poll of world boxing writers conducted by Showtime,
    of the thirty-two surveyed, only six had selected Darchinyan to
    win. At SecondsOut.com the Mijares selection was even more dominate,
    fourteen of fifteen picking him to win.

    It was as if the other 29 fights of his career had meant nothing. All
    Darchinyan's critics could remember were the 10 seconds when he was
    knocked out by Nonito Donaire in five rounds in July 2007, his only
    career defeat. They had chosen to forget his dominating wins over
    Dimitri Kirilov, Glenn Donaire, Luis Maldonado (who drew with Mijares),
    Irene Pacheco and Alejandro Montiel.

    Darchinyan came out of the shadows to win three world titles at 115lbs.

    What was lost on many was the simple fact that Darchinyan had improved
    since his demoralising defeat. While his renowned power was again on
    display against Mijares, his new levels of patience, tighter defence
    and boxing skills were spectacular in their own right.

    In a roundabout way, the loss to Donaire actually helped Darchinyan
    reach a new level of boxing ability. Not only did the taste of defeat
    allow him to refine himself and become a better boxer, it also gave
    other fighters the confidence that he could be beaten. Now, the defeat
    can be totalled by the Armenian as valuable experience.

    Looking back, there were also some mitigating circumstances surrounding
    Darchinyan's loss to Donaire.

    In readily accepting the match, Darchinyan dismissed any suggestion
    that Donaire would benefit from the first hand ring experience of
    his older brother Glen Donaire, who had fought Darchinyan in October
    2006, receiving a broken jaw in his loss. The two brothers were able
    to hatch a plan that outsmarted the then IBF flyweight world champion.

    Afterwards, trainer Billy Hussein had noted that during the loss,
    Darchinyan was not listening to his corner instructions and was just
    trying to knock Donaire out and get home as quick as possible. There
    was a reason to this. Darchinyan's Russian fiancée Olga Stovboun
    was back home in Sydney, pregnant with their first child Ruben. In
    hindsight, Darchinyan did not handle the dual pressures of a world
    title fight and an expectant partner on opposite sides of the planet
    very well.

    A change in trainer helped Darchinyan. Not that Billy Hussein was
    forced out. For Darchinyan's fight with Dimitri Kirilov in August,
    Hussein was committed to training his own brother Hussy in South Africa
    at the same time. With a burgeoning gymnasium to manage, Hussein also
    found it more difficult to commit to training Darchinyan in the USA
    before a world title fight for weeks at a time.

    When Darchinyan first turned professional under Jeff Fenech, Hussein
    was the assistant. When Fenech committed to training Mike Tyson in
    2005, Hussein became the head trainer. For the Kirilov fight, Hussein
    stepped aside and was replaced by Angelo Hyder, who had also worked
    with Fenech and Hussein on many occasions. He was also supplemented
    by Darchinyan's amateur trainer from Armenia, Vazgen Badalyan.

    In knocking out Kirilov in five rounds, Darchinyan looked better
    than ever. Hussein is convinced that having an Armenian voice in
    Darchinyan's corner helped him immensely. While Darchinyan is now
    fluent in a number of languages, in his mind during a fight, he still
    fights in Armenian. Having Badalyan in the corner reinforcing the
    basic fight plan to Darchinyan in the Armenian language helped him
    maintain his focus during the fury of combat. It was another reason
    for the improvement that was on display last weekend. An improvement
    that Mijares had not expected and something the many boxing writers,
    writing him off so adamantly before the fight, could not have foreseen.

    32 year-old Darchinyan's regiment of only sparring much heavier boxers
    also helped him prepare for dealing with Mijares. The "Raging Bull"
    had over one hundred rounds with Lovemore "Black Panther" Ndou, a
    former IBF junior welterweight title holder, who is facing Kermit
    Cintron at welterweight on November 15. If Darchinyan can handle
    himself physically against the size of Ndou, it gives him a tremendous
    advantage going into a fight with a boxer who had to weigh-in at
    115lbs only 24 hours earlier.

