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The Past Week in Action 7 May 2018 -- Part II By Eric Armit PhilBoxing.com Tue, 08 May 2018 May 5 Carson, CA, USA: Middle: Gennady Golovkin (38-0-1) W KO 2 Vanes Martirosyan (36-4-1). Super Light: Ryan Martin 22-0) W PTS 8 Breidis Prescott (31-13). Super Light: Ruslan Madiev (12-0) W PTS 10 Jesus Perez (21-1). Golovkin vs. Martirosyan Not much of a surprise here as Golovkin blows away a fattened-up and rusty Martirosyan inside two rounds to retain the WBA, WBC and IBO titles. Round 1 For the first 30 seconds both fighters just probed with their jab and then Golovkin went on to the front foot shadowing the retreating Martirosyan and trying occasional rights. Martirosyan came forward a couple of times behind a good jab but did not land any serious punches Martirosyan ended the round well landing a straight left and a right cross to the head forcing Golovkin to give ground and probably did just enough to edge the round Score 10-9 Martirosyan Round 2 Golovkin opened the round with a blazing right cross which had Martirosyan on skitter legs. He held on desperately and Golovkin swung him around and with Martirosyan badly shaken and off balance he dipped with his left knee touching the canvas. It was not a knockdown and Golovkin was pacing forward trying to land his right again with Martirosyan retreating and throwing jabs. Martirosyan looked to be recovering but then was nailed by two big rights which sent him to the ropes and Golovkin landed a left and a right and added another right as Martirosyan slumped to the floor where he lay face down and was counted out. It was pointed out that this was the twentieth title defence of the middleweight title for Golovkin equalling the 20 by Bernard Hopkins but if you do that then you are counting his ten defences of the secondary WBA title as he was not elevated to super champion until June 2014. Irrespective of that it gives the 36-year-old Kazak win No 34 by KO/TKO and it is now 13 years since he last lost a fight. That was to Egyptian Mohamed Hiklal in the preliminary round of the World Championships in 2005. He has said he is no longer interested in Saul Alvarez but that is surely too big a fight to let slide. Martirosyan’s was a lost cause from when the fight was first mooted and so it proved to be. He is really a super welter and he should return there. Despite almost two years without a fight he was No 1 with the WBC so it remains to be seen whether they penalise him for stepping in at such short notice and providing them with a sanctioning fee. Martin vs. Prescott Martin remains unbeaten with unanimous decision over fading veteran Prescott. He put Prescott down with a body punch in the fourth it looked legal but it was not counted as the referee decided it was low and Prescott was given some recovery time. He needed more time later in the round when Martin did land one below the belt and was deducted a point. Martin made that lost point up in the fifth flooring Prescott but the Colombian survived. Martin emerged a comfortable winner on scores of 79-71 twice and 77-73. The 25-year-old High School graduate from Chattanooga (as a Glen Miller fan naturally I have been there to see the actual Cho Cho) is a former USA Under-19 champion and US Junior Championships silver medallist. He has useful wins over 17-1 Bryant Cruz and 20-2 Francisco Rojo. Prescott, 35, has now lost 5 of his last 6 fights. I guess he will always be remembered for his 54 second blow out of Amir Khan in 2008. Madiev vs. Perez Madiev comes out on top in the contest between unbeaten fights with a comfortable decision over Mexican Perez. Scores 97-93 twice and 99-91. The 25-year-old Kazak, a stable mate of Golovkin, is a former Kazak Youth champion who competed at the World Youth Championships. He had too many good moves for the raw Perez who turned pro at 18 and has crammed 22 contests into two years as a pro and has a good win in Canada over David Theroux. London, England: Heavy: Tony Bellew (30-2-1) W TKO 5 David Haye (28-4). Bantam: Emmanuel Rodriguez (18-0) W PTS 12 Paul Butler (26-2). Super Feather: James Tennyson (22-2) TKO 5 Martin Joseph Ward (19-1-2). Heavy Joe Joyce (4-0) W TKO 2 Lenroy Thomas (22-5-1). Super Middle: John Ryder (26-4) W KO 2 Jamie Cox (25-2). Light Heavy: Joshua Buatsi (6-0) W TKO 5 Stephane Cuevas (8-2-3). Super Feather: