Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

VIJENDER SCORES HATTRICK OF KNOCKOUT WINS

- Press Trust of India

Star boxer Vijender Singh notched up a third successive knockout triumph in the profession­al circuit, thrashing Bulgaria’s Samet Hyuseinov at the Manchester Arena on Saturday. Barely 35 seconds into the second round, the referee had to come to Hyuseinov’s rescue and award Vijender a win via technical knockout.

MANCHESTER: Vijender Singh continued his remarkably dominant run in the profession­al circuit, notching up a third successive knockout triumph by thrashing Bulgaria’s Samet Hyuseinov in less than two round son Saturday.

Barely 35 seconds into the second round of what was to be his maiden six-round contest, Vijender cornered Hyuseinov with a flurry of combinatio­n punches to force the referee into stopping the bout and give the Indian a win via Technical Knockout.

The for mer Olympic and World Championsh­ips bronzemeda­llist thus continues to remain unbeaten since making his debut in October, all three of his wins being knockouts in under three rounds.

“I practice a lot when I am sparring so that helps me finish it off early in actual contest,” Vijender said after the bout.

With a sizeable crowd in attendance t o cheer him, Vijender walked in to the beats of ‘Singh is King’ and made sure that the song resonated well after he was done with the job inside the ring.

For all his tall talk before the bout, Hyuseinov looked intimidate­d the moment Vijender stepped in. While the Indian moved around confidentl­y and had the Bulgarian on the backfoot with his telling jabs and piercing left uppercuts, Hyuseinov seemed clueless on whether to go all out or stick to counter-attack.

Vijender made full use of his longer reach and his opponent’s confused strategy to complete a dominating first round. The 30-year-old then seemed in a hurry to finish off the contest in the second round and he did exactly that by simply pummelling Hyuseinov.

The assault was so fierce that referee stepped in to rescue the cowering Bulgarian, who had promised to send Vijender back to India “beaten and broken.” The Haryana-lad, on his part, had vowed to answer inside the ring and he did that in style to walk away a deserving winner.

Vijender had beaten Sonny Whiting and Dean Gillen in his previous two bouts, both of which were to be four-round contests but lasted barely over two rounds.

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