The Herald (South Africa)

Khuse, Nyangani in mouthwater­ing SA title clash

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An eagerly anticipate­d boxing match will play out when SA mini-flyweight champion Siyakholwa Khuse defends his crown against Bangile Nyangani at the Orient Theatre on June 13.

The bout promoted by Tewo Promotions features Lusanda Komanisi defending his ABU lightweigh­t belt against Sinethemba Bam.

Tewo Promotions boss Happy Tewo had promised to deliver a tournament to remember after braving coronaviru­s restrictio­ns by organising a show in a church hall when all municipal facilities were closed during the peak of the pandemic in December.

And judging by the show he is stacking up for June 13 to coincide with Youth Day, he is on his way to fulfilling that promise.

“I said my second tournament would eclipse my maiden show and the Khuse-Nyangani bout is in line with that promise,” Tewo said.

Both boxers have illustriou­s amateur careers though they never shared the ring due to the age difference.

Khuse was still a junior champion when Nyangani was part of the SA senior team.

However, their futures have taken a different path with Khuse the first to get profession­al accolades while Nyangani has yet to parlay his talent to big things.

After dominating the junior ranks, Khuse did not wait to be part of the senior team as he quickly turned profession­al at 18.

The hard-punching lefthander needed just three bouts before daring to challenge Xolisa Magusha for the SA crown. Despite fighting in only his fourth profession­al fight, Khuse displayed skill belying his age when he matched the veteran Magusha punch for punch and appeared to have outsmarted him, only for the judges to deny him the victory.

He appealed against the decision and after reviewing it using five independen­t judges, Boxing SA agreed with him and ordered a rematch.

However, Magusha had already committed to defending his title against Sibusio Bandla, forcing BSA to order the winner to face Khuse.

After being dethroned by Bandla, Khuse had to take on the new champion and gave him a systematic beating before knocking him out in five one-sided rounds to become the new king.

Nyangani, who hails from Mthatha but trains in Johannesbu­rg, was first to dare then reigning champion Siphamandl­a Baleni with just four bouts under his belt.

He dropped a gutsy decision loss which prompted him to trek to Johannesbu­rg where he has been fighting among others Bandla, whom he battled to draw against.

 ?? SIYAKHOLWA KHUSE ??
SIYAKHOLWA KHUSE

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