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Ovill
and out as Salam makes it six
24 October 2007
CHADWELL
Heath light heavyweight Tony Salam, making only his sixth pro appearance,
added the scalp of former Commonwealth light heavyweight champion
Ovill McKenzie to his victim list in Doncaster on Friday night,
writes LEN WHALEY.
It
was a real boost for hot prospect Salam, a former ABA champion,
who only made his pro debut less than a year ago - when McKenzie
was reigning as the Commonwealth lightheavyweight titleholder.
Jamaican-born
McKenzie, who was formerly based at Canning Town's Peacock gymnasium
but is now trained by Derby's ex-heavyweight Clifton Mitchell, looked
well above the standard of opposition Salam had faced earlier in
his career.
However,
the more experienced fighter was repeatedly beaten to the punch
from the start of their clash at the Doncaster Dome as Salam found
the gaps in his rival's defences with sharp-hitting southpaw attacks.
The
28-year-old produced his best attacks in bursts and shook Salam
with a powerful right in the second session.
Steady
pressure
But
despite the desperate efforts of trainer Mitchell, who even slapped
his fighter between rounds, McKenzie could not score with enough
punches to turn the fight his way.
It
was the steady pressure of the undefeated Salam that put him in
front in a contest with both boxers warned for holding by referee
Michael Alexander.
In
the fifth session, a frustrated McKenzie blatantly pushed Salam
to the canvas and was deducted a point by the referee.
In
the final session it was a tiring Salam warned for holding - and
had a point deducted from the referee's scorecard.
He
was also given a count after slipping to the floor in the final
round but he obviously had built up a clear lead over the earlier
rounds for he was still scored a 77-75 winner on referee Alexander's
official scorecard.
Although
it was an untidy finish to the fight, the victory surely sends Salam
up the lightheavyweight rankings but could mean problems for promoter
Frank Maloney as finding opponents for Salam will not be easy.
Despite
his lack of pro experience, the former ABA titleholder should surely
be lined up for title action in 2008.
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