    After re-establishing his career with his knockout of Kirilov to
    win the IBF junior bantamweight belt, promoter Gary Shaw initially
    suggested that Darchinyan make a mandatory or easier optional
    defence. Darchinyan would hear nothing of it and with his manager
    Elias Nasser, they made phone call after phone call and sent email
    after email to Shaw requesting he make the unification match with
    WBC/WBA champion Mijares as quickly as possible. With the knockout
    loss to Donaire no doubt in mind, Mijares and his promoter Lou DiBella
    readily agreed.

    The dominant nine round knockout win is now history.

    Born Vakhtang Darchinyan in Vanadzor, Armenia on January 7, 1976
    the diminutive southpaw lived in a large house in the city with his
    father Rubik, a gas station owner, his mother Rena, a Russian language
    teacher and older sister Liana. His father was a wrestler who loved
    other tough sports like boxing and weight lifting and took him to
    the local gym at six years of age.

    A successful amateur boxing career followed with Darchinyan involved
    in 320 bouts, losing only 23. He won 152 international contests
    with 105 wins by knockout. While he did not win a medal at the
    2000 Olympic Games in Sydney, eliminated in the quarter-finals,
    he impressed three-division world champion Jeff Fenech at ringside,
    to the point where he arranged for Darchinyan to train full time with
    his Team Fenech and he eventually became an Australian citizen in 2004.

    After he turned professional in November 2000, the other members
    of Team Fenech would marvel as Darchinyan would talk about future
    opponents and nonchalantly say, "Yes, I fight him. I beat him."

    Many mistake Darchinyan's pre-fight boasts as arrogance. It is simply
    supreme confidence in his own ability to beat any boxer put in front
    of him.

    "Vic is the most confident fighter that I have ever been associated
    with," said promoter Gary Shaw, which is quite a statement considering
    he has previously worked with star names such as Lennox Lewis, Mike
    Tyson, Fernando Vargas, Shane Mosley, Ronald 'Winky' Wright, Arturo
    Gatti, Manny Pacquiao and the late Diego Corrales.

    "Vic never asks me what an opponent's style is," continued Shaw. "I
    never met anyone like him. I said to someone at ringside, if I was
    ever in a bar fight I'd want Vic to be there with me, because Vic
    would probably go after the biggest guy first. He'd even fight a rat
    on a ship. He would tell me, 'don't worry Gary, I'll chase the rat
    around and eventually the rat will get tired.'"

    Darchinyan 31-1-1 (25) now rules as the best junior bantamweight in
    the world, though, Mexican Fernando Montiel who has held the WBO strap,
    may disagree.

    The question is what is the biggest and best fight out there for
    Darchinyan now? Montiel and another Mexican Jorge Arce immediately
    come to mind. Though, don't be surprised if Darchinyan is looking
    even further up the levels of weight classes.

    Before his fight with Victor Burgos in March 2007, the main event on
    the card was the first of the Israel Vazquez versus Rafael Marquez
    thrilling trilogy. Darchinyan openly offered to challenge the winner
    of Marquez and Vazquez fight at junior featherweight at the time. "I
    am going to destroy them both," he had said. "If you can be knocked
    down, I can knock you out."

    On Saturday night in the ring immediately after defeating Mijares,
    standing alongside promoter Shaw, Darchinyan was interviewed by
    Showtime's Jim Gray.

    "We're going to fight (Oscar) De La Hoya at a catch-weight of 152
    pounds," Shaw declared, with a smile on his face. The American may
    have been joking. Darchinyan probably isn't.

    At the beginning of 2007, Darchinyan said that his ultimate goal was
    to beat Manny Pacquiao to become the No.1 boxer in the world pound
    for pound. Most doubted him. After his loss to Nonito, they laughed.

    Now, after his demolition of Mijares, while it would seem to be highly
    unlikely, the notion of Darchinyan facing Pacquiao one day cannot so
    easily be dismissed.

    --Boundary_(ID_rOJTAEtu+WjZ9p/vj5M2pQ) --
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