Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Boxing: Raging Bull sizes up big Fui

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

  • Boxing: Raging Bull sizes up big Fui

    Sunday Telegraph - Australia

    Raging Bull sizes up big Fui

    * By James Hooper
    * From: The Sunday Telegraph

    * January 31, 2010 12:01AM

    AS they stood toe-to-toe, it looked like the biggest mismatch since
    Gorden Tallis used Ben Ross's head as a speed ball.

    Parramatta enforcer Fuifui Moimoi stepped into the ring with world
    champion Vic Darchinyan at Eels headquarters last Friday, the Kiwi man
    mountain against the Raging Bull Ant.

    Moimoi might weigh twice as much as the 56kg super-flyweight, but when
    it comes to speed, footwork and ring smarts, the diminutive Darchinyan
    is all over the NRL cult figure.

    It might have only been a mock sparring session, but there are no
    jokes when it comes to finding Darchinyan's next opponent for March 6
    in the US.

    Nicknamed the Mexican assassin because of his penchant for knocking
    out boxers from south of the Californian border, the WBA and WBC
    unified champion has had his past three adversaries pull out of
    prospective fights. The reasoning is simple: Darchinyan's left-hand
    bombs are so lethal he has rival fighters running scared.

    "I'm fighting on March 6 on the Arthur Abraham-Andre Dirrell card, but
    up until today nobody has wanted to fight me," Darchinyan said. "It's
    been frustrating. They know my power and they don't want to feel it.
    My last three opponents have cancelled.

    "They say it's because of money, but I think it's because they're
    scared. I'm the champion and I don't care who I fight, I'll fight
    anybody."

    The son of an Armenian Olympic wrestling coach, Darchinyan finally
    landed an opponent last Friday in the form of Mexican Rodrigo
    Guerrero.

    To defend his WBA and WBC world title belts, Darchinyan intends to mix
    up his training regimen to try to improve his already brutal punching
    power.

    Gone are the heavy sessions in the gym bench-pressing 120kg and doing
    hundreds of push-ups with his feet elevated on top of one corner of
    the ring.

    Instead, the Sydney Olympian has been working with world champion
    discuss thrower Dani Samuels to improve the fast-twitch muscle fibres
    and explosive power in his legs.

    Parramatta Eels conditioning gurus Hayden Knowles and Craig Catterick
    are supervising the new lower-body program.

    "Vic doesn't need to work on his upper body, boxing is enough for him
    in terms of maintenance there," Knowles said. "But by working on the
    power from his legs, we believe we can increase his power quite
    considerably."

    Darchinyan's manager Elias Nasser admitted the assignment of finding
    fights was tough because of Darchinyan's fearsome reputation.
Working...
X