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Boxing: Darchinyan hits the bull's-eye in win

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  • Boxing: Darchinyan hits the bull's-eye in win

    Los Angeles Times, CA
    Nov 2 2008


    Darchinyan hits the bull's-eye in win


    Armenian boxer stops Mexico's Mijares in the ninth round to add WBC,
    WBA 115-pound titles to his IBF belt.

    By Bill Dwyre
    November 2, 2008

    It's hard to be a raging bull when you weigh only 115 pounds, but Vic
    Darchinyan lived up to the nickname Saturday night.

    A 32-year-old Armenian boxer who lives in Australia, Darchinyan took a
    30-1-1 record into a fight at the Home Depot Center in Carson that he
    was supposed to lose to Mexico's Cristian Mijares (36-3-2).

    On most cards, Darchinyan didn't even lose a round.

    After he had hit Mijares, 27, with about 200 hard lefts, including one
    that knocked him down in the first round, Darchinyan chased Mijares
    across the ring as the ninth round of the scheduled 12 was about to
    end. As Mijares ran backward, Darchinyan chased and caught him with
    yet another solid left. Mijares went down, flat on his back. Referee
    Lou Moret started to count, then saw Mijares wasn't stirring much and
    waved the fight to an end.

    The victory unified three alphabet-soup sanctioning divisions -- IBF,
    WBC, WBA -- the latter two of which had Mijares as champ. So it's
    reasonable to consider Darchinyan the best super flyweight in the
    world.


    "From the first round, I promised I would fight smart, would destroy
    him with the left," he said. "I just thank God it wasn't like Burgos,
    because he took a lot of lefts, too."

    In the same ring on March 3, 2007, Darchinyan beat Victor Burgos, a
    bout stopped in the final round. Soon, Burgos was taken to the
    hospital with brain injuries, and he is still in therapy trying to
    recover from that.

    Mijares made it to the news conference afterward, cuts under both
    eyes, and said, "No excuses. He's a great champion."

    If Darchinyan's wild attacks weren't enough for the 3,076 fans who
    showed up on a rainy night and left the bulk of the seats in the Home
    Depot Center tennis stadium empty, then the semi-main event was.

    In that one, 25-year-old Olympian Andre Dirrell, a bronze medalist in
    Athens in 2004 with a 16-0 pro record and a great future, ran into
    another raging bull, a 167-pound Russian named Victor Oganov. Oganov
    is 32, entered with a record of 28-1, all 28 wins by knockout, and
    fought in a style best described as a bull in a China closet.

    Oganov only moved forward. He took shot after shot and kept coming
    forward. In the first round, Dirrell got him up against the ropes and
    threw at least 25 uninterrupted hard punches. The flurry ended mostly
    because Dirrell's arms started to go limp. Oganov, more like a brick
    building than a person, shrugged and started coming forward again.

    Finally, in the sixth round, with Dirrell having won the previous five
    on all three judges' cards, Dirrell got Oganov against the ropes and
    staggered him slightly. That was enough for referee Ray Corona, who
    stopped the fight.

    Oganov, battered and bloody and still wanting more, mouthed a curse
    word to Corona several times and the crowd, upholding boxing's
    standards for blood thirst, booed the referee.

    Corona said later he had seen Oganov punished enough.

    Dwyre is a Times staff writer.

    http://www.latimes.com/sports/boxing/la-s p-boxing2-2008nov02,0,6652560.story
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