The Guardian Australia

‘He wouldn’t go down’: Tim Tszyu rises to occasion with hard-fought win

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It was no quick kill or the knockout his ravenous fans have come to expect and crave. But Tim Tszyu’s latest conquest was just what he yearned for as Australian boxing’s emerging global superstar edges ever closer to a longawaite­d world-title shot.

“Healthy” was Tszyu’s considered response when asked to assess his clinical performanc­e after yet again underlinin­g those credential­s with a unanimous points victory over Takeshi Inoue on Wednesday night.

It was a high-risk path that Tszyu did not need to take. But, looking unstoppabl­e, Tszyu rose to the occasion for his sternest test yet to prevail after 12 tough rounds and improve his undefeated profession­al record to a 20-0 – 15 by TKO.

“Something I needed in my career, that’s for sure – 12 rounds,” Tszyu said. “Just being able to grind it out the whole time. I got used to these annihilati­ons so it’s good to get the rounds in with a durable opponent.”

Durable being an understate­ment. Including towel downs and medical repairs, Inoue courageous­ly withstood a near-hour-long barrage of head and body blows from Tszyu before accepting his seemingly inevitable fate.

“The guy is built like a brick wall. I don’t think a heavyweigh­t could drop him. What a warrior,” Tszyu said.

Already the mandatory No 1-ranked challenger to Brian Castano’s WBO light middleweig­ht belt, Tszyu is hoping his latest comprehens­ive triumph will finally clinch that world-title shot against the Argentine early next year.

All bets would have been off had the 27-year-old lost to Inoue. But the 10,752 fans who packed Qudos Bank Arena, including a who’s who of Sydney NRL stars, need not have worried.

Tszyu dominated from the getgo. While he was unable to record a 16th knockout win, Tszyu was never in doubt of getting the nod from the judges after leaving Inoue battered and blue.

“I heard him squeal like 20 times and he wouldn’t go down,” he said. “I was very surprised, cos I just kept hitting him with everything and he’s a warrior, man, a Japanese warrior. Respect to him.

“That was the best thing that could have happened, 12 rounds before the big time. I’ll be back in the gym, I need to take these guys out.”

And with a message to Castano and all of his 154-pound competitor­s, he declared: “I’m coming for all of you. Every, single one of you.”

Tszyu’s manager Glenn Jennings will be in deep discussion­s with the sanctionin­g bodies, promoters and Castano’s camp to determine when – and

where – that world-title blockbuste­r can take place.

A sticking point could be Castano’s potential rematch with Jermell Charlo after their controvers­ial split draw in Texas in July which the Argentine was convinced he had won.

Should that take place, and Castano wins, Tsyzu could be in line for a unified mega-fight for all four straps. It would be nothing less than the Sydneyside­r deserves in his obsessive quest to follow in footsteps of his legendary fighting father Kostya and become a world champion.

 ?? Photograph: Mark Kolbe/Getty Images ?? Tim Tszyu eyes his next challenge after a ‘healthy’ performanc­e in disposing of Japan’s Takeshi Inoue.
Photograph: Mark Kolbe/Getty Images Tim Tszyu eyes his next challenge after a ‘healthy’ performanc­e in disposing of Japan’s Takeshi Inoue.

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