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Klitschko knocks out Brock in 7th
NEW YORK—Wladimir Klitschko
seemed intent on defending his title with one hand, the left. He jabbed
and jabbed and occasionally hooked Calvin Brock. Then the IBF champion
was cut by an inadvertent head butt, and the blood trickling down the
left side of his face told him it was time to throw the right. When that
hand entered the fight, it was time for Brock to leave it.
Klitschko stunned Brock with a sharp left, then finished him off with a
thunderous right late in the seventh round Saturday night. “I should
have tried that earlier, but it took me time to get my distance and
rhythm,” Klitschko said. “He was a good defensive fighter.”
Klitschko kept the right in reserve as he piled up points with his jab.
But he found the range with the right midway in the bout, and Brock had
no chance when Klitschko opened up the challenger’s defense with another
quick left. The big right immediately followed and Brock fell face-down
to the canvas. He got up at eight, but was wobbly and referee Wayne
Kelly stopped it at 2:10. “I knew it was over there,” Klitschko said.
“It was easy to hit him with the right hand there.”
Klitschko, in his first defense of the crown he won from Chris Byrd in
April, was cut over the left eye in the sixth. Wary of the cut getting
worse, he unloaded several massive punches late in the sixth and through
the seventh rounds. Did he feel any urgency because of the cut? “Yes,”
the champion said. “But I was leading at that time.” The native of
Kazakhstan, who represents Ukraine, improved to 47-3 with his 42nd
knockout. Brock, a 2000 U.S. Olympian, lost for the first time in 30
bouts.
“I saw the punch coming, but I couldn’t react fast enough,” Brock said.
“He had a better jab than I thought he did. He was very strong.”
Klitschko’s brother, Vitali, now retired, once held the WBC crown and
was considered the better of the two fighters. But Wladimir showed
Saturday why he generally is looked upon as the best of the four
heavyweight champions. He certainly thrilled the Madison Square Garden
crowd of 14,260 that often chanted his name by leveling the game Brock
with the classic left-right combination. Until then, Klitschko was ahead
on all three judges’ cards, but he was getting a stiff challenge from
Brock — even though Brock came into the fight with unimpressive
credentials despite never having lost as a professional.
Although he looked nervous and was awkward in the first two rounds,
Brock began landing some body shots and avoiding Klitschko’s jabs for
awhile. But it was temporary, and the 30-year-old Klitschko took charge
again in the fifth round.
After he was cut in the sixth, Klitschko became more aggressive, and
Brock couldn’t cope, even as many fans chanted “U-S-A! U-S-A!” Klitschko
climbed the ropes in each corner after the win and saluted the fans.
After he left the ring, his smiling brother motioned former champion
Lennox Lewis, who was working for HBO, to come into the ring. Lewis
shook his head and said, “I’m too fat.”—Agencies
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