DARCHINYAN TARGETS WORLD TITLE IN ANOTHER DIVISION
USA Today
Feb 10 2009
SYDNEY (AP) -- Undisputed super flyweight world champion Vic Darchinyan
plans to move up a division to chase a boxing world title at a third
different weight.
The Australian-based Armenian boxer retained his IBF, WBA and WBC
super flyweight titles with an 11th-round technical knockout of
Mexico's Jorge Arce in California on the weekend and returned to
Sydney on Tuesday morning.
Darchinyan (32-1-1, 26 knockouts), who won IBF and IBO world titles
as a flyweight, said he believed he could win world titles in as many
as five divisions.
"I want to be (champion in) three weight divisions, four, five,"
Darchinyan said. "I don't want to go to bantamweight and stop."
His manager Elias Nassar told the Australian Associated Press that
he wanted to arrange bantamweight world title fights for Darchinyan
against either Japan's WBC champion Hozumi Hasagawa or Ghana's IBF
title holder Joseph Agbeko.
FIND MORE STORIES IN: California | Japan | Mexico | Anaheim | Sydney |
Ghana | Australian Associated Press | Vic Darchinyan | Jorge Arce |
Cristian Mijares The win over Arce was Darchinyan's second defense of
his IBF title won with a knockout of Dmitri Kirillov in August last
year, and the first defense of the WBA and WBC titles added with his
knockout of Cristian Mijares in November.
Darchinyan had a small cut near his right eye and doctors had told
him the injury would prevent him fighting for at least 60 days.
He said the win over Arce confirmed his place among the leading
pound-for-pound boxers in the world.
"I've got to be in the top 10, but I don't want to be (just) top 10,"
Darchinyan said. "I want to be closer to No. 1."
USA Today
Feb 10 2009
SYDNEY (AP) -- Undisputed super flyweight world champion Vic Darchinyan
plans to move up a division to chase a boxing world title at a third
different weight.
The Australian-based Armenian boxer retained his IBF, WBA and WBC
super flyweight titles with an 11th-round technical knockout of
Mexico's Jorge Arce in California on the weekend and returned to
Sydney on Tuesday morning.
Darchinyan (32-1-1, 26 knockouts), who won IBF and IBO world titles
as a flyweight, said he believed he could win world titles in as many
as five divisions.
"I want to be (champion in) three weight divisions, four, five,"
Darchinyan said. "I don't want to go to bantamweight and stop."
His manager Elias Nassar told the Australian Associated Press that
he wanted to arrange bantamweight world title fights for Darchinyan
against either Japan's WBC champion Hozumi Hasagawa or Ghana's IBF
title holder Joseph Agbeko.
FIND MORE STORIES IN: California | Japan | Mexico | Anaheim | Sydney |
Ghana | Australian Associated Press | Vic Darchinyan | Jorge Arce |
Cristian Mijares The win over Arce was Darchinyan's second defense of
his IBF title won with a knockout of Dmitri Kirillov in August last
year, and the first defense of the WBA and WBC titles added with his
knockout of Cristian Mijares in November.
Darchinyan had a small cut near his right eye and doctors had told
him the injury would prevent him fighting for at least 60 days.
He said the win over Arce confirmed his place among the leading
pound-for-pound boxers in the world.
"I've got to be in the top 10, but I don't want to be (just) top 10,"
Darchinyan said. "I want to be closer to No. 1."