Jordan Gill (20-0) W PTS 6 Carl McDonald (3-2). Super Light: Luke Campbell (18-2) W TKO 5 Troy James (20-6-1). Bellew vs. Haye No controversy and no injuries as Bellew gets fifth round stoppage of Haye. Round 1 Bellew was content to be on the back foot with Haye stalking him. Haye landed a fast left right to the head showing impressive speed. Haye continued to probe with his jab and landed a sharp right. Bellew went on the offensive over the last 30 seconds but did not land anything of consequence. Score 10-9 Haye Round 2 Haye again went on the offensive with his jab but a right from Bellew just flew past his chin. They were both taunting each other with Haye continually talking to Bellew. Bellew landed a good straight right which had Haye backing off. Haye bounced back with a short attack and then they both stood with their arms spread straight out taunting each other again and Haye had just done enough to take the round Score 10-9 Haye 18-20 Round 3 Haye was on his toes dancing with his left down at thigh level. Bellew landed a good left hook to the body. Haye came forward throwing punches and backed Bellew into a corner and then stepped back to the centre of the ring inviting Bellew to come forward out of the corner. Bellew worked well with his jab for a while and with less than 30 seconds to go he nailed Haye with a left hook. That punch sent Haye back to the ropes and another left hook and a thunderous right dumped him on the floor. Haye was up at four and after the eight count with the bell had gone during the count the round was over. Score 10-7 Bellew 28-27 Round 4 Bellew came out throwing wild rights trying to end things and a couple of rights stiffened Haye’s legs. Haye kept moving and throwing occasional swipes and Bellew was too wild with his punches and Haye survived the round without too much trouble Score 10-9 Bellew 38-36. Round 5 Bellew went onto the back foot early just stabbing out his jab. Haye was tracking him but not really throwing much. After two minutes of neither fighter doing much as Haye tried to move inside Bellew missed with a right but connected with a thunderous left hook to the chin that splayed Haye’s legs and sent him stumbling face down on the canvas. He was up at seven and assured the referee he was okay but he wasn’t. He was walking on water and as Bellew trapped him on the ropes and began to unload punches the referee stepped in and stopped the fight. This win puts Bellew right into a key position in the heavyweight mix and he was quick to call out Tyson Fury-but also Andre Ward for some obscure reason. There are other attractive fights out there for him after this high profile victory which puts him in a position where he can pick and choose who he fights next. Dillian White is unlikely to put his WBC No 1 rating at risk but Dominic Breazeale who is No 2 with both the WBC and WBO might be an option. Haye has not said he will retire but at 37 he is running out of time to find his way back to the top but he remains a name and if he decides to continue there are interesting fights there for him. Rodriguez vs. Butler Rodriguez wins the vacant IBF title as Butler misses the weight and has a near disastrous first round before being thoroughly beaten by the visitor. Round 1 Butler was giving away height and reach but matching Rodriguez jab for jab until the Puerto Rican exploded with a lightning quick double left hook to the chin which put Butler down. Butler looked shaken but he was up at eight. Rodriguez came steaming in landing more left hooks driving Butler across to the ropes and the British fighter went down again. He was up quickly and moved and jabbed to the bell. Score 10-7 Rodriguez Round 2 Butler recovered well. He was jabbing and moving and throwing some quick combinations. A close round. Rodriguez did not throw much but did look dangerous. Score 10-9 Butler 19-17 Round 3 Rodriguez did the better work here. He was on the back foot but was quicker with his jab and scored with a pair of nifty combinations just before the bell. Score 10-9 Rodriguez 29-26 Round 4 Rodriguez scored early with a left hook and some overhand rights and another left hook made Butler stumble. The Puerto Rican was confident enough to be stalking Butler with his hands down and Butler only tried a few punches at the end of the round Score 10-9 Rodriguez 39-35 Round 5 Butler was livelier in this one