South Wales Evening Post

PARKER ENDS CHISORA HOPES

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JOSEPH Parker was knocked down after seven seconds of his heavyweigh­t bout against Derek Chisora, but the New Zealander rallied to record a splitdecis­ion victory at the Manchester Arena.

Having been persuaded to go through with the fight by his mother after a row over the ring walks, Chisora looked set for one of the biggest wins of his career when he landed his signature looping overhand right moments after the first bell.

Parker weathered some more punishing moments before finishing strongly against his tiring rival and was given the nod 116-111 and 115113 by two of the judges, with a third scoring the contest 115-113 in favour of Chisora.

Chisora felt he had done enough to have his hand raised and lamented another narrow decision loss. He said afterwards: “I’m beyond getting upset now. It’s just difficult.

“I train hard, I fight, I put the pressure on. I bring everything and this is the treatment I get from boxing.

“This is unbelievab­le. Most people (thought) I won the fight.”

Perhaps spurred on by the events of the preceding 24 hours, Chisora put Parker on his knees with the first punch of the fight.

Parker had never been stopped in his profession­al career and this seemed more of a flash knockdown than anything Chisora could follow up to end the fight early.

He looked on menacingly after being ushered to a neutral corner, but Parker rose to his feet and looked to avoid the vaunted right hand of his opponent.

While he was forced to wear another big shot in the third round, this time he stayed upright.

Parker showed signs of resurgence after a difficult first few rounds, taking advantage of Chisora slowing down to pepper the British veteran with a combinatio­n that backed him up against the ropes in the seventh.

The pair engaged in several enthrallin­g toe-to-toe exchanges in the eighth, showing tremendous heart, with both men unwilling to take a backward step.

Parker got on top down the stretch and a punishing right hand seemed to wobble Chisora, who survived to the final bell but was left lamenting his second successive defeat.

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