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Sports / Boxing

Zou aims for first pro world title against Amnat

Published: 07 Mar 2015 - 03:45 pm | Last Updated: 16 Jan 2022 - 07:30 pm

 

Macau, Macau--China's Zou Shiming won three world titles in a glittering amateur career, and Saturday aims to complete his transformation to a professional world champion by beating IBF flyweight belt-holder Amnat Ruenroeng in Macau.

Zou also won two Olympic gold medals (2008, 2012) and a bronze (2004), but now faces his toughest challenge in his seventh professional fight at Cotai Arena against a foe he knows all too well from his amateur days.

Zou first encountered International Boxing Federation champion Amnat in 2007 when the Thai, in his first event since being released from prison, pulled off a huge shock to beat Zou, who had already won his first amateur world championship two years earlier.

Zou and Amnat were to meet twice more and the Chinese boxer won both fights on close points decisions, with the last encounter coming almost five years ago in the Asian Games.

The pair have become good friends, but Zou said that would have to be cast aside once the bell rings for the first of 12 rounds on Saturday night.

"We are professionals and although it's true we are good friends, when he is in the ring I will want to hurt him, to try to kill him," said Zou, who under Hall of Fame trainer Freddie Roach has a perfect professional record of six wins from six.

- Boxing salvation -

Amnat turned pro earlier than Zou, after failing to be selected for the 2012 Olympic team, and boasts a perfect 14-fight record with five knockouts.

He will be making the third defence of the title he won against Rocky Fuentes of the Philippines just over a year ago.

Zou was groomed for success by China's elite sporting programme ever since excelling as a schoolboy boxer, but Amnat took a very different path to the top.

Former drug addict Amnat, 35, had been sentenced to his third jail term for drugs and robbery offences back in 2006 when the street kid found salvation by signing up for the notoriously tough Thai correctional system's boxing programme.

Within a year he had won the Thai national championship, despite still serving a heavy 15-year term handed down under the "three strikes and out" policy for snatching a woman's handbag.

His dedication to boxing training and success with the gloves meant that he was released the very next day for "good behaviour" after serving just a year of his sentence.

He never looked back -- "boxing lifted me", he says -- and in his next event beat Zou in the prestigious King's Cup.

Amnat is confident of retaining the title, despite all the hype and support the hugely popular Zou is enjoying in southern Chinese city Macau.

afp