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Dzinziruk Defends WBO
154-Pound Crown
With 10th Round TKO Over Dawson
Photos: Tom Casino - SHOWTIME
World Boxing
Organization (WBO) Junior Middleweight Champ Sergiy
Dzinziruk made the fifth defense of his title look easy
with a dominating 10th round TKO of previously
once-beaten challenger Daniel Dawson in the main event
of ShoBox: The New Generation Friday night on SHOWTIME
from the Chumash Resort Casino in Santa Ynez, Calif.
Unbeaten prospect Vernon Paris narrowly defeated the
tough Juan Santiago in Friday’s co-feature with an
eight-round split decision victory, scored 77-74
Santiago, 76-75 Paris, twice.
Dzinziruk, a superstar in Europe, was more than
impressive in his U.S. debut, dominating the fight from
the opening bell with his relentless jab. Dzinziruk
(36-0, 24 KOs), of Hamburg, Germany, fought safely in
the opening rounds and established the jab before
becoming more aggressive and punishing against the
outmatched, Australian-born Dawson (34-2, 24 KOs).
Dzinziruk certainly
didn’t look like a fighter who was making his first
defense in more than 17 months. The 34-year-old peppered
the clearly defenseless Dawson, 32, with combos and jabs
in the later rounds, forcing referee Jose Cobain to stop
the fight at 2:12 of the 10th round.
“My plan was to use the jab to make him tired and then
go to the other punches,” Dzinziruk said. “We saw some
tapes of him and knew the early rounds would be tough.
Our plan was to apply more pressure in the later rounds
and finish him. We’d had a long layoff and we wanted to
take it easy in the beginning.
“Whatever we planned, it worked out. I feel good about
my performance, especially after the long layoff.
I wanted to please the American fans, and I think I did.
Now, I want to take collect a few more belts and take on
the other (154 pound) champions.”
Steve Farhood, ShoBox’s
expert analyst, agreed.
“The jab was a dominating weapon,” Farhood said. “We
knew going in that Dawson had to find the answer for it
and he never did.
“You can’t help but project his jab against the best
154-pounders in the world and wonder if he’d be as
effective. We really want to see him against the best.”
Dawson, who was also making his U.S. professional debut,
knew he had no answer for Dzinziruk’s most dangerous
weapon.
“Obviously, he had a good jab. That’s pretty clear,”
Dawson said. “I think once he established the jab and
the range, I was fighting to get back in it and he was
already comfortable. I failed to get around the jab or
beat him to it. “
While Dzinziruk put on a technical boxing clinic in the
main event, Friday’s co-feature was a little more wild
and unorthodox.
Paris (21-0, 13 KOs), of
Detroit, Mich., was clearly the more talented boxer, but
he tired towards the middle rounds and didn’t fight with
a sense of urgency. Santiago (2-4-1, 7 KOs), of Denver,
Colo., continued to press the action and won the crowd
over with his tough and determined style of fighting.
A close fight throughout, Paris came out in the eighth
and last round knowing that he needed a strong showing
to impress the judges and earn a decision.
“It was a close fight, but the judges got it right,”
Paris said. “He was aggressive and strong and he landed
a lot of good blows, but he also missed a lot. At the
same time, all of my punches landed. The judges got it
right.”
Santiago, who earned a
lopsided 77-74 on one judge’s scorecard, saw it
differently.
“I’m very disappointed,” Santiago said. “I feel like I
won, everyone knows that I won. I don’t know what more I
needed to do to win it.
“I did everything I possibly could do. I fought my
hardest. Everyone thought I won that fight.
Antonio Tarver, an expert analyst for ShoBox, felt Paris
didn’t give his best effort against a tough opponent.
“It was very
entertaining, but Paris has to get in shape,” Tarver
said. It’s obvious he has the skills and the talent, but
he has to get committed and dedicated. It’s clear he was
the better fighter, but, sometimes, wills beat skills.
“That last round is what did it for him. He laid it all
on the line and, if it wasn’t for that, he would have
lost it.”
The doubleheader was promoted by Gary Shaw Productions,
LLC.
Friday’s fights will re-air on SHO 2 on Tuesday, May 18
at 10 p.m. ET/PT (delayed on the west coast). The fights
will be available On Demand from May 19 until June 1.
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