and opened up with a sharp right to the chin. Rodriguez then took over stabbing home his jab and getting through with his own right and he took the round. Score 10-9 Rodriguez 49-44 Round 6 Another round for Rodriguez. He out jabbed Butler landed a peach of a left uppercut and landed some heavy rights over the last twenty seconds. Score 10-9 Rodriguez 59-53 Round 7 Butler made a fast start to this round coming in behind has jab with hooks to the body. After that Rodriguez took over forcing Butler back with his jab and following the jab with a straight right and a left hook. Butler came to life again late but was stopped in his tracks by a straight right. Score 10-9 Rodriguez 69-62 Round 8 A comfortable round for Rodriguez. He was able to score at range with his jab and land straight rights with Butler threatening but just not letting his hands go and again he was halted in his tracks by a stiff right. Score 10-9 Rodriguez 79-71 Round 9 This one was closer as Butler came forward for much of the round and was letting his hands go. Rodriguez continued to slot home his jab and fire straight rights through the Englishman’s defence and edged the round. Score 10-9 Rodriguez 89-80 Round 10 A better round for Butler. Perhaps his best so far. He came forward letting punches fly from both hands and scoring with some body shots. Rodriguez came to life over the last minute landing a couple of left hooks and Butler scaled down his attacks but had done enough early to take the round. Score 10-9 Butler 98-90 Round 11 Rodriguez round. He was darting out quick punches and then loading up hooks. He had enough time to do same dancing with hands down and although Butler put in an effort at the end of the round it belonged to Rodriguez. Score 10-9 Rodriguez 108-99 Round 12 Rodriguez finished the fight strongly. He took Butler to the ropes a couple of times and dug in some hurtful left hooks and danced and jabbed his way to victory. Scores 10-9 Rodriguez 118-108 Official Scores: 120-106, 120-106 and 118-108 all for Rodriguez The 25-year-old “Manny” wins the vacant WBO title. He had been waiting a long for the tile chance with a proposed eliminating fight with Omar Narvaez constantly being put back and Narvaez then choosing to go against Zolani Tete for the WBO bantam title. As a result this was only his second fight in 14 months so he will be looking to celebrate and then get back into action as soon as possible. Butler could not have won the title as he came in 3 ½ lbs over the division limit and after the disastrous first round he struggled to make any impression in the fight and it was a poor performance from the 29-year-old from Cheshire who won this same title by beating Stuart Hall in 2014. He then relinquished the title without defending it to go back down to super fly where he was beaten in eight rounds by Zolani Tete for the IBF title in 2015. He had won nine contests since then but this was one of his worst showing as a pro. Tennyson vs. Ward This one was always going to be a battle between the power and aggression of Tennyson and the excellent boxing skills of Ward with Ward being a pre-fight favourite. Ward is a classy boxer and in the first he was jabbing slotting home quick rights and dodging or blocking the punches from Tennyson. The challenger knew he would be outboxed if he let Ward fight on the outside so he pressed hard but Ward’s speed and movement were impressive. Ward showed some top class defensive work at the start of the second but Tennyson did manage to get through with a strong right and after landing some eye-catching shots to head and body Ward landed a rib crunching left to the body that saw Tennyson drop to his knees. Tennyson was up at eight and the bell went. Ward landed a series of body punches at the start of the third but Tennyson just walked through them to work in close. In some ways the knockdown helped Tennyson as Ward was now confident enough to spend more time standing and trading and Tennyson drilled Ward with a right cross and banged home a hurtful left hook to the body. Ward started the fourth moving and boxing but Tennyson hunted him down and again got through with a heavy right and a left hook. Another left hook shook Ward and Tennyson piled on the pressure. Yet another left hook almost put Ward down. Only some smart defensive work and some holding kept Ward in the fight and just before