JORRIN BARELY KEEPS WBC 122-POUND BELT BY MAJORITY DRAW WITH SATO


February 5, 2002

TOKYO, JAPAN-Unbeaten Willie Jorrin (28-0-1, 13 KOs), 122, US, very barely kept his WBC 122-pound belt on a split draw as he dropped Japanese Osamu Sato (25-1-2, 14 KOs), 122, twice in the third to be on the verge of a KO victory, but became fading and defensive to consume his early lead on points over 12 heats at Ariake Coliseum, Tokyo.

Scored: Maximo Barroveccio (Italy) 114-114, Vincent Rodriguez (Philippines) 113-113, and Noparat Sricharoen (Thailand) 114-112 for Sato. Referee was Terry OfConnor (England).

The slick-punching Jorrin easily swept the first three rounds with sharper punches to the still nervous Japanese. Jorrin, in round three, sent him sprawling to the deck with a left hook following a chopping right and floored him again with a flurry of punches. Sato had a narrow escape.

The Japanese desperately began to mix it up from the 4th and overwhelmed the abruptly fading champ probably due to his one-year activity. Sato seemed to dominate almost all rounds from the 4th with his busier combinations though Jorrin occasionally threw countering shots. The champfs face was bruised and bleeding from a gash over the left optic with his absorption of Satofs persistent attack.

The official verdict dejected the once cheering crowd as the draw meant Jorrinfs defense. Sato, who expected to be called himself the new champ, deserves a rematch with Jorrin or a shot at the winner of his mandatory defense with Israel Vazquez.

UNDERCARD:

Formerly brightest Japanese prospect Akihiko Nago (18-3, 12 KOs), 122, returned to action after his 14-month layoff since his failure to win the WBC 115-pound belt via unanimous nod to the defending champ Masamori Tokuyama, but surprisingly hit the deck twice in the first, once more in the second, and lost a close but unanimous decision to Thai #8 ranked feather Thongchareon Au Suwannaslip (8-6, 1 KO), 122, over 8.

It might be a mistake to book such a physically superior Thai opponent in his comeback go though Nago moved up to the 122-pound division. Thongchareon landed a vicious overhand right to drop him with such heavy damage as to make him fall again in the opening canto. The second witnessed Nago collapse again with a same right as he suffered in the previous round. The Japanese southpaw, once highly rated in the world, tried to win back points with his trade-mark jolting right hooks, but all the officials tallied 76-75 for the unheralded Thailander. Nago had lost just twice-both with the world title at stake-to the WBA champ Hideki Todaka and the WBC ruler Tokuyama, so his comeback was very highly expected. It was a shocker.

Japanese top ranked super-bantam Shigeru Nakazato (21-5, 16 KOs), 122, decked lefty speedster Jun Toriumi (13-3-1, 2 KOs), 122, four times en route to a fine KO win at 2:43 of the 6th session. Though bleeding badly, Nakazato had him on the canvas with his roundhouse but powerful shots in the first, second and 6th (twice).

Japanese #3 welter Motoki Sasaki (15-4, 8 KOs) was awarded a TKO triumph over Yoshihiko Kogo (8-9, no KO) after the 6th.

Promoter: Kyoei Promotions.

WBC supervisor: Frank Quill (Australia).

(2-5-02)


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