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Five
years after his sensational
gold medal win
at the 2000 Olympic Games in
Sydney, Australia, Mohammad Abdullaev (Muhammadqodir Abdullaev) from
Uzbekistan will challenge Miguel Cotto in a highly anticipated world
championship fight on June 11 at Madison Square Garden of New York.
"This
will be a historical fight on a
historical location“,
promoter Bob Arum said."
Thousands of fans from Puerto Rico will fill the arena to watch Cotto and
to watch the parade of the Puerto
Ricans in New York the next day.“
Abdullaev defeated Cotto en route to his gold medal (17-11),
but what is this win worth when they meet again as boxing professionals
with their way to the top so different? Abdullaev, the second Usbekistani
after Artur Grigorian (WBO lightweight world champion 1996 to 2004) to
fight for one of the most prestigious titles in pro boxing, has taken a
wondrous journey. Born in Tashkent he chose the United States for his
first steps in his professional career after the 2000 Olympics. It didn’t
work out the way he expected, although he was victorious for a long time.
After being defeated by Emmanuel Clottey in 2003 he signed with Universum
Box-Promotion, had his first fight under new guidance in Bayreuth,
Germany. He headlined at a Spotlight Boxing event in Lübeck (live on
Eurosport in 54 European countries), went to Las Vegas in April 2004 for
another good tune-up fight (TKO win over José Feliciano) and delivered a
tremendous performance and a 3rd round KO win over the strong Juan Alberto
Godoy in Stuttgart earlier this year.
In Universum’s Hamburg gym Abdullaev is prepared more systematically for
his fights than he used to. “His potential is enormous, we now realize
that Mohammad has wasted some time in his career,”
says legendary trainer Fritz Sdunek, 58, who prepares Abdullaev in
coordination with assistant Artur Grigorian. Sdunek has a record of 80
world championship fights with more than 70 wins.
For the Hamburg based 31-year-old Uzbekian Abdullaev, ranked WBO #5, it
will be the first professional world title shot.
"New
York is the boxing capital of the world,"
Abdullaev said. "After
defating Cotto I will learn more English. And Uzbekistan will call out a
national holiday."
Abdullaev ran his professional record to 15-1 (12) by knocking out
Argentinian Juan Alberto Godoy in round 3 in a defence of his WBO
intercontinental title in Stuttgart, Germany, on February 15. He will now
continue his preparation in a training camp on the German-Polish island
Usedom.
The 24-year-old Cotto is 23-0 (19) as a professional and won the WBO title
on September 11, 2004, with a ninth round TKO over Kelson Pinto. Since
then he defended his crown twice, by knocking out Randall Bailey in round
six on December 11 and by stopping DeMarcus Corley in round five on
February 26.
"I
closed the chapter of the Olympic Games",
Cotto stated. “Now I’m holding a world title in the professionals and will
show Mohamed who is the real champion.”
Should
Abduallev beat
Cotto he would
capture the first world title at 140 lb. for Universum Box-Promotion.
The event will be televised live by HBO in the US.
4-21-2005
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