Eight
minutes of what was described as a 'merciless struggle' wasn't
enough for either Olga Bojare or Irina Peliha to establish a
decisive advantage over the other when they met in Riga on the
10th September and left the Latvian crowd thundering for more.
They'll
have to travel to Germany to get it : Jan Joe Zamboni, the
managing director of Elite Box Promotions, who was in the crowd,
wasted no time in signing up the pair of them to settle things
on his 'Night of the Next Champions' bill in the EWE Arena,
Fürstenwalde, on the 28th October. "We scour the world looking
for attractive match-ups," says Zamboni, "but a battle like
their last one has not been seen in a very long time!"
On the
same bill, Ramona Kühne (26) of Großziethen, who on Saturday was
interviewed and signing autographs at the annual 'Day of the
Martial Arts' in the Gropius-Passage, Berlin's largest shopping
centre, will be moving up for the first time from four to six
rounds. "I've only been boxing professionally since April 2006,
so I need to take things one step at a time," she explained.
After
getting the nod from the judges against Natalija Dolgova of
Latvia and Slovakians Jarka Blahova and Miroslava Durinova,
Kühne, who is trained by her boyfriend, Stephan Böstfleisch, and
managed by Adil Cift, had been scheduled to take on the rangy
Lívia Sándorfi of Budapest (Hungary) in her fourth outing, but a
new opponent had to be found at only two days notice after the
Hungarian boxing federation refused to release her. Into the
breach stepped Danielle Camerling of the Netherlands — like her
opponent a former kick-boxer, here fighting for the first time
under the marquess of Queensberry rules.
Camerling's attempts in the first round to establish a
bridgehead in the new sport were repulsed with a certain
brutality; Frau Kühne was
not
in a welcoming frame of mind! Rocked several times in the
opening two minutes by an opponent able, seemingly, to connect
at will with either hand, the big Dutch girl was dropped by a
combination in the final seconds and only saved from a count-out
by the bell. Wisely her corner decided in the interval not to
let her come out for the second round (photo).
Kühne's
opponent on the 28th has not yet been named. It could be one of
the Polish girls that were canvassed but unavailable on the last
occasion, Dorota Kosatka or Monica Herzilla, or else Sándorfi,
if permission can be obtained this time. At 1.78m (5'10"),
Sándorfi is unusually tall for a junior welterweight (-63 kg)
and would enjoy an 8 centimetre height advantage over Kühne if
the two were to fight. According to Fight Night Boxen, after two
outings as a professional, Sándorfi remains undefeated.
(Sources:
Elite Boxing, Fight Night Boxen, Slimtrax Promotion)
[Lívia
Sándorfi's fight with Alena Kokavcova is featured in Photo
Gallery #322]