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  • Harrison's place in history assured

    Harrison's place in history assured
    Stephen Halliday at Braehead Arena

    The Scotsman - United Kingdom
    Jun 21, 2004

    THE superlatives flowed almost as fluently as the barrage of punches
    which took Scott Harrison into the history books on Saturday night
    but no matter the praise heaped upon him, actions speak so much louder
    than words for Scotland's WBO featherweight champion.

    Even compared to the legendary Roberto Duran by understandably jubilant
    manager Frank Maloney in the wake of his breathtaking third round
    stoppage of mandatory challenger William Abelyan at the Braehead Arena,
    Harrison's performance issued a proclamation to the rest of the nine
    stone division's elite that he is more than ready to stake his claim
    as the finest of them all.

    Injin Chi, the explosive WBC champion from South Korea, is first on
    the wish-list of Harrison's promoters as the 26-year-old pursues his
    dream of unifying the titles. Boxing politics may yet conspire to deny
    Harrison the marquee fights he craves against IBF and WBA champion
    Juan Manuel Marquez of Mexico or his Filipino rival Manny Pacquiao,
    but there can be no doubt now that the Glaswegian belongs in such
    elevated company.

    Saturday's defence of his title was widely predicted to be Harrison's
    most difficult yet against the Armenian-born Californian southpaw
    with a reputation as the wild card of the division, a man capable of
    seriously ruffling the smoothest of feathers.

    While Harrison's ruthless dismantling of an opponent ranked in the
    top ten by three of the major sanctioning bodies will not receive as
    much exposure in the Las Vegas Sun as it does in the Scottish one,
    he can be sure this result will be duly noted on the influential
    American boxing scene.

    "I believe I am the best featherweight in the world," said Harrison,
    "and I just want the opportunity to prove it. I want to collect all the
    belts I can, I want the unification fights. After that, my goal is to
    move up to super-featherweight and become a two-weight world champion.

    "I honestly don't think about the money. What's more important to me
    is the chance to go down in history for a long, long time. Anyway,
    if you keep winning world title fights, you don't have to worry about
    the money, it will come automatically.

    "I think I'm just about getting to my peak now but at the same
    time I feel I can jump up another level or two if I need to in the
    big unification fights. I want to keep busy now and I want to keep
    making history."

    His defeat of Abelyan was Harrison's fifth victory in a world title
    contest, drawing him level with Jim Watt's record for a Scottish
    boxer. It now seems inconceivable that he will not go on to become
    his country's most successful pugilist of all time.

    Despite well-publicised personal difficulties Harrison encountered
    in the build-up to the contest, cleared of an assault charge just
    nine days earlier, there was a hugely impressive, almost serene focus
    about the champion as he entered the ring.

    Any fears that the anger he had expressed over both the court case
    and Abelyan's pre-fight taunts would result in a dangerous lack of
    concentration were erased from the opening bell as Harrison settled
    into a slick rhythm of controlled aggression.

    The challenger paid for opting to share the centre of the ring in
    the first round, Harrison catching him repeatedly with straight right
    hands and clipping left hooks to take the session convincingly. The
    second round saw Abelyan switch to the kind of tactics widely expected
    of him, circling the ring defensively and landing several accurate
    counter punches on the advancing champion.

    It was enough to win Abelyan the round and suggested Harrison may be
    in for as long and troubling an evening predicted. Instead, it was
    simply the cue for the Scot to produce arguably the most impressive
    round of his career to date.

    Closing down the space Abelyan was attempting to create, Harrison
    regained total control of the flow of the contest. Another jolting
    right hand staggered and dropped Abelyan for the first time, the
    stunned challenger continuing after an eight count from American
    referee Samuel Viruet. There was no respite, Harrison sensing the
    opportunity for an early night and refusing to let Abelyan off
    the hook.

    A blistering combination sent him to the canvas again, Abelyan this
    time sprawling forward in disarray and looking unlikely to beat the
    count. Bravely, he did, but when Harrison swarmed in again, Viruet
    stepped in to call a halt at 1m 45sec of the round.

    "Scott made a statement tonight, not just to British boxing where he
    is now the country's number one fighter ahead of Ricky Hatton and Joe
    Calzaghe, but to the rest of the boxing world," said manager Maloney.

    "I don't think anyone in the featherweight division can beat him. He
    is a modern-day Roberto Duran, he will fight anyone and he does it
    for the glory and for pride in his country.

    "My only disappointment was that we didn't have a sell-out for this
    fight. I know it was on and off a few times, which made it difficult,
    but Scott is the most successful sportsman in Scotland and I hope
    the people will really get behind him.

    "If we can bring Injin Chi here, a guy who loves to come forward and
    fight, it would be a massive fight for Scott and for Scotland."

    Chi, the 30-year-old Korean who travelled to Manchester earlier this
    year to stop Michael Brodie and claim the WBC title, is scheduled to
    make the first defence of his belt against Eiichi Sugama of Japan
    in Seoul on 24 July. With the WBC last week filing for bankruptcy
    after losing a dollars 31 million lawsuit to German boxer Graciano
    Rocchigiani, the organisation's future is clearly in some doubt but a
    fight with Chi would remain a major attraction for Harrison no matter
    how many titles are on the line.

    "It would be a great fight for Scott," said his father and trainer
    Peter Harrison, "and those are the kind of tests he wants now. He has
    never shirked anyone and he will fight any featherweight out there."

    Glasgow super-featherweight Willie Limond convincingly won a gruelling
    battle against crude French champion Youssef Djibaba, to lift the
    vacant European Union title.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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