Moruti Mthalane poses with the IBF flyweight belt after beating Mexico's Julio Cesar Miranda in Johannesburg on Friday night

Moruti Mthalane poses with the IBF flyweight belt after beating Mexico's Julio Cesar Miranda in Johannesburg on Friday night

CELEBRITY Steve Hofmeyr was at ringside to watch Moruti Mthalane win the vacant IBF flyweight crown in Johannesburg on Friday night. But the boxer he really came to see – alleged hitman Mikey Schultz – was knocked out in one round.

Fighting for a peripheral continental title, Schultz went into this bout at the Wembley indoor arena against Zimbabwe’s Tineyi Maridzo looking to win his first ever belt as a professional boxer and stretch his unbeaten record.

But after just more than a minute Maridzo threw a right cross and Schultz ducked into it, catching the blow on the side of his head.

The shot switched his lights off instantly; he toppled onto the floor and didn’t move again until the referee was more than midway through the count.

Schultz, who is believed to be involved in the killing of mining magnate Brett Kebble, tried hard to stand up, but when he lifted his hands off the canvas he lost his balance and careened into the ropes. The fight lasted just 87 seconds.

Schultz’s wife, a few seats away from Hofmeyr, burst into tears and was comforted by friends and family.

The action didn’t end there, however. Walking back to his dressing room Schultz was loudly booed by a black fan who, as a result, was set upon by a Schultz supporter. Another white onlooker was heard to swear at the black fan and shouting at him to “go back to Soweto”.

Security guards and police ended the scuffle fairly quickly, although only after the Schultz fan had thrown several punches, most of which seemed to miss.

The night belonged to Mthalane who easily outboxed Mexican Julio Cesar Miranda to become South Africa’s third reigning IBF titleholder, alongside junior-bantamweight Simphiwe Nonqayi and welterweight Isaac Hlatshwayo, who defends against Germany-based Jan Zavac at the same venue on December 11.

The last time this nation boasted three or more “bona fide” world champions you’d have to go back to the mid-1990s when Vuyani Bungu (junior-featherweight), Mbulelo Botile (bantamweight) and Phillip Holiday (lightweight) ruled supreme.

For a brief stint in 1996 Sugarboy Malinga joined them as WBC super-middleweight king, while Baby Jake Matlala held the WBO junior-flyweight belt.

Matlala was the first SA fighter to bid for IBF flyweight crown, back in 1991, but he was stopped by Dave McAuley. Mzukisi Sikali tried in 2005 but quit against Vic Darchinyan.

Mthalane challenged Nonito Donaire for the same belt last year, but lost on a cut. On Friday night he made no mistake as he jabbed Miranda into oblivion.

The Mexican was simply unable to avoid his left-hand lead; he may as well have had a sign printed on his face saying: “Hit here!”

Mthalane threw leather at Miranda’s head all night, and appeared to rock him frequently throughout the 12 rounds, although one sensed that the Mexican was playing possum in the hope of enticing the South African to drop his guard.

He struggled to get past Mthalane’s tight defence, although in the eighth round he landed a right hand that forced his opponent to hold.

Mthalane landed some peach right hands of his own too, but he could have won this fight with his left alone.

Two judges scored it for Mthalane 118-111 and the third 117-111. Mthalane improved his record to 24-2, while Miranda dropped to 30-5-1.

On the undercard, SA bantamweight champion Klaas Mboyane outmuscled Cleutus Mbhele for 12 rounds while Zolani Tete blew Tanzanian Anthony Matthias out in one round.

Jeffrey Mathebula stopped Rashid Ally, also of Tanzania, in the fourth round.

The only successful foreign boxer on the bill was Maridzo, who was so chuffed with his victory over Schultz that you might have thought he’d won the world title by knocking out Floyd Mayweather and Manny Pacquiao with one punch.

His record now reads eight wins and four losses; Schultz dropped to 16-1-2.

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Comments

 

Punungwe

November 21, 2009 at 7:09 am

[..foreign boxer ..... was so chuffed with his victory over [South African] Schultz that you might have thought he’d won the world title by knocking out Floyd Mayweather and Manny Pacquiao with one punch.]

There goes the snide, envious remarks meant to belittle foreigners again. So how did the reporter want Maridzo to celebrate his victory?t (Reply: 40% of the boxers on the bill were foreigners. Statement of fact: Maridzo was the only foreigner to win – promoters normally hope to bring people who will lose. Another statement of fact: Maridzo celebrated with more animation than I’ve seen in a LONG time. His celebration had nothing to do with the fact that he was a foreigner).

 

A Joburg Local

November 21, 2009 at 7:53 am

Shultz is a rubbish. I am glad he was beaten, he deserves it.

 

Karma Police

November 21, 2009 at 7:54 am

What goes around for mikey comes around for mikey. he is a bully who picks on drunk people at clubs

 

Punungwe

November 21, 2009 at 3:44 pm

Explanation accepted. Actually I was wondering who exactly is Tineyi Maridzo as I have never ever heard of him till today.

Given his obscurity and his sudden winning of a ‘continental title’ he does have a reason for energetic celebrations.

 

Adriana Stuijt

November 22, 2009 at 4:56 am

Ah yes, boxing. I covered a boxing match for the Rand Daily Mail a long time ago as a medical journalist, and headlined it “You should have your head read Charlie’ — after a neurologist was asked to comment on the medical effects which those repeated punches to the brain had on boxer Charlie Weir’s brain. Do you remember Charlie Weir – he had this lock of white hair. the prognosis for Charlie was so poor because of his career in which he must be have had hundreds of head-punches, that the neurologist recommended that he quit boxing — or faced dying of counter-coup injuries. Charlie turned his hand to wrestling after that. Boxing is the only ;’sport’ in the world which is designed to actually cause massive brain-damage to the ‘sportsmen’ participating in it. Why this horror is still being glorified by sports journalists is caused by only one thing: the huge amounts of cash which sports promoters earn from these hapless, usually working-class young men who are lured into the boxing arena with promises of fame and glory – but nobody ever bothers to tell them that they are just so much cattle for the gladiator’s arenas. Poor Charlie Schultz, poor Mohammed Ali – one of the most talented men on the planet, punched into early senility despite his ability to ‘sting like a bee, dance like a butterfly’.

 

Chris van der Merwe

November 23, 2009 at 7:54 pm

Well done Maridze. I hope you hit that killer hard!!

Sneeks around in the dark and murders people, then glories in the publicity.

Next time, hit him harder!



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