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  • Tanamor Crashes Out

    TANAMOR CRASHES OUT

    Sun.Star
    Thursday, August 14, 2008
    Philippines

    FOR the third straight Olympiad, the Philippines will go home without a
    boxing medal after Harry Tañamor, the lone entry, lost in the round
    of 32 to Ghana's Manyo Plange.

    Tañamor, the third-best prospect to win the gold in Beijing, was the
    overwhelming favorite in the match but the African champion showed
    no respect for the Pinoy's credentials.

    A head shot put Ghana ahead before Tañamor quickly leveled the match.

    The Pinoy went to the body late in the first round but his flurries
    didn't count, instead, he trailed 1-2 at the end of the first.

    It was a similar story in the second and third rounds as Tañamor's
    body hunting failed to impress the judges while a counterpunch to
    the put Plange ahead 2-5.

    Tañamor, who finished second in the World Championships in Chicago
    last year, failed to score a single point in round 3 and his last
    ditch efforts in the final round netted him only a point.

    In the other bouts, Lukasz Maszczyk of Poland, defeated Saidu Kargbo,
    Sierra Leone, (RSC 1:32); Birzhan Zhakypov Kazakhstan defeated Pal
    Bedak, Hungary, 7-6;

    Hovhannes Danielyan of Armenia defeated Thomas Essomba, Cameroon,
    9-3; Nordine Oubaali of France defeated Rafikjon Sultonov, Uzbekistan,
    8-7; Zou Shiming of China defeated Eduard Bermudez Salas, Venezuela,
    11-2; and Winston Montero of the Dominican Republic defeated Suleiman
    Wanjau Bilali.

    Meanwhile, Shiming began his quest for China's first boxing gold medal
    in style Wednesday with an 11-2 victory over Bermudez of Venezuela
    in the light flyweight division as the Olympics' biggest and smallest
    boxers began wrapping up the tournament's preliminary bouts.

    Deontay Wilder stopped the US team's freefall with a brutal
    come-from-behind victory over Algeria's Abdelaziz Touilbini, while
    Osmai Acosta shut out his Nigerian opponent to open his chase for
    Cuba's fifth consecutive Olympic heavyweight title.

    Zou became a national hero for winning China's first boxing medal with
    a bronze in Athens, and he followed it up with world championships in
    2005 and 2007. Though the martial-arts-trained Zou often struggles to
    make his 48-kilogram weight limit, he doesn't seem to lose much power.

    Zou entered Workers' Gymnasium with both arms stretched high,
    pumping his gloves with frenetic vigor to a huge ovation from the
    two-thirds-full arena. (ML with a report from AP)

    --Boundary_(ID_0AyRJgo7I9XSG0AVxsEppg)--

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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