Tszyu good: Nikita preserves family’s crazy legacy

Darren Walton |

Nikita Tszyu proved too strong for Oscar Diaz in their WBO super welterweight showdown.
Nikita Tszyu proved too strong for Oscar Diaz in their WBO super welterweight showdown.

An elated Nikita Tszyu is eyeing bigger fish after living up to his word and taking out big-talking and tough Spaniard Oscar Diaz to edge closer to a world-title shot.

Tszyu improved his unbeaten record to 13-0 with an emphatic sixth-round stoppage in the pair’s super-welterweight showdown in Newcastle on Wednesday night.

Forging his own path after living in the shadows of his Hall-of-Fame father Kostya and fellow world title-winning brother Tim, Tszyu is now potentially one win away from securing his own shot at global glory. 

Tszyu
The superfit Tszyu was on fire throughout and will now set his sights on bigger names. (Dan Himbrechts/AAP PHOTOS)

But, rather than gloat or worry about his next bout, the 28-year-old was merely relieved at earning some extra time in the ring after experiencing just three rounds in the past two years either side of left-hand surgery.

“Good to get the rounds in. Good to feel the energy of a crowd,” Tszyu said.

“Good to also get a sweat up.”

The likes of superstar Keith Thurman and fellow American Tony Harrison, who Tim KO’ed in 2023 to win the WBO super-welterweight belt, are being touted as Tszyu’s possible next targets.

Tszyu entered his latest contest ranked sixth with the IBF and is now tipped to climb to as high as No.3 in the division’s pecking order after ending Diaz’s unbeaten record savagely.

The so-called “Butcher” lived up to all expectations with a comprehensive display at the “Tszyu-Castle” Entertainment Centre.  

Looking physically imposing in career-best shape, the home favourite dominated from the first bell.

Diaz
Oscar Diaz goes down for the count at Newcastle Entertainment Centre. (Dan Himbrechts/AAP PHOTOS)

He landed several blows in the opening round, then dropped the Spaniard in the second with a big left.

Tszyu continued the onslaught in round three despite the flurry of punches to Diaz’s head only provoking a wry smile from Diaz, nicknamed “The Bull’ or ‘El Toro” after winning all of his previous 16 fights.

But his chin could cop only so much.

Tszyu
Nikita Tszyu lands a crunching left on Oscar Diaz. (Dan Himbrechts/AAP PHOTOS)

After withstanding another fierce combination in round five, Diaz finally succumbed after Tszyu floored the European with a devastating left-right barrage in the sixth stanza.

Diaz’s camp initially protested after seeing their man cop more blows while on his knees on the ropes, which Tszyu apologised for.

Then they mercifully told the referee Diaz could not go on. 

Anthony Mundine (right) with son Rahim Mundine
Ex-world champ Anthony Mundine (right) with son Rahim Mundine before his super-middleweight bout. (Dan Himbrechts/AAP PHOTOS)

With Kostya (18-0) and Tim (23-0) on Australian soil, Tszyu’s win extends the home record of the nation’s most famous boxing family to an incredible 54-0. 

On Wednesday’s night’s undercard, another son of a gun also maintained his undefeated professional record as Rahim Mundine scored a unanimous points win over Lance McDonald in a five-round super-welterweight stoush.

The victory was Mundine’s third since debuting under crushing expectations four years ago.

Rahim Mundine (right) defeats Lance McDonald
Son of a polarising gun Rahim Mundine (right) was an unpopular points winner over Lance McDonald. (Dan Himbrechts/AAP PHOTOS)

But the 24-year-old son of ex-triple world champion Anthony Mundine could not escape the shadow of his polarising father.

“My dad’s the most hated athlete ever in this country,” he said after being booed and jeered by the Newcastle crowd after the three judges awarded him the bout 49-46, 49-46 and 48-47.

“I won easy, but he’s a real tough competitor. I landed cleaner shots.”

AAP