Josh Taylor clinically exposes Apinun Khongsong and the IBF’s ranking policy

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Josh Taylor thrashes IBF mandatory to set up Jose Ramirez showdown, writes Matt Christie from York Hall

“I CAN still make it to the pub!” Josh Taylor shouted to
old pals-cum-BT Sport analysts David Haye and Carl Frampton inside a near empty
York Hall after an early finish to his IBF and WBA super-lightweight defence against
Apinun Khongsong.

The press in the balcony also called to Haye and Frampton after Taylor’s first round KO and asked if the replays on the screens in front of them made the finish any clearer than it had appeared in real time. “A left hand,” Frampton responded while Haye clenched his left fist then wryly shrugged his shoulders.  

The Thai challenger was something of a mystery even before he writhed on the canvas after a short, sharp left plunged into his body. Though his 16-0 record matched that of the champion, the 147 cumulative defeats suffered by his opponents should make his position as the IBF mandatory worthy of further investigation. For context, the sanctioning body placed Khongsong eight places above Taylor’s previous opponent, Regis Prograis. The same Prograis who went 12 rip-roaring rounds with the Scot last year in a closer than close fight laced with unquestionable skill and quality. If anyone in the IBF can justify satisfactorily why Prograis is now rated so miserably, I’m all ears.

Such hokey-pokey speaks of the nonsensical manner in which sanctioning
body ratings are compiled. Khongsong picked up IBF Pan Pacific and IBF Asia
belts in recent years against undemanding opposition, paying sanctioning fees
along the way as his IBF world ranking steadily improved. Draw your own conclusions
on the morals of that.

But it’s easy to be so cynical with hindsight. Certainly, there were enough whispers of Khongsong’s punching prowess to make Taylor and new trainer Ben Davison take this challenge seriously. The 24-year-old’s long arms and broad shoulders tallied up with a fighter who could bang and as the opening bell sounded he looked significantly taller and wider than the champion. His right arm was cocked and ready to counter, and his left, which he clumped into Taylor’s ear and caused it to redden in the first minute, also carried significant weight.

“A lot of people will disagree but we thought Khongsong was a
threat,” Davison told Boxing News in the immediate aftermath. “Josh came
straight over afterwards and said [to me], ‘They’re the heaviest hands I’ve
ever been in with’.

“We watched how he’d made weight and we picked up on his thin
waist. I didn’t expect it to be exploited that soon but, back stage before the
fight, I had the body belt on and I’d not felt Josh like that before.

“For a training camp he’s got fatigue and all the rest of it
but once that fatigue had gone, I could really feel the difference.”

Khongsong felt it too. Southpaw Taylor used clever feet and feinted with his right to disarm the challenger before pushing him to ropes and administering the wicked left-handed blow. Not only was Khongsong counted out at 2-41 by referee Phil Edwards, he was still grimacing 15 minutes later when he was put in the back of an ambulance on a stretcher and taken to hospital on the instruction of doctors.

“I’ve definitely caved his rib cage in,” Taylor told the assembled press. “I knew that’s what he does in the clinch, he always swings off the clinch so I thought I’d go under the hook. I felt it go right in. I knew it was a good shot but I didn’t know to the extent until I seen him lying on the floor.”

Taylor marches on and deserves credit for taking care of
business so clinically. In the end he didn’t quite make last orders for a deserved
pint, but one hopes this is the last order he has to take from sanctioning
bodies before he gets the fight his talents merit. Jose Ramirez, the WBO and
WBC champion, is apparently ready and waiting.  

Epsom’s Charlie Edwards returned to the ring for the
first time in 13 months and was made to work hard for points win by Wolverhampton’s
Kyle Williams. The Midlander tried and tried to put a dent in the former
WBC flyweight boss but in the end was the clear loser – 99-91 on referee Bob
Williams’ card – after 10 rounds.

Up on the balcony directly above the ring, Edwards’ brother
Sunny made himself heard. Making the most of the lack of crowds, he shouted
advice to Charlie throughout and even found time to share a joke or two with
Williams and his corner. At the final bell, Kyle looked straight up to Sunny
and pointed at him through his left glove and offered a wry smile.

Williams – who took Sunny’s mischief in good humour – had his
moments. In the fifth he briefly rocked Edwards with a right to the head and had
greater success in the eighth, the best round of the fight, when he pinned his
opponent on the ropes with a sustained assault on the body. Yet the classier
work, orchestrated by quick and intelligent feet, always came from Edwards.

As early as the first round Williams was shaking his head
upon being caught. Edwards’ jab was impressive throughout; in a tidy move in the
sixth he doubled it, span away from the counter and hurled a right over the
top.

A worthwhile outing for Edwards as he maps out a future down
at super-flyweight, a division he’s likely better suited to than the
bantamweight class this was fought at.

Spain-based Romanian Ionut Baluta may not be the
underdog again for a while. For the third consecutive time he upset the odds,
this time with a bruising and emphatic third round stoppage of Ireland’s
fancied David Oliver Joyce. The victory follows wins over Kyle Williams and
TJ Doheny.

Baluta controlled the opening round before attacking like his
life depended on it in the second. The former amateur star – who lost to Vasyl
Lomachenko as long ago as 2008 – was in trouble but fired back as the pair
exchanged meaty shots in Baluta’s corner.

Baluta stepped up another gear in the third. This time,
33-year-old Joyce could not go with him and his head was a stationary target. A
searing left hook crashed off Joyce, by now in dire straits, and he toppled in
slow motion onto his back. He regained his footing but little else and referee Steve
Gray called off the hammering at 1-49.

Oxford’s Jordan Flynn opened the evening with a 60-54
whitewash of Stockport’s Jamie Quinn. Flynn was flashy and eager
throughout, scoring to Quinn’s body with looping blows but he struggled to
penetrate his much-travelled opponent’s high guard with most of his rat-a-tat
attacks upstairs. In the thick of lockdown, Quinn told Boxing News he
feared he may not fight again because the demand for journeymen would cease,
but this latest outing was his third in four weeks.

The inspirational comeback of 38-year-old “Jazzy” Jeff
Thomas
, from Lytham St Annes, could be over after he was soundly beaten
over four rounds by George Davey. Trained by popular former
super-middleweight contender, Henry Wharton, the York prospect’s lead left
hand, generally thrown as a jab but occasionally as a hook, was on point
throughout. Thomas did score with a big left hook himself in the dying moments
but was too frequently beaten to the punch. Mr Williams scored it 40-36 in the
22-year-old’s favour.  

Gateshead’s Karl Pilkington dutifully chased Northampton’s
Eithan James for the entirety of their four-rounder, picked up a
swelling beneath his left eye but left a 40-36 loser on the card of referee
Williams. James, only 20, was made to work hard for the victory in every round
in a solid workout.

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