The Phnom Penh Post

Golovkin survives Derevyanch­enko scare to regain title

-

GENNADY Golovkin reclaimed his IBF title on Saturday, def e a t i ng Ser g i y Derevyanch­enko by a unanimous decision in a bruising middleweig­ht fight at Madison Square Garden.

Golovkin knocked Derevyanch­enko down in the first round and cut him over the eye in the second but had to dig deep to beat the stubborn Ukrainian, who made his opponent look all of his 37 years.

“It’s a bad day for me but a h u g e e x p e r i e n c e ,” s a i d Golovkin. “After the first round I didn’t think this was an easy fight. I told myself this is a tough fight.”

With the vacant middleweig­ht title on the line, Derevyanch­enko fought a brave fight, landing solid body shots and getting Golovkin in trouble several times.

He recovered quickly from the knockdown but it didn’t help him in the scoring department in what was a surprising­ly close fight.

One judge scored it 114-113 and the other two had it 115112 for Golovkin.

The 37-year-old Golovkin improved to 40-1-1 as he regained the belt he first won in 2015.

Golovkin defended the title with wins against Dominic Wade, Kell Brook and Daniel Jacobs and a draw against Mexico’s Canelo Alvarez.

Golovkin was stripped of the IBF title last year when he failed to make a mandatory de f e nc e a g a i ns t Dere v yanchenko, opting instead for a rematch with Alvarez – who handed Golovkin the first defeat of his career.

The 33-year-old Derevyanch­enko, who falls to 13-2 with 10 KOs, was hoping to score a huge upset and dim the prospects for a third GolovkinAl­varez bout in 2020.

The shadow of another Alvarez fight has loomed large over this bout.

Alvarez is making a November 2 return to the ring against light heavyweigh­t titleholde­r Sergey Kovalev in a fight that will see Alvarez move up two weight divisions.

Golovkin, who contends that Alvarez “ran away” from a rematch, was clearly wearied by repeated questions about Alvarez in the build up to Saturday’s bout.

Speaking in the ring immediatel­y after the fight, Golovkin said would have to improve before he f i g ht s Al vare z again.

“Right now I know exactly what I need. I understand I need more,” he said. “Everything is ready. Just call to Canelo and if he says yes, let’s do it.”

Blood flows

This may not have been the long awaited trilogy showdown but it was a surprising­ly entertaini­ng fight.

Golovkin started quickly in the opening round, landing strong left hooks and then knocking Derevyanch­enko down with a grazing right to the top of the head.

I n t h e s e c o nd r o u nd , De re v y a n c h e n k o s t a r t e d bleeding from a nasty cut over the right eye that referee Harvey Dock mistakenly called a head butt.

Video replays showed t he cut came from a v icious left hook to t he brow t hat had Derev ya nchenko paw ing at his eye to t r y a nd wipe t he blood of f.

Once the blood started to flow, Derevyanch­enko went to work. Down a 10-8 round from the knockdown and bleeding from a potential fight stopping cut he showed more urgency.

Golovkin was the aggressor through the middle rounds but Derevyanch­enko managed to counterpun­ch effectivel­y. When Golovkin tried to cut off the ring, Derevyanch­enko did a good job of spinning out of trouble and throwing punches on the move.

E v e r y t i me G o l o v k i n appeared t o get Derevyanch­enko in trouble, the Ukrainian dug deep and battled back with a sense of determinat­ion and a steady volley of punches.

Both fighters landed solid punches in a furious 10th round. Derevyanch­enko had Golovkin in trouble after a right hook and a right uppercut but Golovkin came back and connected on a couple of blows at the bell.

By the 12th round, Golovkin looked the more tired of the two but he had won enough rounds early on and scored the knockdown, which allowed him to take the close decision.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Cambodia