The Northern Advocate

Cards fall Parker’s way

Fa takes first pro loss but there was no knockdown

- Liam Napier

Joseph Parker remains king of the New Zealand heavyweigh­ts after securing a unanimous decision victory over Junior Fa. Fa, a 6-1 underdog, defied prediction­s of a knockout by lasting the distance with former amateur foe Parker, more than holding his own over the course of the 12 rounds in the headline event at Spark Arena on Saturday night.

Not even a gaping cut above his right eye could deter Fa from having a crack at a major upset in the biggest New Zealand heavyweigh­t fight since David Tua floored Shane Cameron in 2009.

The three judges all favoured Parker with cards of 109-119, 113-115, 111-117 with two of those scorelines out of step with what was on show.

This was far from the statement performanc­e Parker sought but it keeps his hopes alive of mounting another charge for a title, with Dereck Chisora expected to be next in line.

Crucially the victory, in-front of a near capacity crowd, preserves Parker’s third ranking with the WBO and sets up bigger fights to come.

Fa, following the first defeat of his career, in his 20th profession­al fight, will need to regroup and assess where to next.

The 31-year-old proved his durability but probably needs to come forward more and let his hands go to challenge elite opponents.

There was no evidence of ring rust despite both boxers being out of the ring for over one year.

From the opening bell urgency was evident with a fast pace set. Fa used his significan­t height and reach advantage to try control the distance with his jab, but also landed some decent shots on Parker.

Parker came forward, regularly getting on the inside, to successful­ly target Fa’s body and string combinatio­ns together while attempting to load up his right hand.

A big overhand right from Parker in round nine grazed Fa but the elbow that followed the punch opened up a gaping cut above Fa’s left eye. Despite the best efforts of his corner blood poured from Fa’s eye through the remaining rounds.

Sensing he may be in strife, Fa emerged with intent in round 10 to land several telling shots on Parker — one straight right in particular an impressive blow.

Chants of “Junior, Junior” rang out during the 11th round as sections of the crowd warmed to the heart Fa portrayed as he bit down on his mouthguard and Parker struggled to land clean shots, especially with his favoured right hand.

The final round featured a flurry of punches, with neither fighter getting the upper hand.

Earlier in the night on the all-Kiwi undercard heavyweigh­ts Hemi Ahio and Julius Long put on an entertaini­ng slugfest that, while could not be called a highly skilled battle, did not lack heavy hands.

Detroit native Long, who was knocked out in the second round by British Olympic champion Audley Harrison in 2002, dropped Ahio with an upper cut in the fourth round.

Ahio was not down for long, though. The pair traded further big blows until Ahio caught Long flush on the jaw with a brutal left shot that sent the big American crumbling to the floor in slow motion, ending the fight in the sixth round to improve his record to 17-0.

Dual Commonweal­th Games gold medallist David Nyika, on pro debut, secured a bizarre 28-second TKO win over previously undefeated cruiserwei­ght Jesse Maio, who failed to beat the count after ducking into a shot and catching it behind the ear.

 ?? Photo / Dean Purcell ?? Junior Fa (left) backs up as Joseph Parker goes hunting for a clean blow on Saturday.
Photo / Dean Purcell Junior Fa (left) backs up as Joseph Parker goes hunting for a clean blow on Saturday.

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