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Boxing: Vic Darchinyan Denied Again in Bantamweight Title Bid

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  • Boxing: Vic Darchinyan Denied Again in Bantamweight Title Bid

    Bad Left Hook.com
    April 6 2012


    Yamanaka vs Darchinyan Results: Vic Darchinyan Denied Again in
    Bantamweight Title Bid


    by Scott Christ on Apr 6, 2012 12:02 PM EDT in Boxing Results and
    Post-Fight Analysis

    Vic Darchinyan dropped to 0-3 in bantamweight title fights this
    morning in Japan, losing a fairly wide decision to WBC titleholder
    Shinsuke Yamanaka on scores of 117-111, 116-112, and 116-112. It's the
    second straight loss for the Armenian brawler, and without question
    the best win to date for the 29-year-old Yamanaka.

    Darchinyan (37-5-1, 27 KO) is 36 years old and you have to wonder how
    much he's got left competing at the top levels. He was sorely
    outclassed by Anselmo Moreno in his last fight, and he's just 3-4
    fighting above 115 pounds in his career, with his best win coming over
    a tired-looking Yonnhy Perez, who retired without ever fighting again.

    Darchinyan has talked about going into MMA, and reports from Australia
    were that this would be his last boxing fight before venturing into
    that world. But MMA's lowest weight class is 125 pounds, and there's
    not big money in it. If it's something he wants to do for pride or
    just for the hell of it, and he's not expecting much financially, then
    he might as well, I guess -- why not? He's unlikely to become a star,
    though, since MMA stars are simply not that small, which isn't much
    different than in boxing.



    But let's move on from Darchinyan and talk about Yamanaka (16-0-2, 11
    KO), who now joins the upper echelon of the bantamweight division.
    With Abner Mares set to move out on April 21, and Nonito Donaire
    already gone, Anselmo Moreno is for all intents and purposes the
    world's No. 1 bantamweight. But after Moreno, who's to say that
    Yamanaka isn't now the No. 2 man? Joseph Agbeko is still out there
    with a stronger resume, but he's lost three of his last four (all to
    top fighters, but still). Yamanaka is in a position to become a
    serious player at 118, even if that means staying at home, because the
    American TV world is nearly out of the division, basically, at least
    in the short-term.

    Takahiro Aoh (23-2-1, 10 KO) retained his WBC super featherweight
    title with a 12-round decision win over Thailand's Terdsak Kokietgym,
    formerly known as Terdsak Jandaeng (you may recall the tough, sturdy
    Terdsak from losses to Juan Manuel Marquez, Joan Guzman, or Steven
    Luevano). Aoh, 28, won on scores of 116-112, 116-112, and 118-110, the
    latter of which was called too wide by Jake Donovan of
    BoxingScene.com, who said it was a "sensational battle."

    Also on the card, former 118- and 126-pound titleholder Hozumi
    Hasegawa came back to the ring, stopping untested Mexican Felipe
    Carlos Felix in the seventh round. Hasegawa improves to 30-4 (13 KO),
    and was fighting at featherweight again. At 31, he wants to stay in
    the game, and he can still box. It's a question of how good a fighter
    he can beat at 126.

    http://www.badlefthook.com/2012/4/6/2930310/yamanaka-vs-darchinyan-results-decision-hasegawa-aoh-japanese-boxing-news


    From: Baghdasarian
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