By Akeem Lawal
Nigerian boxer, Lasisi Aliu lived up to his promise by
knocking out Gyula Dodu of Hungary in Round One of their 53.52kg Bantamweight professional
fight at the Ahdaaf Sports Club, Al Qouz Dubai, UAE on Friday.
Aliu provided the fastest bout of the six-card event of
the second edition of 'The Fight' held under the auspices of Thailand-based PBC
(Professional Boxing Commission) International, with a knockout victory over Dodu
in just 59 seconds of the opening round.
In a chat with Sportsbiz247.blogspot.com, ‘Lucky Boy’ as
he is fondly called by his admirers said he did not boast of knocking his
opponent out in the first round just for the fun of it as he had prepared well
and also confident in his hard work.
“Glory be to almighty God for the victory tonight. Before
the fight, I told you that I will deal with him and make sure he regrets
fighting me. The confident came as a result of my hard work and I believe in my own
personal plan for the fight. I want to say a big thank you to my fans for their
support. I also want to express my gratitude to my team Round 10 Boxing for their support and my sponsor Top 8 for being there for me,” the
Qatari-based pugilist told Sportsbiz247.blogspot.com after his victory.
The 26 year old, who now boast of a record 3–0 (2 KOs),
revealed that his second fight against Payu Sor Kounlavung of Thailand which he
won by unanimous decision, was the toughest of his three professional fights.
“I won my first pro fight by knockout but my second fight
against Payu Sor Kounlavung was the most difficult of the three fights. I was
able to win by unanimous decision even though I knocked him down during the
course of the six-round bout.
“Right now, I will continue to train hard and remain
focused with my boxing career here in Dubai and pray to God to always crown my
efforts with success,” Aliu said.
The other fight saw Filipino expat Larry Abarra stopped
Isaac Nettey of Ghana in the second round, while Deo Kizito of Uganda lost to Evgeny
Vazem of Russia by split decision.
Rohen Date of the U.K. sent Stephen Okine of Ghana down
twice in rounds two and four and handily won a unanimous decision, while
Nicholas Mwangi of Kenya beat Azizi Zafar of Afghanistan also by unanimous
verdict.
The six fights were officiated by the Professional Boxing
Commission (PBC), International with fight supervisors Tony Comia of the
Philippines and Wei Na of China.
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