Boxing: Darchinyan early leader for Fighter of the Year

FOXSports.com
Feb 8 2009

Darchinyan early leader for Fighter of the Year

by Jake Donovan, BoxingScene.com

Updated: February 8, 2009, 1:25 AM EST 4 comments Former flyweight
titlist Vic Darchinyan began 2008 on the comeback trail, and ended the
year as a unified three-belt champion and strong contender for Fighter
of the Year.

With Manny Pacquiao, last year’s winner, not fighting until May,
Darchinyan jumped out to an early start in 2009, adding to his
impressive run of super flyweight victories with a systematic beatdown
of Jorge Arce. A grudge match three years into the making, Darchinyan
dominated throughout en route to an 11th round knockout in Anaheim,
Calif.

The Honda Center crowd never seemed to know which way to root during
much of the high-contact affair. The night began with Arce enjoying
the makeshift hometown advantage with Darchinyan entering the arena to
a chorus of boos. It was the only disadvantage Darchinyan would
encounter all night. But, it was one he seemed to embrace as he bore a
sinister grin on his face all the way to the ring and through the
ropes.

Once the action was underway, the rabid fans in the house simply
cheered the action no matter who was throwing. There was plenty to
root for, even if it meant dedicating its applause to the man they
originally came to despise.

A boxing match never threatened to break out in this fight of little
big men. Both fighters looked for openings in the early
going. Darchinyan found one, a straight left that momentarily stunned
Arce. A right hand found its mark for Arce, but was immediately
countered with an uppercut for Darchinyan, who also landed with right
hooks upstairs as well as straight lefts as the round came to a close.

The momentum flowed in the same direction in the second round. Arce
couldn’t get anything going, as Darchinyan constantly beat the
free-swinging Mexican to the punch. It appeared to be more of the same
in the third, until Arce was finally able to establish his offense.

A double left hook to the body temporarily slowed down Darchinyan’s
attack; two left hooks and a straight right hand upstairs turned the
tide in Arce’s favor moments later. An accidental head butt late in
the round left Darchinyan with a cut over his left eyelid, and the
champ later ate another left hook to add to his troubles.

Arce brought forth the good fortunes into the fourth, starting things
off with the weapon that brought him back into the fight, a left hook
upstairs. Darchinyan struggled to rediscover his rhythm until a
thudding body shot midway through the round helped swing things back
in his favor. A straight left by Darchinyan left Arce wobbled and
forced to clinch inside of the final minute. The sequence was followed
by a teeth-rattling uppercut that left Arce on rubber legs. He
survived the round, but lost his punch as he struggled to regain his
senses.

Back in the driver’s seat, Darchinyan was renewed as the fifth began,
boxing on his toes and almost daring Arce to come in. The round
clearly belonged to the transplanted Armenian, who ended the frame
with a flurry of punches, including one or two after the bell for good
measure.

Sensing his foe was beginning to wilt, Darchinyan offered a brief chin
check at the start of the sixth. Arce absorbed, but offered back
little in return. As the round wore on, Darchinyan was throwing every
punch with mean intentions.

Darchinyan began the seventh round with right hook upstairs, and
basically spent the rest of the round taking Arce to school. The
brutal offensive attack was mixed in with stellar in and out movement,
always just far enough out of Arce’s punches to make him miss and
counter the hell out of him in return. A mixture of fatigue and
absorption had Arce stumbling around the ring at rounds end.

Things slowed down a bit in the eighth, but still heavily in favor of
the unified junior bantamweight champion. Darchinyan was brilliant in
mixing boxing and banging in the round, slipping Arce’s punches and
coming right back with right uppercuts and straight lefts.

Read more at…For more boxing news and features, check out
BoxingScene.com. The first significant foul of the fight came midway
through the ninth. Darchinyan was warned for holding and hitting, with
the offending infraction drawing blood from behind Arce’s left
ear. Both fighters were warned for roughhouse tactics later in the
round. Consecutive jabs landed for Darchinyan early in the tenth, a
combination rarely seen in the fight to that point. Arce couldn’t do
anything more than continue to absorb. Cut around both eyes and behind
his ear, the concern at this point was no longer winning, but whether
or not he’d last the full twelve.

His actions at the start of the eleventh didn’t suggest as such. A
sequence as simple as freeing himself from a clinch resulted in Arce
stumbling into the ropes. Darchinyan landed a straight left that once
again had Arce staggering about the ring moments later, this time
complaining to the referee about a head butt, only to be told that the
blood came from a punch. The cut over Arce’s right eye re-opened,
clearly aggravating the Mexican who kept pawing at it while Darchinyan
treated it like a bullseye.

Just as he was being told by his handlers that there was only one
round left, Dr. Paul Wallace decided that eleven rounds of punishment
for Arce, stopping the fight in between rounds. Arce was visibly
upset, wanting to at least go the full twelve, but it instead goes in
the books as a technical knockout.

The official time was 3:00 of Round 11.

Darchinyan continues to enjoy as great of a run as anyone in the sport
not named Manny Pacquiao. The Armenian-born, Australian-based fighter
improves to 32-1-1 (26 knockouts).

The win is his third straight, and now unbeaten in his last five since
the knockout loss to Nonito Donaire in July 2007. The three wins he’s
enjoyed in the past seven months have clearly been a case of quality
over quantity, racking up one-sided stoppage wins over Dimitry
Kirilov, Cristian Mijares and now Arce.

A rematch with Donaire was suggested, to which Darchinyan was
open. Promoter Gary Shaw, who used to promote the Filipino before the
two had an ugly split last year, shut down the thought of such a fight
taking place. When asked about presenting the fights the fans want to
see, Shaw suggested the likes of Fernando Montiel, Rafael Marquez or
Israel Vazquez, perhaps hinting at a move up in weight for Darchinyan
in the near future.

Wherever he fights in the near future, Vic Darchinyan will be a
massive handful for any fighter. It was a painful lesson learned by
Arce, who suffers his second one-sided loss in less than two years. A
former lineal junior flyweight champion and two-division interim
titlist, it appears that Arce’s glory years are well behind him. The
Mexican dips to 51-5-1 (39 knockouts), snapping a modest five-fight
knockout streak in the process.