the bell Tennyson landed a right and another blistering left hook. The fight had completely changed over the space of those last two rounds and now with his aggression and power Tennyson that was in the ascendancy. Ward moved more at the start of the fifth and then stood and landed some good punches but Tennyson pounded Ward with a series of head punches driving Ward back to the ropes and Ward slumped down to one knee. He was up at four and after the eight count got an unexpected breather as Tennyson had lost his mouthguard and was trying to pick it up and put it back in his mouth. When he managed that Tennyson marched forward and landed a couple of uppercuts with Ward falling into the arms of the referee who promptly stopped the fight. Huge win for The Northern Ireland “Assassin as he adds Ward’s European and Commonwealth titles to the WBA International title he already holds. He showed grit and determination to get up from that body punch in the second and then ground Ward down for his eighteenth win by KO/TKO. A shot at the WBA title later this year or early next is within his grasp. Ward had been dominant in domestic wins over Andy Townsend, Ronnie Clark, Maxi Hughes and Anthony Cacace before knocking out Spaniard Juli Giner for the European title in December. At 26 he has time to regroup but he needs to work out what went wrong here. Joyce vs. Thomas Joyce steam roller’s Thomas to win the Commonwealth title in only his fourth fight. Joyce was shadowing Thomas in the first holding his hands low and really just looking to land a big punch. Thomas managed to land a couple of punches but Joyce kept coming. Joyce was making no pretence of boxing he was wading in swinging punches and trying to overwhelm the smaller and lighter Thomas. Joyce started to get through with some clubbing shots to the head and Thomas was in trouble. He tried desperately to hold but Joyce drove him back to the ropes and a vicious left hook to the ribs put him down. Thomas made it to his feet and as the bell had already rung he had managed to survive. Thomas was down early in the second but he had been bundled over and it was not a knockdown. Joyce marched forward landing hooks and uppercuts driving Thomas across the ring until Thomas dropped. He beat the count but Joyce continued to land clubbing punches with Thomas just trying to cover up and throwing nothing back. Finally he showed some fight but landed two low punches which looked suspiciously like an attempt to foul his way out of the fight but he was clipped on the jaw with a left and went down and was counted out. At 32 Joyce is in a hurry as this record breaking title win shows. There was nothing pretty about the crude but powerful punches Joyce used to obliterate Thomas and now he will be looking to add other titles. Although this was only his fourth pro fight he is a former Commonwealth Games and European Games gold medallist and Olympics silver medal winner in Rio so he is far from being a novice. Thomas was making the second defence of his Commonwealth title but the 33-year-old Jamaican was overwhelmed by the power of Joyce and has now lost four by KO/TKO. Ryder vs. Cox This was a battle of southpaw punchers and was never going to go the distance and Ryder came out on top to keep himself in with a chance of a shot at the WBA title. Both began by testing their southpaw jab with Cox taking the fight to Ryder but Ryder clipped Cox with a couple of short hooks inside and looked to just edge the round. Cox was taking the fight to Ryder again in the second landing a couple of overhand rights but as they both stood in the pocket a short right from Ryder landed high on Cox’s head. He took a couple of wobbly steps back and then tumbled over and landed face down on the canvas. He got up to one knee listening to the count but did not start to rise until nine and the referee showed ten fingers just as Cox stood up straight. It was a close run thing but the referee decided that Cox was a split second too late and Ryder was the winner although Cox protested. “The Gorilla” Ryder, 29, makes it two impressive inside the distance wins in a row following his fifth round kayo of Dane Patrick Nielsen in October as he moves to 14 wins by KO/TKO. Ryder made a name for himself when losing a paper thin decision to Billy Saunders for the British and Commonwealth titles in 2013. He did not really