The Philippine Star

Last man standing in Budapest boxing

- By JOAQUIN HENSON

While the Philippine­s battles in the Asian Games, a small Filipino contingent of four is in Budapest for the AIBA World Youth Championsh­ips where 359 fighters from 65 countries are vying for honors in 10 weight categories each for men and women at the 5,000-seat Dunn Arena.

Only flyweight Milenino Anduyan and bantamweig­ht Criztian e survived the preliminar­ies while lightflywe­ight Criz Russu Laurente and women’s flyweight Jima Baja were bundled out in their first bouts. Anduyan, however, failed to go beyond the second round, losing a close 3-2 decision to Morocco’s Bader Berhili, but Pitt Laurente pulled through and will face Iran’s Daniyal Shahbakhsh in the quarterfin­als today. If Pitt beats Shahbakhsh, he advances to the semifinals on Tuesday and is guaranteed a bronze.

Coaches Pat Gaspi and Elias Recaido are with the team in Hungary. ABAP executive director Ed Picson said every fighter had to qualify to make it the World Youth Championsh­ips. It’s a bigger competitio­n than in the Asian Games where there are 194 fighters from 31 countries competing in seven divisions for men and only three for women.

Anduyan’s defeat to Berhili was a heartbreak­er. Anduyan, 18, looked impressive in his debut, carving out a 4-1 decision over hometowner Tamas Borsos. Against Berhili, he wasn’t as convincing but came close to scoring a win. Two judges, Mikhail Shashkov of Russia and Antonio Acija of Uganda, had it 29-28, both for Anduyan. But three other judges saw it the other way as Kam Naklam of Thailand and James Beckles of Trinidad and Tobago scored it 29-28 and Seyed Ali Jafari of Iran, 30-27, for Berhili.

Anduyan, whose idol is Nonito Donaire, Jr., took the Batang Pinoy gold medal in 2015 and went to the semifinals of the Asean Youth Championsh­ips in Saraburi, Thailand, last year. The Tacloban teener qualified for Budapest by finishing sixth at the Asian Youth Championsh­ips in Bangkok last April.

Baja, the Philippine­s’ only female qualifier, crashed out in a heap. Korean Kim Chae Won stopped the Cagayan de Oro fighter at 2:59 of the first round. Russu Laurente also bowed out in his first outing, dropping a 5-0 decision to Thailand’s Thitisan Panmod with all five judges scoring it 29-26.

So now, the Philippine­s’ medal hopes rest squarely on Pitt Laurente’s shoulders. The twotime Palarong Pambansa gold medalist from General Santos City got off to a rousing start by decisionin­g Kyrgyzstan’s Sanzhai Seidekmato­v, 4-1 then clinched a seat in the quarterfin­als vi a 4-0 verdict over India’s Akash Kumar. Four judges scored it for Laurente as Hichem Menchaoui of Tunisia, Dmytro Lazarev of Ukraine, Yu Ling Chang of Chinese-Taipei and Wilfredo Vazquez of Cuba saw it 29-27. Judge Josef Cser of Austria had it a draw, 28-all.

Laurente booked a ticket to Budapest after bagging a silver at the Asian Youth Championsh­ips in Bangkok this year, losing to Uzbekistan’s Abdumalik Khalokov in the final. On the way to the gold medal match, he disposed of fighters from Japan, Afghanista­n, Cambodia and Thailand. In 2016, Laurente took the gold at the Children of Asia Championsh­ips in Yakutsk, Russia, beating Kazakhstan’s Sulchar Taltibek in the final after eliminatin­g three Russian fighters in a row. A win over Shahbaksh, a quarterfin­alist in the recent Asian Youth Championsh­ips, will assure Laurente a podium finish in Hungary.

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