Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Vic Darchinyan wins super flyweight world-title bout with T. Rojas

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

  • Vic Darchinyan wins super flyweight world-title bout with T. Rojas

    Vic Darchinyan wins super flyweight world-title bout with Mexico's
    Tomas Rojas in second round knock-out
    From: AFP
    December 13, 2009 1:42PM


    Vic Darchinyan retains world titles VIC Darchinyan knocked out
    Mexico's Tomas Rojas in the second round today to retain his World
    Boxing Council and World Boxing Association super flyweight titles.

    The Armenian-born fighter, who is based in Marrickville in Sydney's
    inner west, flattened Rojas after two minutes and 54 seconds of the
    second round, improving to 33-2 with one drawn by taking his 27th
    victory inside the distance in the matchup of southpaw stars.

    Rojas fell to 32-11 after his first loss in more than two years.

    Gallery: Boxing champion Vic Darchinyan

    Boxing Central: Latest fight stories and great galleries

    The Mexican landed more punches and kept Darchinyan on the move over
    the first five minutes, but the champion was simply waiting for the
    right moment to strike.

    "He was punching me. He was making more punches than me. But I knew my
    time would come,'' Darchinyan said. "I just took my time. I used my
    skills. It's about mind. It's not just power. I had to mentally be
    ready.''

    Darchinyan's moment came late in the second round when a left to the
    head set up a powerful left to the chest that Rojas tried to duck.

    Instead, the Mexican moved his head directly into the path of
    Darchinyan's punch and was caught on the chin and then hard in the
    chest before falling onto his back.

    "He was going to duck it. I knew it,'' Darchinyan said. "I didn't go
    for his head. I went for his chest.
    He put his head right in the way of my punch.'' Seconds later,
    Darchinyan had the victory, improving to 11-2 in world title fights.

    "I like when opponents hit me and think I'm open and they can get
    more,'' Darchinyan said. "I know he's going to come and I'm going to
    get him.''

    Darchinyan, who stopped Mexico's Jorge Arce in 11 rounds in a February
    title defence, was coming off a unanimous decision loss to Ghana's
    Joseph Agbeko last July when he moved up to fight for the
    International Boxing Federation bantamweight crown.
Working...
X