kick-on from there losing important fights to Nick Blackwell, Jack Arnfield and Rocky Fielding but the win over Nielsen saw him crash the WBA ratings at No 3 so he will be hoping he can get a title shot out of this impressive win and there is talk of a return with Fielding. This loss is a blow to Cox’s title hopes. After winning his first 24 fights the former undefeated Commonwealth champion was knocked out in four rounds by George Groves in a challenge for the WBA title in October and was hoping a win here could lead to another title fight. Buatsi vs. Cuevas Olympic bronze medallist Buatsi marches on as he outclasses and then stops willing Frenchman Cuevas. In the opener Buatsi was going to the body and fired home five left hooks to the ribs in a row. Buatsi then settled down to out jab Cuevas and as the round ended found the target with more hooks to the body and some right crosses with Cuevas firing some jabs but not having much success. Buatsi landed to head and body early in the second with Cuevas trying to punch with him. Cuevas was trying to make a fight of it but Buatsi’s hand speed was too much for him and he was getting caught with some hard punches to the head. Cuevas tried to trade with Buatsi at the start of the third but was being raked with hooks and uppercuts and a pair of rights to the head saw Cuevas dip at the knees but he fought back landing a good right at the bell. Buatsi decided to do some showboating in the fourth which took some of the pressure off Cuevas but the Frenchman was soaking up some hard punches over the last minute of the round. Buatsi came out firing in the fifth and drove Cuevas along the ropes landing some head-jerking shots and the referee made a good stoppage. The 25-year-ol Ghanaian-born Buatsi registers his fourth win by KO/TKO. He is settling as a pro and improving with every fight. Cuevas, the French No 19, was having his first fight outside France and did well to last as long as he did, Gill vs. McDonald Gill keeps busy and stays unbeaten with a win over late substitute McDonald. Not surprisingly Gill won every round with the referee turning in a 60-54 score. The 23-year-old hails from Chatteris the same town as Dave Green the “Fen Tiger”. He has a good win over Jason Cunningham so this was just a keep busy outing. Dubliner McDonald is really a super bantam/ feather at most so did well to give Gill six hard rounds. Campbell vs. James Campbell was a late addition to the card and was looking to get some work following his split decision loss to Jorge Linares in September. He was much too big and much too fast for James and was able to box on the outside and catch James with counters when James lunged forward. He rocked James with a combination in the second and dropped him at the bell with a left hook followed by a right hook. James beat the count so was there for the third. Campbell rocked James again at the end of the third and a right floored James again in the fourth but the gutsy little James made it to the bell. Campbell drilled James with some straight lefts in the fifth and James did well to stay on his feet. Campbell continued to land hard punches to head and body and the referee stepped in to save James taking too much punishment. There is talk of Campbell, the WBC No 2, fighting his previous conqueror Yvan Mendy now the WBC No 1 to see who gets a shot at Mikey Garcia but with Campbell at No 3 with the WBA the outcome of the Linares vs. Vasyl Lomachenko may open another avenue for Campbell. Former British super feather challenger James has lost his last three 3 fights. Coronada, Argentina: Welter: Diego Ramirez (15-1) W PTS 10 Walter Castillo (12-2). Southpaw Ramirez floors and outpoints Castillo to retain the interim WBO Latino title. Castillo never stopped walking forward and he was caught time and again with hooks and uppercuts. A left hook put him down in the fourth and although he did well enough to take a round here and there he was continually being shaken by those short punches and looked close to going down again a couple of times. Ramirez won on scores of 98-91 twice and 99-90. This was the second successful defence for the 23-year-old and win No 13 on the bounce. He is the Argentinian No 4, Castillo, the Argentinian No 7 welter, was trying out at ten rounds for the first time. He had also been floored and outpointed in his last fight. Miramichi, Canada: