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Boxing: Fenech foe plots Vic's fall

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  • Boxing: Fenech foe plots Vic's fall

    FOX SPORTS, Australia
    Townsville Bulletin, Australia
    Advertiser Adelaide, Australia
    March 23 2005


    Fenech foe plots Vic's fall
    By Grantlee Kieza

    HE once broke the heart of Jeff Fenech - and this Sunday Harold
    Volbrecht wants to crush the apple of his eye.

    Volbrecht, South African welterweight champion for a staggering 14
    years, was the architect of Fenech's worst defeat. And now he's back
    in Australia confident his flyweight Mzukisi Sikali will take the IBF
    world flyweight title from Fenech's pride and joy, Vic Darchinyan.

    It's the first title defence for the Fenech-trained Darchinyan, and
    the Armenian-born world champ has picked a fight with a slick-moving
    veteran who is unbeaten over his last six years, and supremely
    confident of springing an upset at the State Sports Centre.

    Volbrecht was one of the world's top welterweights for a decade and
    has trained some of South Africa's greatest fighters of the last 20
    years.

    These range from Corrie Sanders, the giant policeman and rugby
    five-eighth who held a version of the world heavyweight championship,
    to the sublimely gifted Brian Mitchell and the flamboyant Lovemore
    Ndou.

    He also trained Phillip Holiday, the world lightweight champ who
    ended Fenech's career with a devastating second-round knockout back
    in 1996 in Melbourne.

    And Volbrecht says Sikali is the best fighter of the lot.

    "He is a far more talented boxer than Darchinyan," Volbrecht said.

    "In terms of style he fights a lot like Sugar Ray Leonard, but from a
    southpaw stance.

    "Sikali is a beautiful mover and I have always said that a skilful,
    thinking fast boxer will always beat the strong, hard-punching
    aggressive types like Darchinyan.

    "I have trained a lot of fighters over the years and we have come a
    long way for this fight. I don't often travel with losers and I will
    be very surprised if Vic Darchinyan is still the world champion on
    Monday."

    Volbrecht has been able to back up his confidence in the past.

    He says he planned for the deeply-religious Holiday to nail Fenech
    with overhand rights from the fourth round of their world-title bout
    in 1996. Instead Holiday unleashed a barrage of punches in the
    opening seconds with the fury of a biblical plague.

    "We had a TV monitor in our room and we could see Fenech in his
    dressing room just sitting there and not warming up properly,"
    Volbrecht said.

    "I knew then we could catch Fenech cold and I told Phillip to throw
    the right hands we were planning for round four.

    "Phillip was a very good fighter but he was helped a lot in that bout
    by catching Fenech cold."

    Volbrecht says Sikali's lack of a proper warm-up was responsible for
    his worst defeat, a 48-second loss to WBC flyweight champ Pongsaklek
    Wongjongkam in Thailand eight years ago.

    Since then he has lost just once, and that was by a split decision in
    a world super-flyweight title fight in Italy six years ago.

    Darchinyan, 29, also fights as a southpaw. He won the world title in
    an epic battle against the Colombian fighter Irene Pacheco in
    Hollywood, Florida in December.

    KOSTYA Tszyu's protege, Anton Solopov, and Newcastle's most popular
    fighter, Chad Bennett, will both be in action tomorrow night at
    Newcastle Panthers.

    Solopov, who is a former world junior amateur champion and the first
    fighter to be managed by Tszyu, will be looking for his 10th
    professional victory when he faces Argentina's Raul Eduardo Bejarano,
    the South American welterweight champion.

    Bennett, who is the current IBF Pan Pacific welterweight champ, will
    face another South American fighter, Oscar Samudio from Paraguay.
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