The Manila Times

Reinvigora­ted Khan stops Molina to snap losing skid

- AFP

LOS ANGELES: Britain’s Amir Khan defeated previously unbeaten American Carlos Molina in a light-welterweig­ht showdown over the weekend, returning the Englishman to the world title scene after back-toback losses.

After watching Khan batter Molina for most of the fight, referee Jack Reiss halted the bout following the 10th round as Molina’s cornermen asked him to end the lopsided contest.

“You could see the way I was fighting, more patiently,” Khan said. “At times he did catch me. I just composed myself, stuck with the game plan, stayed with it and kept my composure.”

A week after his 26th birthday, Khan dominated with superior handspeed and was seldom tested in improving to 27-3 with his 19th early stoppage and first victory since stopping Zab Judah in July of last year.

Hometown hero Molina, 27, fell to 17-1 with one draw.

Khan was stopped in the fourth round last July by American Danny Garcia in a showdown for two world titles after a controvers­ial loss to US fighter Lamont Peterson last December.

Garcia, who watched from ringside, will defend his world titles against compatriot Judah in Febru- ary. But Khan hopes for a rematch with Garcia after that.

“I’m ready for Danny Garcia anywhere, any time, any place,” Khan said. “He was lucky. He caught me with a good shot.”

Khan opened a cut over the left eye of Molina in the opening seconds and the Englishman pressed the attack against his smaller rival with jabs and quick combinatio­ns.

After trading punches, Khan would walk to reposition himself for his next attack, a patient strategy instilled upon him by new trainer Virgil Hunter, who Khan began working with eight weeks ago after dumping Manny Pacquiao cornerman Freddie Roach.

“He’s teaching me how to understand boxing,” Khan said. “If I’m using my speed properly, there’s nobody in the world who can beat me.

“I get too ballsy for my own good. But now with Virgil I’m sticking behind that jab and staying patient.”

Round after round, Khan got the best of nearly every exchange as a bloodied Molina refused to back down but struggled to even test Khan’s defenses.

“I caught him with some good shots and he kept coming,” Khan said. “I thought ‘I had better stick to my game plan because this kid is tough.”

 ?? AFP PHOTO ?? Amir Khan of Great Britain ( right) lands a right hand to the head of Carlos Molina during their Vacant WBC Silver Super Lightweigh­t title fight at Los Angeles Sports Arena on Sunday.
AFP PHOTO Amir Khan of Great Britain ( right) lands a right hand to the head of Carlos Molina during their Vacant WBC Silver Super Lightweigh­t title fight at Los Angeles Sports Arena on Sunday.

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