CELES KOBAYASHI RISKS WBA 115-POUND TITLE AGAINST MUNOZ, 21-0, 21 KOs, TOMORROW


March 8, 2002

TOKYO, JAPAN-Lefty Japanese Celes Shoji Kobayashi (24-4-3, 14 KOs) will risk his WBA 115-pound belt against top-ranked Venezuelan KO artist Alexander Munoz (21-0, 21 KOs) at Budokan (Martial Arts Hall) in Tokyo, Japan, tomorrow.

Each tipped the beam at 115, the class limit. Munozfs stock tremendously raised here after his excellent display of speed, power, skill and balance at a public workout. His only untested factors are stamina and durability, which the southpaw champ boasts of.

Kobayashi, 29 and 6 years his senior, said, gI have superior experience in world title bouts. I will withstand his attack as much as possible and retaliate as he runs out of gas to defend my title.h

Munoz predicted, gI will knock him out within 8 rounds.h

Officials: referee Stanley Christodoulou (South Africa); judges guy Jutras (Canada), Derek Milham (Australia) and Jose Laurino (Urguary). The WBA supervisor is Renzo Bagnariol (Nicaragua).

Akihiko Honda of Teiken Promotions, Inc. presents a quadruple title bout, and other title goes are as follows:

The OPBF 140-pound champ Masakazu Satake (14-2-4, 8 KOs) will put his regional belt on the line against world-rated lightie Rick Yoshimura Roberts (38-5-2, 20 KOs) over 12 rounds. They fight at the 138-pound catchweight, and Satake scaled in at 138 and Rick 137.5. The fast-handed lefty Satake, 24 and making his 6th defense, is favored to outspeed the 37-year-old veteran, who battled the then WBA light boss Takanori Hatakeyama to a hard-fought draw in February of the previous year. The New Yorker Rick, who had defended his Japanese 135-pound title 22 times, has been training at Roy Jonesf Sqaure Ring gym since he was moved from Japan to Florida due to the US military order.

Upcoming OPBF top ranked Japanese feather champ Eiichi Sugama (22-2, 19 KOs), 125, will defend his belt against slick-punching Haruhiko Okuda (21-2, 16 KOs) over 10.

Lefty national light champ Norio Kimura (17-4-2, 5 KOs) will face top-ranked Takehiro Shimada (10-6, 7 KOs) over 10.

It seems difficult to predict the winner in each competitive fight.


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