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Boxing: While Arce Is Courageous, Darchinyan Is Dominant

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  • Boxing: While Arce Is Courageous, Darchinyan Is Dominant

    WHILE ARCE IS COURAGEOUS, DARCHINYAN IS DOMINANT
    by Steve Kim

    Maxboxing
    Feb 9 2009

    In the bowels of the Honda Center in Anaheim, California, where a
    makeshift podium was constructed for the post-fight press conference
    this past Saturday night, Vic Darchinyan wore the battle scars of his
    night's work. Ice was being applied to his oft-used left hand, there
    was swelling around both his eyes and a cut near his forehead. But
    that paled in comparison to the damage he doled out to the game Jorge
    Arce, who never stopped trying to win, but was simply outmatched and
    outgunned by Darchinyan over 11 one-sided - albeit, exciting - rounds.

    "I kept my promise," said the Aussie-based Armenian, who had made
    good on his word to 'punish' Arce. "I was waiting for big uppercuts,
    he was slow. Sometimes I was waiting too long. At the end of the rounds
    I started to pick it up. Every moment I was catching him with straight
    and left uppercuts, I picked it up immediately." He would add later,
    "I like my uppercuts. I can catch anyone with uppercuts."

    They call him 'the Raging Bull', and with his hard-charging, rampaging
    style, it is an appropriate moniker. But his awkward, herky-jerky,
    southpaw style is more reminiscent of a cobra who suddenly strikes out
    with venomous fury. He is anything but a classic stylist, but he has
    a style that is his alone. As he crouches and peers into his opponent,
    with his arms angled as if he were about to deliver a forearm shiver,
    he lashes out violently with heavy punches from all directions.

    >From the very onset of his bout with Arce, he would continually beat
    'Travieso' to the punch with a series of left hands and right hooks
    that stunned the brave Mexican time and time again. But Arce would have
    some moments in the middle rounds as he closed the gap and began to
    bang away at Darchinyan's body. What had been an all out assault early
    on from him, now became more measured attack as he ate some leather.

    "He has a good punch," conceded Darchinyan, "but I know sometimes he's
    catching me with punches, the crowd was screaming, 'Oh, yeah!!!' but
    he's not bothering me. I didn't hurt."

    As the rounds mounted, you could see the damage accumulate on
    Arce. His face was reddened early on, and by the late rounds he had
    even suffered a cut behind his left ear, in addition to other facial
    lacerations. But to his credit, Arce never stopped trying to win. He
    would trudge forward and accept everything that came his way from
    the heavy-handed Darchinyan. Time and time again he attempted to land
    left hooks over the top by timing the oncoming rushes of Darchinyan
    in the manner that Nonito Donaire did in the summer of 2007, but to
    no avail. The speed and precision to execute such a maneuver were
    non-existent. However, what he still had in abundance was his heart.

    And it kept him in the fight for 11 largely entertaining rounds. It
    was about as daring a performance as you'll ever come across. Beaten
    physically, but not in spirit, he would not hear the final bell as the
    fight was halted with Darchinyan leading big on all three scorecards
    by scores of 109-100.

    "I came to fight, there was only one round left," said a disappointed
    Arce, who would be hospitalized later on. "I wanted to continue
    fighting. I don't know why they stopped the fight. I'm a puncher, I
    have the puncher's chance at the end. I came to fight and I followed
    him the whole fight."

    But Arce was as gracious as he was gallant in defeat.

    "There are no excuses, I told you before I was not going to put
    any excuses and there are no excuses," he would say through his
    manager, Fernando Beltran. "He's a good fighter; I think it was a
    very competitive fight. I think I hurt him a couple of times with
    body punches. So I think I always have a chance to win the fight. I
    always felt I had a chance to win the fight."

    Darchinyan, though, was the story of the night. Since his knockout
    loss to Donaire, he has put on an impressive run that has seen him
    blow through the likes of Dimitri Kirilov, Cristian Mijares and now
    Arce. Right now, there is no hotter fighter.

    "I think so," agreed Ken Hershman, boxing czar of Showtime, which has
    chronicled his rise. "I think his performance was spectacular. He's
    fun and exciting. He had a lot of fans here, and that's the kind of
    fighter you want to see."

    Right now, he holds three of the four major belts at 115 pounds. And
    with WBO belt-holder Fernando Montiel moving up, it may be time for
    Darchinyan to go big game hunting elsewhere.

    "I think he's clearly the king at 115. We'll have to look at options
    going up and see what else is there," said Hershman. And one of those
    options is either Rafael Marquez or Israel Vazquez. "I'm going to sit
    with Gary Shaw and see what they want to do. I love that option and
    I love the Israel Vazquez option and we'll see which way they want
    to go."

    Vazquez and his manager Frank Espinoza were in attendance on Saturday
    night.

    "Absolutely, we're interested in fighting him," said Espinoza. "He's
    willing to come up to 122. Israel Vazquez has already shown interest
    that he's willing to fight him."

    As for Montiel, "Montiel is fighting March 28th for the vacant WBO
    118-pound title," said his promoter, Bob Arum. "If he's successful
    in that and Darchinyan wants to fight him, that's fine."

    But it's clear who Darchinyan prefers - Vazquez.

    "I would love to fight him," said Darchinyan on the post-fight
    dais, as Vazquez was seated next to him. And he took an unusually
    respectful tone towards his potential foe. "I'm not saying I want
    to fight him because I can knock him out or destroy him. Because we
    already did some sparring together and I know he's a great puncher,
    a tough fighter and it's going to be a very exciting fight. We'll
    find out who's best in eight-ounce gloves."

    (As for a rematch with Donaire, don't even go there. Darchinyan's
    promoter, Gary Shaw, who once represented him, ain't hearing it.)

    But regardless of who he fights, Darchinyan is the biggest little
    man in boxing. His lone loss, in retrospect, was the best thing to
    ever happen to him.

    "Don't remember what happened in the past," said Darchinyan, who moved
    his mark up to 32-1-1 with 26 stoppages. "It's the past, it's helped
    me more, what happened with Donaire."

    Shaw perhaps summed it up best, "He's the unstoppable force right
    now in boxing. He's very difficult to hit, he's difficult to fight
    because he's so difficult to hit and you gotta start thinking and
    change the game plan because if you go in there and he's not there,
    you don't know where he is, you don't know what's coming back at you."
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