Miguel Berchelt (L) reacts after defeating Carlos Claudio in their super featherweight bout at the Mandalay Bay Events Center on March 30, 2013 in Las Vegas, Nevada. |
LOS ANGELES - Miguel Berchelt ousted already unbeaten Francisco Vargas on Saturday, chasing him in the eleventh round to grab the World Boxing Council super featherweight title in a standoff of Mexican adversaries.
Arbitrator Raul Caiz ended the session 2:19 into the eleventh round after a ridiculous cut over the left eye of Vargas left the champion not able to see or stop the triumphant challenge.
"Francisco Vargas is an awesome champion. At the point when he's hurt he tosses significantly more punches. He has a considerable measure of heart," Borchelt said. "In any case, I came here to win. I came here to show I have a heart. I came here to be the champion."
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Berchelt, 25, enhanced to 31-1 with his 28th early stoppage and tenth continuous triumph while Vargas, 32, tumbled to 23-1 with two drawn.
"This is the thing that I generally needed," Berchelt said. "I'm youthful. I'm eager. I needed to be a title holder. Presently I have the belt on my midsection and it feels the best."
Japan's Takashi Miura, who lost the title to Vargas 14 months back, thumped out Mexico's Miguel Roman 53 seconds into the twelfth round on the undercard at Indio, California, to wind up distinctly Berchelt's compulsory title challenger.
Berchelt, battling outside Mexico for just the second time, over and over associated with rebuffing left snares in the second and third adjusts. His hard rights to the head in the fourth again hindered Vargas, opening cuts over both eyes in the trades.
Going past the 6th round without precedent for his vocation, Berchelt kept up the force. Cadiz and ringside specialist Paul Wallace checked Vargas in the ninth and tenth adjusts and permitted him to proceed.
Blood started streaming uninhibitedly from the cut over Vargas' swollen left eye in the ninth and by the eleventh was more than the champion could overcome.
"The cut was a major issue. It wouldn't give me a chance to do what I needed," Vargas said. "I was never going to stop. I was continually going to battle. I'm a warrior. I battle 'til the end.
"Be that as it may, it was recently the blood. I couldn't see. I couldn't battle."
- Miura's most recent round KO -
Miura enhanced to 31-3 with two drawn by taking his 24th profession knockout, his first knockout past the ninth round, while Roman tumbled to 56-12 with his 18-battle win streak snapped.
Miura, 32, and Roman, 31, had quick paced, hard-punching early adjusts. Miura's left eye started swelling in the fourth round and both warriors landed rebuffing body blows.
Roman associated with a rebuffing ideal to Miura's jaw in the 6th, setting up a whirlwind by the Mexican that debilitated the previous champion.
The Asian southpaw endured a bleeding lip yet let go back in the seventh with restored energy, exchanging intense punches.
Roman endured a cut over his left eye in the eighth on an unplanned head-butt from Miura, who traded hard punches in the ninth and locked the Mexican immediately in the tenth.
Miura thumped down Roman late in the tenth with a heavy hammer left hand to the body and dropped Roman again in the eleventh with a whirlwind of body punches.
Right on time in the twelfth round, Miura handled a left to the head that left Roman lying on the canvas and ref Tom Taylor excluded him.
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