Breidis Prescott put Amir Khan to the sword
6th Sept 2008
The flawed diamond that is Amir
Khan was ruthlessly exposed last night as he
suffered a devastating first-round knockout at the
violently quick and powerful hands of Colombian
opponent Breidis Prescott.
After 18 straight wins against an array of mostly
light-punching opponents which had established
Khan’s box-office appeal, the 21-year-old from
Bolton was destroyed in 54 seconds by the fierce
puncher from South America.
Prescott, a 25-year-old who had boxed only twice
before outside his native Colombia and never outside
of South America, while accumulating a record of 19
straight wins in three years, 17 by stoppage, had
been confident from the moment he stepped off the
plane that he would acquaint the 21-year-old Olympic
silver medallist from Bolton with the harsh
realities of the prize ring.
Some of these were articulated recently by former
world featherweight champion Barry McGuigan, who was
speaking of Khan when he warned: “I always tell kids
that anybody with two fists, who can turn their
weight over, can punch. If the target is open, if
the defence is poor, hands down, chin up, feet all
wrong, then any decent boxer can knock you over.”
Khan was not only knocked over by Prescott, he was
clinically knocked out. Lauded on both sides of the
Atlantic as the foremost prospect in boxing, he was
hurt almost immediately by a right hand to the jaw
thrown hard and accurately by the Colombian and,
suddenly, he had the startled look of a deer caught
in headlights. Prescott sensed his chance.
Standing tall and forcing maximum leverage into his
punches, the Colombian assassin went for the quick
kill. Two more right hands crashed into Khan’s jaw
and, as his legs betrayed him and he went down, the
10,000-strong crowd registered their shock, but the
man most shocked of all was Khan. He rose to his
feet as referee Terry O’Connor tolled the mandatory
eight-count but it was clear that his powers of
resistance were gone.
Prescott moved in and drove Khan back into his own
corner before delivering a hard right and wicked
left to the chin that left Khan in a heap, his world
title dreams in tatters and his distressed mother,
sitting at ringside, in tears. O’Connor’s completion
of the 10-count was a formality.
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Despite the
experienced manoeuvrings of his promoter, Frank
Warren, whose matchmaking had secured Khan a top-10
ranking by the world sanctioning bodies, the danger
signs had been there all along. Even in a dominating
performance against light-punching Dane Martin
Kristjansen in April at the Bolton Arena he betrayed
a worrying vulnerability to being hit by a right
hand over the top of his low left, the same punch
with which Willie Limond, another light hitter,
induced a serious crisis in his career by flooring
him in the sixth round of their July 2007 bout. |
Michel Gomez floored him in June and Gomez was five
years removed from his last meaningful performance,
a fifth-round knockout of Scotland’s Alex Arthur;
the fact that his most productive fighting days took
place in the super featherweight (9st 4lb) division
discouraged any notion that Khan was ready to
challenge for the world lightweight (9st 9lb) title.
“I have been working on things like keeping my hands
in the correct position and moving with my hands up
and keeping my feet together, stuff like that,” Khan
said recently. “I have really enjoyed the work
because I love learning, especially if I know it’s
going to help me.” Unfortunately, it did not help
him much into the burning cauldron of the prize
ring.
Nate Campbell, who has stopped 25 of the 32
opponents he has beaten, had recognised the flaws.
“Limond couldn’t even punch and he almost knocked
him out, so what’s going to happen when he fights a
guy who can box, throws in volume, can slug, has
great defence, a great inside game and a great
outside game?”
Campbell asked following Khan’s elevation to No 2 in
the WBO rankings on the basis of his seventh-round
stoppage of Kristjansen, which paved the way for a
proposed title challenge by the end of this year.
“He’s fighting guys like Kristjansen, who couldn’t
score a knockout with a hammer.”
credits: bbc |