VietNamNet Bridge – Tran Van Thao is expected to win the first-ever World Boxing Council (WBC) Asia title for Viet Nam today in Bangkok.

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Tran Van Thao will be the first Vietnamese boxer to vie for a WBC Asia title. — VNS Photo vothuat.vn


The boxer, the first Vietnamese boxer competing for a world professional bell, will fight Indonesian George Lumoly in the super-flyweight category.

Entering the match, Thao boasts six wins, including four knock-outs (KO). Thao grabbed a gold medal from the National Boxing Championships’ 52kg class last year and he was the champion of the Steel Competition Boxing Tournament, an annual event for local professional boxers, in the same year.

Meanwhile Lumoly, 26, has taken part in 12 matches and notched eight wins, three draws and one defeat. Six of his wins are KOs. Lumoly is from Jakarta and became a professional boxer in 2013. He previously competed in the light flyweight class. Lumoly won a title at the Indonesia Professional Boxing Commission in September.

It will be the first time that Thao has participated in a 12-round match.

Before the match, he noted that Lumoly is experienced and would not be an easy opponent.

 “It is my longest match ever, so my training schedule with teammates and coaches at the Saigon Sport Club changed a lot so that I could be strong enough for the whole event,” said Thao who is called ‘Viet Nam’s Mayweather’. He noted that he has taken part in 15-round and 20-round matches twice a week.

 “I have talked with coaches and watched his video clips. I practiced with teammates who have the same style as him. And now I am ready,” said the 25-year-old, who went professional in 2015.

According to Tran Minh Tien, president of Viet Nam Boxing Federation, the organisation aims to reach the international level, beyond the Southeast Asian region, in the near future.

Thao’s participation in the WBC competition is a step forward for Viet Nam boxing.

“It is a good signal for Viet Nam and it would be historic if he could bring home the title. I hope that it would be a strong kick to encourage Vietnamese boxing in general. Other athletes will step out of Viet Nam to compete in the international professional rings,” Tien said. 

Source: VNS

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