Manila Bulletin

Donaire, world champ again after 7 years

- By NICK GIONGCO

A freak back injury suffered by Irishman Ryan Burnett handed the World Boxing Associatio­n (WBA) bantamweig­ht title to Filipino-American Nonito Donaire Saturday night

(early Sunday in Manila) in Glasgow, Scotland.

Burnett didn’t come out for the fifth round when he hurt his back midway through the fourth round after missing with an overhead right.

Donaire tried to finish him off by raining blows in the remainder but Burnett managed to survive. He later told his cornermen that he could no longer throw his right.

This prompted the referee to declare a halt to the scheduled 12-rounder at the 13,000-seat SSE Hydro, making Donaire a champion again at 118 lbs after more than seven years.

Before misfortune struck, Burnett, who entered the match with a 19-0 card with nine KOs, was ahead on the scorecards after controllin­g the first two rounds.

But Donaire, armed with a 38-5 card with 24 KOs, was in the thick of the match and appeared to be finding his rhythm when the end came.

“As a warrior, Burnett is an amazing fighter, early on he just kept coming at me. A win is a win and it wasn’t the way I would like to win but he's an amazing fighter,” said Donaire, who turns 36 in less than two weeks.

“Age is nothing but a number. He was fast, strong and caught me with some good punches. I came into this fight as the bigger guy and my coaches snapped me out of it and told me to box.”

Still, Donaire wasn’t as ecstatic as a pure stoppage winner, knowing that the victory was kind of half-baked as he didn’t whoop it up and instead consoled the weeping Belfast native.

Burnett was so much in pain that he had to be brought out of the ring on a stretcher.

But according to some ringsiders, Burnett had been badly hurt by a vicious Donaire left hook on the same spot where he complained of extreme pain as he got back to his corner at the end of the third canto.

During the break, Burnett had told his corner of a discomfort on that area of his body, according to the UK media.

Donaire’s win makes him the fourth reigning Filipino world champion after Manny Pacquiao, Jerwin Ancajas and Vic Saludar.

On Dec. 1 in Los Angeles, minimumwei­ght Mark Anthony Barriga will attempt to join them while super-fly Donnie Nietes will get his turn on December 31 in Macau.

The Donaire-Burnett clash was a part of an elite eight-participan­t bantamweig­ht tournament called the World Boxing Super Series that will hold semifinal matches next year.

The remaining four fighters aside from Donaire are South African Zolani Tete, Emmanuel Rodriguez of Puerto Rico and Naoya Inoue of Japan.

Donaire is paired with Tete while Rodriguez and Inoue make up the other final four tiff.

The finals will be held in May with the winner getting $10 million (about 1535 million).

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines