The Star Malaysia

Brazil’s Sousa knocks out opponent in final bout

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Unheralded Brazilian Hebert Sousa won the Olympic middleweig­ht boxing gold with a stunning third-round knockout of Ukrainian Oleksandr Khyzhniak, turning around a fight he had all but lost to win Brazil’s second-ever Games gold in the sport.

Khyzhniak had the edge in the fight with quick and big punches but Sousa, who has no championsh­ip titles to his name, fought hard to stay in the match and from nowhere unleashed a fierce left that sent his opponent to the floor.

Sousa immediatel­y burst into wild celebratio­n, falling to his knees and screaming out into the arena as a shaken Khyzhniak got back on his feet, staggering, and demanded the fight continue as the Brazilian team rejoiced.

Britain’s Galal Yafai and Bulgaria’s Stoyka Zhelyazkov­a Krasteva won first boxing golds for their countries at the Tokyo Olympics after dominant displays in their flyweight finals.

Reigning Commonweal­th champion Yafai won on a split decision against Filipino Carlo Paalam in the men’s match but was always the stronger boxer, fighting on the front foot and beating Paalam with accurate punches and a composed

performanc­e.

Yafai sent the 23-year-old Filipino to the canvas in the first round with a fierce left hook to the chin but Paalam recovered quickly and fought hard for what could have been the Philippine­s’ first-ever

Olympic boxing gold medal. The Briton, who has two brothers who were profession­al boxers, kept his cool as Paalam came out battling in the next two rounds, mixing roundhouse­s with uppercuts through the middle, but Yafai held a strong guard to fend off his opponent.

His gold put Britain second in the boxing medals table behind powerhouse Cuba.

“I’m just so determined to win,” said Yafai, a Rio Olympian who quit his job in a car factory to focus on fighting.

“I’ve just got the heart and desire to win and that worked for me.”

A two-time bantamweig­ht runner-up in world championsh­ips, 35-year-old Krasteva finally got her gold, showing her experience across the three rounds to deny Buse Naz Cakiroglu, 10 years her junior, Turkey’s first-ever boxing Olympic title. — Reuters Olympic boxing gold medal. The Briton, who has two brothers who were profession­al boxers, kept his cool as Paalam came out battling in the next two rounds, mixing roundhouse­s with uppercuts through the middle, but Yafai held a strong guard to fend off his opponent.

His gold put Britain second in the boxing medals table behind powerhouse Cuba.

“I’m just so determined to win,” said Yafai, a Rio Olympian who quit his job in a car factory to focus on fighting.

“I’ve just got the heart and desire to win and that worked for me.”

A two-time bantamweig­ht runner-up in world championsh­ips, 35-year-old Krasteva finally got her gold, showing her experience across the three rounds to deny Buse Naz Cakiroglu, 10 years her junior, Turkey’s first-ever boxing Olympic title.

 ?? — ap ?? In the face: Brazil’s Hebert Sousa (right) landing a punch on ukraine’s Oleksandr Khyzhniak during their men’s middleweig­ht bout.
— ap In the face: Brazil’s Hebert Sousa (right) landing a punch on ukraine’s Oleksandr Khyzhniak during their men’s middleweig­ht bout.

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