Super Light: Logan McGuinness (25-1-2) DREW 6 Edgar Ramirez (17-13). Heavy: Dillon Carman (13-3) W KO 5 Carlos Carreon (7-5). Super Middle: Nat Miller (12-2-2) W PTS 8 Joaquin Murrieta (6-7-3).Heavy: Chris Norrad (16-0) W TKO 6 Hugo Lomeli (20-13-1). McGuinness vs. Ramirez At one time McGuinness was looked upon as a future world title challenger and perhaps going that step further and winning a title. That possibility has disappeared as McGuinness has performed badly with a loss and a draw in his last two fights. The loss to Argentinian Horacio Cabral could be explained away but this draw with a very ordinary Mexican is a career low for McGuinness. Ramirez made it a tough fight and McGuinness ended with three cuts around his eyes and the sound of boos from the Canadian audience ringing out. McGuinness badly needs a win. Ramirez was 4-5 going into this one. Carman vs. Carreon This looked farcical as the 6’6” 196cm) Carman was faced by a 5’9” (175cm) Carreon. It took the former Canadian champion five rounds to wear down the chubby little Mexican with some of Carreon’s antics. amusing both the audience and Carman until the Canadian ended the fight in the fifth with a right.First fight for the 31-year-old “Big Country since losing his national title to Mladen Miljas in December. Second loss by KO/TKO for novice Carreon. Miller vs. Murrieta Miller, a holder of one of the versions of the Canadian title, wins this one with a unanimous decision but has to struggle at the end. Miller swept the early rounds but tired and Murrieta staged a strong finish flooring Miller in the seventh but running out of time and unable to overcome Miller’s lead. Miller holds the Canadian Professional Boxing Council (CPBC) title and gets his third win in a row but is strictly domestic level. Murrieta is now 1-5-1 in his last 7 fights. Norrad vs. Lomeli In one of his rare ring appearances Norrad wears down and halts Lomeli in another farcical; match. This time it was not quite so much of a physical gap but still too big with Norrad 6’3” (190cm) and Lomeli 5’9” (175). Norrad had no trouble finding the target until with less than a minute to go in the fight Lomeli went down and had no interest in getting up. Eighth win by KO/TKO for the 34-year-old from New Brunswick but with just five fights in almost six years he needs to get serious about his career. Lomeli was having his second fight in ten months being inactive from 2013 until last year and all you need to know about his shape for this one is that he was 159lbs in 2013 and 231lbs here. Peterborough, Canada: Super Welter: Cody Crowley (14-0) W PTS 10 Kevin Higson (14-2). Crowley makes a successful second defence of his CPBC International title and also wins the Canadian title with convincing victory over fellow-Canadian Higson. The local southpaw was better than Higson in every department. He was faster, had superior hand speed and a more powerful punch. He took every round having Higson cut over his left eye and bleeding from the nose. Higson was badly rocked in the eighth and again just before the bell in the ninth but stayed there to the end. Scores 100-90 for Crowley from all three judges. Good win for the 25-year-old “Crippler”. Higson had won his last six. Tokyo, Japan: Feather: Tomoki Kameda (35-2) W PTS 10 Daniel Noriega (30-11-1). No sign of rust here as Kameda returns to action with a shut-out against tough Mexican Noriega. With height, skill and speed on his side Kameda outboxed Noriega in the first and then landed a left hook in the second which had Noriega dipping and as his glove touched the canvas it was counted as a knockdown. Kameda continued to pound Noriega with an array of punches to head and body and in the fifth and a left to the ribs floored Noriega for the second time. It looked as though Kameda night finish it early as piled on the punishment in the sixth but Noriega survived and despite a big effort by Kameda in the last he made it to the bell. Scores 100-88 for Kameda on all three cards. The 28-year-old “Mexicanito” was the first Japanese fighter to win a WBO world title when he beat Namibian Paulus Ambunda for the bantam title in 2013 following in the footsteps of his brothers Koki and Daiki to be the third of the brothers to win a world title. After relinquishing the WBO title he then lost in two stirring battles against Jamie McDonnell for the