Mar. 7, 1998 |
ROCKY LIN
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The WBA #2 ranked junior fly contender JOMA GAMBOA, a hard-hitting Filipino, 109, survied a careless first-round visit to the deck, fought back to make Japanese lefty RYO KURUSHIMA, 108 1/2, take a standing count in the 4th and followed up en route to a stoppage at 2:17 of the 9th. Gamboa had acquired the Fedelatin junior fly title on a surprising first round KO of ex-WBA ruler Carlos Murillo in Caracas, Venezuela, on Sept. 27. He moved up to the #2 rank of the WBA, and will move up to the top rank since the WBA champ Pichit Chor Siriwat beat #1 contender and compatriot Hadao CP Gym in Thailand on Mar. 1. Gamboa, however, looked too eager to finish the underdog Kurushima, hitting a punch at a time. He must hit more blows in combination. Scored after the 8th: double 78-73 and 77-74, all for Gamboa, who raised his credentials to 23-3-1, 18 KOs. Kurushima, who had lately entered the Japanese top ten by whipping rated Nobuo Murasaki, fell to 7-5-3, 5 KOs. But Kurushima, with his experience in Karate, proved he could punch despite this defeat. |
JOMA GAMBOA
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Lefty prospect GO KANEUCHI, 130, had a tough battle due to the tremendous fighting spirit and durability of Mexican warrior FERNANDO ALANIS, 130, but dropped him with a fine combination to make the referee intervene at 2:08 of the 8th. Alanis was the tough hombre who fought a close battle prior to a 10th and final round stoppage by Joichiro Tatsuyoshi in Las Vegas in Dec., 1996. Kaneuchi sometimes scored his best shots to Alanis, who was never fading but responded to the Japanese lefty's solid combos with his roundhouse rallies. The 8th saw Kaneuchi battered to the punch temporarily but retaliate with a fast and effective combination, dropping him on the deck. The third man didn't hesitate to declare a halt on Alanis hitting the deck. Kaneuchi, formerly All Japan high school champ, is 10-1, 6 KOs. Alanis reportedly dropped to 17-8-3, 8 KOs. In a supporting 8-rounder, Japanese-based Mongolian Isoodolin Batnasan,
147, made it 3-0, 3 KOs, as he stopped Japanese Tomonori Ohara, 147, at
1:32 of the 2nd session. |
GO KANEUCHI
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