Adam Azim Hammers former champion Sergey Lipinens to catch a stop win in nine rounds at Wembley Arena | Boxing news
Adam Azim scored a dominant victory over Sergei Lipinette to win the Wembley Arena conflict in nine rounds.
Azim took a key step against Kazakh, the first former world champion he fought in his career.
Lipinens held the world title of IBF and boxers of elite operators like Mikey Garcia, Jaron Ennis and Lamont Peterson.
At the age of 35, Lipinets had had more than a decade of the Azima senior. But for all the Kazakh world -class boxing experience, Azim remained composed. He walked toward the outside of the ring in their open circle, unfettered, while pulling into the lipinents.
Azim began to threaten the fast left hooks and hit the body tightly. While Lipinets tried to close it, Azim welcomed Kazakh strictly, right right.
In the second round, the lipinets felt hard left hooks and Azim supported them with another cross. He stretched his body again and began to establish his command of the competition.
Jab whimpered between Lipinenes gloves. That encouraged the answer. Lipinens chased Azima, reaching for him with the left. But he couldn’t score a slough stylist down.
The right top cut that breaks out of the Azim, which is purely connected. The British right hook caught Lipinens’s glove, but a flatter right found her chin.
The breakthrough came shortly afterwards in the third round. Azim took off his lipets with his feet with a pure one blow, Azima, on a retreat, unbuttoning his excellent left hook.
The lipinets landed strongly on the canvas. But the hard veteran campaign was beat by the Count.
Determined, the lipinets were still going out in the next round and inserted to the right into Azim’s beard. The real hook also caught him, but Azim did not allow him to break him.
His left hook still strayed. The British recognized it and, according to his merit, did not follow the attack when Lipinets was obviously in trouble. Judge Steve Gray still took away the point from the Azima.
Continuing to march the action, Azim scored with his left hook a long right upper part. Then a break came into action because of a second random low kick.
Azim would distract the superior hip combination. His right hook was hit and the lipinets felt the full force of the upper cut as he made a mistake.
Azim stood on the ground, working in his pocket in the immediate vicinity. The strong rights of excessive forces continued to punish the lipyets. He shook on Kazakh and marked the former champion.
But Azim was still careless, and another low blow saw him another point in the seventh round.
Low Lipinette’s blow, maybe in response, landed in the eighth round, and afterwards they opened up to each other, tearing the upper parts.
Azim won the exchange, and the shootings broke into him. The upper -cut arm of Azima landed Flush and Lipinens wound back.
He left the saying out of balance to the right, and the lipinets were desperately returned to reject Azima before the bell rang to end the eighth.
At the beginning of the next circle, Lipinets stormed into the blizzard of the upper cut.
Azim rocking him for heels. Kazakh was swinging, his hands down for a moment, and Judge Steve Gray stopped him on his feet for 33 seconds in the stanza.