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Ireland has a new world champion as Burnett prevails despite judging controversy

Burnett follows in the footsteps of Wayne McCullough by claiming the bantamweight title.

Ciarán Gallagher reports from the SSE Odyssey Arena, Belfast

RYAN BURNETT IS the IBF bantamweight champion of the world after a commanding points win over Lee Haskins at the SSE Odyssey Arena in Belfast.

Tonight’s bout marked the first time Burnett – a former Olympic champion for Ireland at Youth level – had headlined a fight card in Belfast and just his fifth paid contest on home soil as he fought in his hometown for the first time in two-and-a-half years.

And the 25-year-old delivered a performance to match the occasion as his homing-missile right hand led him to a split-decision victory, with only the disgraceful judging of Clark Sammartino threatening to spoil the challenger’s night.

Replicating the feat of fellow Belfast man Wayne McCullough, Burnett has become a world 118lb champion in his 17th professional contest, while he becomes Ireland’s first professional world-title holder since yet another Belfast fighter, Carl Frampton, lost his WBA featherweight title to Leo Santa Cruz last January.

Ryan Burnett Presseye / Declan Roughan/INPHO Presseye / Declan Roughan/INPHO / