Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Boxing: Darchinyan Unstoppable says Fenech

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

  • Boxing: Darchinyan Unstoppable says Fenech

    Seconds Out
    March 29 2005


    Darchinyan Unstoppable says Fenech

    IBF/IBO champion Vic Darchinyan

    Paul Upham
    Contributing Editor

    After IBF flyweight world champion Vic Darchinyan's win over IBO
    champion Mzukisi Sikali by 8th round TKO on Sunday night in Sydney,
    his trainer Jeff Fenech says that the improving "Raging Bull" will be
    unstoppable once he learns to fight for the full three minutes of
    each round.

    "When he learns to do what I want him to do, that is punch for three
    minutes, nobody can beat him," said Fenech. "He stops and starts and
    I don't want him to get hit and he doesn't need to get hit because of
    his power. We have to do everything perfect in our preparation."

    29 year-old Darchinyan 23-0 (18), making the first defence of his IBF
    title after he had stopped long-reigning former champion Irene
    Pacheco last December, was simply too powerful for the experienced 33
    year-old South African 29-6-2 (17). The only negative for the
    Armenian born Australian citizen was his obvious tiredness from
    rounds four to six.

    Watching amongst the live audience at ringside, undisputed world
    junior welterweight champion Kostya Tszyu feels that Darchinyan is
    not training properly. "Vic needs to train harder," he said. "He
    needs to work harder and smarter in the gym and be able to fight for
    twelve rounds."

    Co-trainer Billy Hussein felt that Darchinyan went out too fast early
    looking for a spectacular knockout. "Vic trains hard, but because he
    threw a lot of hard punches, you expect him to get tired," he said.
    "By about the 6th round, he got his second breath. Usually, he starts
    slow, but with the excitement of fighting at home, he is trying to
    impress his fans."

    Commentating for television, Team Fenech team-mate Hussein Hussein
    who established his own reputation amongst the flyweight division
    elite against Mexican Jorge Arce one week earlier in the USA, felt
    that Darchinyan's power was too much for Sikali.

    "I was impressed with Vic, his power, strength and his speed," he
    said. "I knew as the rounds progressed, his power was going to wear
    Sikali out. He was taking too many clean punches. He stood there
    trading punches and you don't do that with Vic Darchinyan. He punches
    like a middleweight."

    Can Darchinyan be considered the best flyweight in the world yet? "I
    think he has to beat WBC champion Pongsaklek Wonjongkam or WBA
    champion Lorenzo Parra first," said Hussein.

    Fenech, the three-time world champion, has no doubt that Darchinyan
    will prove to be the undisputed world champion. "We have two belts,
    but there is a couple more to go yet," he said. "Vic can beat
    Wonjongkam and Parra. But he has to get in better condition in his
    sparring. What he did here was what he does in the gym. I want him to
    punch continuously and when he does that, nobody will beat him."

    Was Fenech happy with Darchinyan's first world title defence?

    "No," he replied with a smile. "Because I know he is better than
    that. I'm never happy with him because I just know he is so much
    better."

    There has been talk of a match-up in Japan next, but Darchinyan
    doesn't care where he fights, he just wants to fight the best. "I
    want the WBA champion Lorenzo Parra," he said. "He is rated No.1 by
    Ring Magazine and I only want to fight the best and I want to win the
    WBA title."

    Photo: http://www.secondsout.com/World/news.cfm?ccs=225&cs=15931

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
Working...
X