Klitschko KOs Rahman!

Wladimir Klitschko KOs Rahman (Round 7)
GERMANY-Mannheim(HL)- IBF/WBO/IBO heavyweight champion Wladimir Klitschko (52-3, 46 KOs) easily stopped former champion Hasim Rahman (45-7, 36 KOs) in the seventh round on Saturday night at SAP Arena in Mannheim, Germany.
The Ukrainian boxer has started the fight very confidently, keeping Rahman at a long distance and constantly connecting with his best punch – the left jab. Wladimir also frequently landed the right. Rahman had little luck reaching Klitschko. Having taken the bout on three week’s notice, “The Rock” was sluggish and slow.
Rahman laid on the ropes absorbing punishment for almost the entire third round, much to the dismay of the spectators. Klitschko threw out a considerable quantity of blows, many of which connected to Rahman’s chin. In the beginning of the sixth round, Rahman took three successive left hooks from Wladimir and tumbled to the deck. “The Rock” was up again at seven, only to take more hammering the rest of the round.
In the seventh round, Klitschko staggered Rahman again and referee Tony Weeks made the decision to finish the beating. Hasim argued and wished to continue fighting. Yes, he was still standing, but he had taken many blows.
“Now there are many boxers whom I am ready to meet,” said Wlad afterward, “David Haye, Chris Arreola, Alexander Povetkin, I am ready to fight any of them.”
Vitali Klitschko, who was to have boxed against The Rock in November 2005, informed Fightnews.com “Today Wladimir showed Rahman everything that I would have done. When I damaged my knee and couldn’t box with him, the American boxer spoke bad about me to journalists. Wladimir has avenged that for me.”
With the win, Wladimir Klitschko confirmed his position at the top of the heavyweight division. He could fight against Alexander Povetkin as soon as July 2009.
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When Hasim Rahman had his last throw of the championship dice tonight in Mannheim, Germany he didn’t roll a six, but instead got rolled over in seven. The WBO/IBF/IBO Heavyweight Champion of the World Wladimir Klitschko was simply too much for “The Rock” on this night. The reigning titlist entered a controlled performance built brilliantly on his jab.
Round one began with Hasim fighting out of a crouch position to try and avoid the left of Klitschko that has been so domineering in recent years. He found little solace in this position as “Dr Steelhammer” rammed his head back with the abrasive punch. In the second Rahman adopted some roughhousing tactics on the inside, with a few punches winging past Wladimir’s ear and onto the back of his skull. At this point it seemed like the emotionally fragile Rahman was already going into survival mode, and a glancing Klitschko right ended another one-sided round.
Round three was different only for the fact that Rahman abandoned the crouch, and in fact any movement at all, for a “rope-a-dope” strategy. Ali it was not, as Wladimir effortlessly landed draining punches with no return from his opponent except for the odd feint. The champion stung his challenger with a crisp jab-right-jab combination which inspired Rahman to come forward for the last 30 seconds of the round, however is flailing rights had little effect on the dominant Klitschko.
For the next two rounds Wladimir did not give an inch, stemming any flow of punches from Rahman with his ubiquitous straight left, occasionally hooking with it to great effect. It was the left hook that rendered Hasim horizontal when a barrage of said punches landed, followed by a glancing right to put him on his back in the sixth. Arguably referee Tony Weeks could have stopped the fight here as Wladimir landed a steady stream of punches to end the round, with no real riposte from his staggering foe.
The seventh began with Rahman looking like he wanted to be elsewhere, and Wladimir quickly complied with this as a two-handed barrage in the corner saw Weeks halt the action.
Wladimir Klitschko made this look as easy as most expected he would, by entering a masterful display. In truth Wladimir had this fight sewn up from the first round, but exercised his customary patience and perhaps a touch of reluctance carried over from his knockout setbacks a few years ago to beat Rahman. To his credit, Hasim didn’t look for an exit strategy as he has in the past against the likes of Evander Holyfield and last time out against James Toney. Instead he took his beating manfully and while his efforts came to nothing, he put down more effort than some recent Klitschko foes, Lamon Brewster for example.
It is clear where Rahman should go from here, and that is retirement. He hit his brief career peak seven years ago when he landed the right hand heard around the world on Lennox Lewis, and hasn’t looked close to the top level since his 2005-6 WBC reign. Wladimir on the other hand has possibly his career plateau in front of him as the first mega-money Heavyweight battle since Lewis’ reign is on the horizon if a deal can be made with David Haye. It will be intriguing to see Wladimir step out of his comfort zone, as Haye seems to pose the last existing threat to the brother’s Klitschko and their dominance of boxing’s blue ribbon division. For the first time since “Iron” Mike Tyson stalked boxing’s dark corridors, Heavyweight boxing looks interesting again. Enjoy it while it lasts.
Rahman has now likely lost his last chance to again become world champion. Based on Saturday’s performance, little remains from the boxer who knocked out Lennox Lewis in 2001.


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