Los Angeles Times

Boxer sluggish but still a champ

Matthysse, who won his first world title by knocking out Kiram, aims to face Pacquiao.

- By Lance Pugmire lance.pugmire@latimes.com Twitter: @latimespug­mire

Who’d have known that Lucas Matthysse, after winning his first boxing world title, would have to wonder about such strange queries.

Where were your power punches?

What did you learn about the performanc­e-enhancing effects of the pain-relief rub known as Tiger Balm?

Do you deserve Manny Pacquiao in his discussed April 14 comeback fight?

The 34-year-old Argentinia­n, who had twice failed in bids to become a juniorwelt­erweight world champion, took consolatio­n late Saturday night in claiming the World Boxing Assn’s vacant secondary welterweig­ht belt by knocking out Thailand’s No. 2-rated contender, Tewa Kiram, in the eighth round at the Forum.

The bout followed Jorge Linares’ seventh consecutiv­e lightweigh­t title victory, a unanimous decision (118110, 118-110, 117-111) over Mercito Gesta.

Matthysse won despite a puzzling departure from his famed reliance on heavy handed blows.

Punch statistici­an CompuBox recorded him landing only 39 power punches on Kiram (37-1).

“He moved really well and he was really big. That’s why it was hard to cut the distance,” Matthysse (38-4, 36 knockouts) said.

The reduced effort also looked much like the effects of age, as Matthysse only landed 24% of his total punches (59 of 246 thrown) and trailed 68-65 on judge Pat Russell’s card through seven rounds.

Kiram trailed 68-65 on Zach Young’s card and 69-64 on Levi Martinez’s thanks to his own weak efficiency of landing just 55 of 277 punches (19.9%).

That happened in spite of Kiram and his corner attempting to massage the rules by stuffing the fighter’s nose into a small cup of a substance he sniffed during the bout, specifical­ly after the sixth round when a member of the California State Athletic Commission noticed and confiscate­d the tin.

In perhaps the most entertaini­ng moment of the fight before the eighth round, referee Raul Caiz Sr. was shown the substance and decided to launch his own investigat­ion by smelling the substance himself between rounds.

Caiz allowed the fight to proceed.

After the bout, the head of the commission, Andy Foster, told The Times that the substance was the overthe-counter pain-relief rub, Tiger Balm, which Foster said did not rise to the level of being a banned drug.

Foster urged The Times to later come to look at the substance, directing a reporter to the Forum’s upstairs “Justin Bieber” room, but security officers disallowed a reporter at the entry of the Forum Club (where a portrait of Justin Timberlake was placed) and pointed him to the exit.

The Forum crowd was repulsed by the showing of both fighters through seven rounds.

Then Matthysse acted on the advice of his cornerman Joel Diaz and fought more aggressive­ly, landing a hard left to the face that knocked Kiram to the canvas early in the round.

“I didn’t feel his power when he hit me and that’s why I was able to find him later and stop him,” Matthysse said. “He felt my power.”

Kiram went down for good on a second left to the head.

HBO analyst Max Kellerman questioned if Kiram’s delayed reaction was suspicious, perhaps indicating that he didn’t want to fight anymore, but the theory seemed dubious considerin­g Kiram was leading on one card and certainly wanted the belt to build upon his title-fight purse of $40,000.

Kiram was down for an extended period, and was taken to a local hospital afterward for precaution­ary reasons.

Mattyhsse, meanwhile, leaped atop a neutral ring corner with a beaming expression of satisfacti­on after previously losing title shots against junior-welterweig­hts Danny Garcia and Viktor Postol.

He said he’d like to meet Garcia in a rematch after the former two-division champion meets Brandon Rios on Feb. 17, and he also threw his hat in the ring for a possible Pacquiao return fight that could happen April 14 at Madison Square Garden.

In his next bout, Matthysse won’t be able to bring the type of tentativen­ess or lethargy that he showed Saturday night.

At least he’ll be bringing his new belt.

‘I didn’t feel his power when he hit me and that’s why I was able to find him later and stop him. He felt my power.’ — Lucas Matthysse after knocking out Tewa Kiram in the eighth round Saturday night at the Forum

 ?? Jeff Gross Getty Images ?? TEWA KIRAM receives a standing eight count after being knocked down by Lucas Matthysse, right, during Saturday night’s bout at The Forum.
Jeff Gross Getty Images TEWA KIRAM receives a standing eight count after being knocked down by Lucas Matthysse, right, during Saturday night’s bout at The Forum.

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