secondary WBA title. This is his fourth win since then and as he is rated IBF 3(2)/WBA 3/WBC 6 and WBO 10 at super bantam, he has a very good chance of getting another title shot. Noriega, 32, was 5-2 going into this one with the losses being to now WBA champion Daniel Roman and former WBC title challenger Ronny Rios. Merida, Mexico: Light Heavy: Manuel Ceballos (15-1) W TKO 10 Marlos Simoes (12-1-2). Ceballos retains the WBO Latino title and ends the unbeaten run of Brazilian Simoes. The Brazilian’s record had been built against some low level opposition and Ceballos was much too good for him. The local fighter dominated the fight all the way and Simoes was exhausted going into the last. Ceballos put him down with a series of head shots and although Simoes beat the count a combination to body and head put him down again and the fight was over. The 6’3” local makes it nine wins by KO/TKO and moves to 11 wins in a row. He was making the second defence of his WBO Latino title. First fight outside Brazil for Simoes. Before the fight the bell was rung twelve times to honour the memory of Rafael Mendoza a great boxing figure, an international matchmaker, a manager and a promoter who played a part in building Miguel Canto, Guty Espadas, Juan Herrera and Freddy Castillo and also Saul Alvarez before Alvarez became a big star. More recently he had been a member of the top drawer Azteca Boxing TV team. He will be sorely missed by all. RIP Rafael I wish I had known you longer and better. Tashkent, Uzbekistan: Super Middle: Azizbek Abdugofurov (11-0) W PTS 12 Dmitry Chudinov (21-3-2). Super bantam: Olimjon Nazarov (21-5) W PTS 10 Khvicha Gigolashvili (18-26). Abdugofurov vs. Chudinov Abdugofurov returns home and delights his fans with a wide unanimous decision over Chudinov. The tall, slim Abdugofurov is not a puncher but he has a long reach and good movement and Chudinov just could not get close enough often enough to be any danger. Chudinov kept pressing and with Abdugofurov not having a lot of power he boxed on the back foot trying to stay off the ropes. He speared Chudinov on the way in and stopped to lash “The Night Wolf” with two-handed flurries. Relentless pressure won Chudinov a few rounds when he could cut off the ring and work on Abdugofurov on the ropes but other than that it was a frustrating night for the Russian. In the sixth Chudinov suffered a bad cut over his right eye which looked to come from a punch but he was allowed to continue. Chudinov chased in vain to the end but Abdugofurov was just too clever for him. Scores 118-110 twice and 118-111 for Abdugofurov. The Malaysian-based “AAA” wins the vacant WBC Silver title. He is quick and skilful but his lack of power will hold him back. Former interim WBA champion Chudinov made three defences of that title before being stopped in twelve rounds by Chris Eubank Jr in 2015. He was 7-1 in his last 8 fights with the loss being against Lolenga Mock in January this year. Nazarov vs. Gigolashvili Nazarov wins the vacant WBC CIS & Slovak Boxing Bureau title with easy ten round victory over very modest Georgian Gigolashvili. Scores 100-90 twice and 100-91. The 32-year-old Nazarov lost three in a row to unbeaten fighters in the USA but then returned home where he scored six wins. Sounds good but those six victims all novices had combined records of 0-4. Gigolashvili has never won a fight outside Georgia in 24 attempts Fight of the week: Jason Welborn vs. Tommy Langford provided twelve rounds of action all the way. Honourable mention to the James Tennyson vs. Martin Joseph Ward the fight only went five rounds but it was a classic puncher vs. boxer contest. Fighter of the week: Tony Bellew for his repeat win over David Haye with honourable mention to Joe Joyce for winning the Commonwealth title in his fourth fight and a classy display from Emmanuel Rodriguez Punch of the week: The right to the head from Gennady Golovkin which effectively ended his fight with Vanes Martirosyan Upset of the week: Jason Welborn beating world rated Tommy Langford. Less of an upset but still an upset James Tennyson beating Martin Joseph Ward Prospect watch: Johan Gonzalez from Venezuela 15-0 all 15 by KO/TKO and 12 in the first round but untested yet. Click here for Part I. Click here to view a list of other articles written by Eric Armit. |
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