HEADBUTT LEAVES ZERAFA UNABLE TO CONTINUE, TSZYU GRUDGE FIGHT ENDS IN NO CONTEST
Just as quickly as Nikita Tszyu-Michael Zerafa was bubbling up nicely through two rounds, it was dramatically stopped three seconds into the third frame.
Former world title challenger Zerafa (34-5, 22 KOs) was deemed unable to continue between the doctor and referee Chris Condon taking his advice, having suffered a nasty gash above his left eye from an accidental headbutt.
"I didn't stop it, I don't know why you're booing me, the doctor stopped it," Zerafa protested as thousands of displeased paying fans at the Brisbane Entertainment Centre felt short-changed by what was billed as the fight of the decade on Australian shores.
Both apologised in post-fight interviews afterwards, with Tszyu (11-0, 9 KOs) saying he was told that 'Michael said he couldn't see' as it remains unclear whether they'll pivot in a different direction. Tszyu lamented having trained for six months without reward, while the 33-year-old was rushed backstage with a security escort to avoid being hit by fans.
It's especially an anticlimax given Zerafa began well.
He advanced and caught the fan favourite with a slick succession of jabs before moments later, was off-balance and teetering dangerously close to the canvas before the referee breaks them after eating some leather straight back, an early sign of things to come.
They briefly trade in the pocket, Tszyu flicks his left hand through the guard and it's an interesting start to a fight which has bubbled nicely. Both are clearly defensively vulnerable and that makes for precisely what everyone came for - a conclusive finishing.
Tszyu starts the second round with forward pressure, Zerafa intermittently countering him off the back foot and waiting for openings. The referee separates them again and the former world title challenger is wearing some damage around his left eye, a sight spurring both into action as the younger man has a target to aim at, Zerafa needs to assert himself.
He does with a clean right, then Tszyu fires back and presses his foot on the accelerator, leaving himself open for a lunging hook to land flush as he staggers back to the ropes.
Just before the start of round three, the doctor assessed Zerafa's left eye. He did so and although no longer bloody, you could see a deep cut above his eye but below the eyebrow.
Cameras showed Zerafa verbalise that he was okay to continue, though instinctively you can sense a decision is taking too long and moments later, the official motions to wave it off.
McKean targeting world-level run and more
Demsey McKean (24-2, 16 KOs) is glad to be back winning in the public eye and eyes a return to the world scene after a seventh-round stoppage of Toese Vousiutu (8-3, 7 KOs), who proved too tough for his own good during a gruelling back-and-forth tussle at times.
McKean, whose career defeats have come against Filip Hrgovic and Moses Itauma, both rated among The Ring's top-10 at heavyweight, looked off-balance at times and was drawn into exchanging in close quarters when he would've been better served to utilise his range.
Yet from as early as round three, the 35-year-old hurt Vousiutu - even if he tried to mask it - and there was an overwhelming sense the writing was on the wall two rounds later, as he connected clean with a series of uppercuts and stinging haymakers to unsteady him.
An unanswered barrage of punches pinning Vousiutu against the ropes did the trick before McKean embraced the bad boy role, predicting a Zerafa win to cap the night's action.
Nelson Asofa-Solomona was the latest athlete to switch sports, predictably scoring a first-round finish on his pro debut with an uppercut blasting beyond Jeremy Latimore (1-1).
After a successful career as a professional rugby league footballer, who also made 16 international appearances for New Zealand, the 29-year-old was unhappy and stressed the need to hold his stance better after breezing past a fellow former pro, albeit a decade older.
Stevan Ivic (8-0-1, 2 KOs) retained his domestic title with a narrow 10-round majority decision win (96-94 x 2, 95-95) past Liam Talivaa in a slow-burner that ebbed and flowed.
Former sparring partner-turned-opponent Talivaa (7-2, 3 KOs) finished stronger and wobbled the defending champion in the final round, to the point where many were surprised by the scorecards not favouring the younger southpaw after throwing caution to the wind.
The decision was met with boos as Ivic praised Talivaa's improvements since sharing rounds previously, hinting that he wanted to be in more exciting fights and start challenging himself overseas -- adding that U.S. and UK heavyweights are 'nowhere as good as ours'.
Wilson sends Piala packing in four
One-time junior lightweight world title challenger Liam Wilson (18-3, 10 KOs) kicked off the main card with the night's first stoppage, defending his WBO ranking title with a fourth-round stoppage of tricky Rodex Piala (12-2, 1 KO).
Filipino visitor Piala was left writhing in agony near the ropes for several minutes, a sharp contrast to what was an encouraging effort following a cagey start. Landing early and often in the second frame, Wilson wore the damage and looked a cherry red colour, though being caught clean on the bell to end round three kicked the 29-year-old into gear.
His corner were visibly excited by hooks and body shots in the fourth, the latter foreshadowing an emphatic finish. A nice one-two combination was followed by a disguised left hook to the midsection, Piala didn't see it coming and 'Mr. Damage' ended it early.
"I had to box the right fight, he was tricky customer but got the job done, onto the next. It was a weird one, we had the main event first and now you can enjoy the undercard," he joked during his post-fight interview. Prior during the build-up, he sang a different tune.
Next month will mark three years since he fought admirably but ultimately succumbed to a ninth-round knockout defeat by WBO 130-pound champion Emanuel Navarrete.
"I think I deserve the Navarrete rematch. I said many years ago when I lost, if he doesn't wanna give it me, I'll work my way back into a position and that's what I'm doing. Time waits for nobody - I'm getting older - and need to make the most of it," he told BS.
Currently the WBO's No. 3-ranked contender, No. 1-rated Charly Suarez will presumably get first refusal on the Navarrete-Nunez unification winner come March 1. Kenichi Ogawa at No. 2 - viciously stopped by Joe Cordina in June 2022 - has only boxed poor opposition since.
Keeping active, this showing will have done him some good.
Full card results
157-pound catchweight, 10 rounds: Nikita Tszyu ND3 (0:03) Michael Zerafa
Heavyweight: Demsey McKean TKO7 (1:27) Toese Vousiutu
Heavy: Nelson Asofa-Solomona KO1 (2:27) Solomona-Jeremy Latimore
Heavy: Stevan Ivic MD10 (96-94 x 2, 95-95) Liam Talivaa
Junior lightweight: Liam Wilson KO4 (2:56) Rodex Piala
Super middleweight: Max Reeves UD6 (60-54) Sonny Abid
Lightweight: Billy Polkinghorn UD6 (60-54) Jomar Paliwen
Middleweight: Blake Wells TD9 (88-83, 88-84, 87-84) Ainiwaer Yilixiati
Junior middleweight: Jack Javed UD4 (40-36) Zephy Vaotu'ua