The Free Press Journal

VIJENDER BEATS CHINESE BOXER ZULPIKAR IN HIS 9TH CONSECUTIV­E VICTORY

KO king defeats challenger Zulpikar Maimaitial­i as Indian boxers sweep Battlegrou­nd Asia with all wins

-

Indian star Vijender Singh defeated Zulpikar Maimaitial­i of China by a unanimous decision in a tough 10-round contest here on Saturday to retain his WBO Asia Pacific Super Middleweig­ht title and take over his opponent's WBO Oriental Super Middleweig­ht crown.

The Haryana pugilist thus extended his winning streak in the profession­al arena to nine bouts. It was the first defeat of Zulpikar's profession­al career.

Known for his ability to knockout opponents, the Uighur boxer from China was undefeated in his previous nine profession­al bouts. He had won eight of those -- several of them by knockouts -while one bout was undecided.

Both boxers were slightly tentative in an evenly matched opening round. Zulpikar tried to go on the offensive at the start of the second round but Vijender did well to negate his attacks. The Indian used his superior height to land several punches over the course of the round.

The next couple of rounds were evenly matched as well although the Chinese boxer found it hard to counter Vijender's height advantage.

The Indian used his superior power and height to consistent­ly chip away at his opponent and gradually wear him down. Zulpikar tried very hard, but found it tough to deal with Vijender's defence and counter-punches.

In his attempt to force the advantage, Zulpikar hit Vijender below the belt on a few occasions, one of which saw the contest being stopped for several seconds in the ninth round.

Zulpikar tried to force the pace in the final round in an attempt to regain lost ground, but Vijender managed to evade his attacks and hold on for the win.

Earlier in the evening, Indians did well in the undercard bouts as well with 2006 Commonweal­th Games champion Akhil Kumar, Jitender Kumar, Asad Asif, Kuldeep Dhanda, Dharmender Grewal, Pardeep Kharera winning their respective fights.

Making his profession­al debut at the age of 36, Akhil Kumar defeated Ty Gilchrist by a technical knockout (TKO) in the Junior Welterweig­ht category after the Australian was deemed unfit to contest further at the end of the second round.

Akhil suffered a nasty cut under his left eye in the early stages of the opening round. But he did not let that affect his performanc­e, fighting with his typical open stance and tried to intimidate his opponent.

Akhil came out all guns blazing in the second round with a flurry of punches, forcing the Australian to retire with an injury. Jitender, another debutant in the pro circle, also registered a TKO, thrashing Thanet Likhitkamp­orn of Thailand with a barrage of power-packed punches in the Lightweigh­t category.

The Thai was unable to put up much of a fight which prompted the referee to stop the contest in the second round. Kharera also registered a TKO, overpoweri­ng Wanphichit Siriphana of Thailand in a Welterweig­ht category contest. It was scheduled to be a six-round bout, but the 21-yearold Indian rained powerful blows on his opponent right from the opening bell and the Thai was forced to leave the ring with an injury after the second round.

Earlier, Asif defeated Larry Abbara of the Philippine­s in the opening fight of the evening before Kuldeep Dhanda defeated fellow Indian Sachin Bhot in the second bout. India's Dharmender Grewal then beat Isaac Slade of Australia in the Cruiserwei­ght category to cheer up the local crowd.

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? India’s Neeraj Goyat (L) in action against Alan Tanada
India’s Neeraj Goyat (L) in action against Alan Tanada

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India