Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Boxing: Promoters queue for Darchinyan

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

  • Boxing: Promoters queue for Darchinyan

    AAP NEWSFEED, Australia
    September 21, 2005, Wednesday 5:41 AM Eastern Time

    Box: Promoters queue for Darchinyan

    By Adrian Warren

    SYDNEY

    Australia's only remaining male world boxing champion, Vic
    Darchinyan, has been treated like a superstar in his native Armenia,
    while back home, three promoters vie for the right to stage his next
    world title defence against Irishman Damaen Kelly.

    Darchinyan, who relocated from Armenia to Australia after the Sydney
    2000 Olympics, has returned to the country of his birth for the first
    time since winning the IBF flyweight title last December.

    "He has been absolutely swamped over there as a superstar, he's been
    absolutely flat out doing media and doing guest slots on television,"
    Darchinyan's manager Robert Joske said.

    "He's finding it difficult to walk down the streets without getting
    swamped by autograph hunters and he can't wait to get home."

    Joske said Darchinyan was "most distressed" when he told his client
    his former opponent Mzukisi Sikali had been killed by robbers in
    South Africa last week.

    He said the mandatory defence against Kelly would probably happen
    between late October and mid-November.

    Australian citizen Darchinyan is his adopted country's only remaining
    male world boxing champion after super featherweight Robbie Peden
    lost his title to Mexican Marco Antonio Barrera in Las Vegas last
    weekend.

    Joske said he was "reasonably confident" the mandatory defence
    against Belfast based boxer Kelly would not go to a purse bid and a
    deal would be finalised in the next week or two.

    He was waiting for a response from a number of Australian promoters
    and revealed Darchinyan had received an offer to defend the title in
    Ireland.

    "They have made an offer, to fight in Belfast, I've knocked that
    offer back, at this stage, and indicated that we will be coming back
    with a counter offer to which they were most receptive," Joske said.

    "I've offered it to three Australian promoters, I'm now waiting for
    them to respond with the best deal for Vic.

    "Vic really wants to fight again in Australia and if we can make that
    happen, then we are going to."

    Australia's IBF number one ranked middleweight Sam Soliman has
    challenged the leading WBC and WBA contender Ronald "Winky" Wright to
    a fight, and proposed the winner should fight the victor of the
    December 3 rematch between undisputed middleweight world champion
    Jermain Taylor and former champion Bernard Hopkins.

    Soliman could sit tight for a couple more weeks and wait for the IBF
    to strip Taylor for not making a mandatory defence against him, which
    would leave the Australian fighting IBF second ranked Kingsley Ikeke
    of Nigeria for a vacant title.

    However, Soliman's manager Stuart Duncan said a fight with Wright
    would be far more financially rewarding for his charge than a title
    bout with Ikeke.

    "We sit back and risk fighting Kingsley for $50,000 or do we go and
    fight 'winky' for $350,000?," Duncan said.

    "Why don't we unify the number one spot with the winner guaranteed to
    meet Bernard Hopkins or Jermain Taylor."

    Taylor, who was injured in the first fight with Hopkins, was expected
    to be fit for the rematch, but Duncan said Soliman would be willing
    to step in, if the champion had to withdraw.

    Duncan said he was also chasing a rematch for Jason DeLisle against
    IBF light heavyweight champion Clinton Woods, who beat the Australian
    in his last fight before winning the title.

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