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Vijender Singh Clinches Fourth Successive Knockout Win In Liverpool

Vijender Singh Clinches Fourth Successive Knockout Win
LIVERPOOL, ENGLAND - MARCH 12: Vijender Singh celebrates beating Alexander Horvath during their Middleweight contest at the Echo Arena on March 12, 2016 in Liverpool, England. (Photo by Dave Thompson/Getty Images)
Dave Thompson via Getty Images
LIVERPOOL, ENGLAND - MARCH 12: Vijender Singh celebrates beating Alexander Horvath during their Middleweight contest at the Echo Arena on March 12, 2016 in Liverpool, England. (Photo by Dave Thompson/Getty Images)

LIVERPOOL -- There was no stopping Indian boxing star Vijender Singh as he notched up his fourth successive knockout professional win by pummelling Hungary's Alexander Horvath in under three rounds here on Sunday.

Vijender had little trouble outpunching his opponent, who failed to get up after being thrown off balance by his body blows in the third round of the six-round contest of the middlewight (75kg) category late last night.

Vijender Singh, right, stops Alexander Horvath during their Middleweight contest at the Echo Arena in England.

"I don't know what happened to him, I think he was looking to get out by making an excuse. It's a good start to the year for me. I am happy to register another knockout win. I think this is a great start for me looking ahead to my WBO Asia title bout in India (on June 11) this year," Vijender said after the bout.

"My target is to win the Asia title in front of my home crowd and looking forward to register two more knockout wins in April before I play in India," he added.

The 30-year-old Indian, who went into the contest on the back of three successive knockout triumphs, continued to be a cut above his rivals, who talk big but deliver little inside the ring.

Vijender Singh, left, and Alexander Horvath in action during their Middleweight contest at the Echo Arena on 12 March, 2016 in Liverpool, England.

The 20-year-old Horvath, with an experience of seven pro fights before Sunday, had been drinking snake blood to prepare himself but it seemed the bizarre routine helped little in countering the ferocity of India's first Olympic and World Championships bronze-medallist.

Vijender walked into the arena to the trademark beats of popular Bollywood song 'Singh is King' and was cheered vociferously by the sizeable Indian community present inside.

The Indian took barely a few seconds to get a measure of his rival and once that was done, Vijender landed some telling jabs to unsettle Horvath, who spat out his gumshield twice in the opening round itself.

Vijender did exceptionally well in commanding the pace of the bout and managed to drain the Hungarian in the second round itself.

Horvath's body language was sluggish while Vijender executed his counter-attacks with the right mix of confidence and power

Horvath's agony ended barely a minute into the third round when Vijender's body blows brought him to his knees, giving the Indian his fourth knockout triumph.

Vijender will next be seen in action on 2 April, the opponent and venue for which would be decided later.

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This article exists as part of the online archive for HuffPost India, which closed in 2020. Some features are no longer enabled. If you have questions or concerns about this article, please contact indiasupport@huffpost.com.