Wednesday, December 25, 2024

Murtazaliev Offers Arguello Vibes – Sergio Mora

Sergio Mora was in awe of IBF junior middleweight champion Bakhram Murtazaliev final weekend, saying he reminded him of the nice Alexis Arguello with how he appeared destroying former WBO champion Tim Tszyu in three rounds on the Caribe Royale Resort in Orlando, Florida.

Murtazaliev’s Exact Punches

Commentator Mora says he realized within the first minute and twenty seconds of the struggle that Tszyu was in hassle as a result of Murtazaliev appeared Arguello-esque, throwing brief punches with accuracy. Tszyu made issues simpler for Murtazaliev by going proper at him and attempting to have a conflict, however he acquired destroyed.

Murtazaliev (23-0, 17 KOs) got here into the struggle with a damaged knuckle on his proper hand, which is often the principle weapon in his arsenal. He adjusted effectively to the harm, utilizing his left hook to repeatedly droop Tszyu (24-2, 17 KOs) to the canvas in a four-knockdown efficiency.

Mora feels it was dangerous matchmaking on Tszyu’s group’s half to decide on to match him in opposition to the highly effective Murtazaliev in his first struggle after he suffered his first profession defeat in opposition to the 6’6″ Sebastian Fundora on March thirtieth. He feels that Tszyu ought to have been given a confidence booster as a substitute.

“Within the first minute of the primary spherical, I notice that this man goes to offer issues to Tim Tszyu,” mentioned Sergio Mora to the Chris Mannix YouTube channel, speaking about Bakhram Murtazaliev’s destruction of Tim Tszyu final weekend.

“It solely took me one minute and twenty seconds to comprehend this man was going to be a headache. He had a laser-like proper hand, the uppercut, and the hook, which he ended up dropping. He jogged my memory within the first minute when he missed that proper hand, and he threw a left hook like an Alexis Arguello.”

Murtazaliev wasn’t utilizing his proper hand rather a lot within the struggle. A lot of the massive punches that he landed had been along with his left hook, and it was virtually like he was combating with only one arm.

“They’re laser-like, don’t waste no area, and the approach is ideal. It’s not pace that will get you; it’s not energy that will get you. It’s time and accuracy. That’s what I noticed with Murtazaliev when he missed that first proper hand, after which he threw that left hook and caught up with that proper uppercut,” mentioned Mora.

It was shocking to see how effectively Murtazaliev fought in shut quarters as a result of taller fighters usually want a number of room to generate energy on their punches. That wasn’t the case with Murtazaliev. He gave the impression to be punching more durable in shut than he did from the surface, and that was bizarre however devasting.

“I mentioned, ‘This man goes to be hassle.’ Despite the fact that they weren’t touchdown cleanly, it was going to be a protracted night time for Tim Tszyu. It ended up being a brief night time as a result of it ended up being a three-round conflict that he was on the finish of, however dangerous matchmaking since you go from a 6’6″ southpaw to an unknown, sturdy, undefeated Russian title holder,” mentioned Mora.

Tszyu appeared like he hadn’t accomplished any analysis on Murtazaliev’s previous fights to know what he was getting himself into by combating this man. If he had checked out his current victory over Jack Culcay, he would have rejected him as an opponent.

YouTube videoYouTube video

Related Articles

Latest Articles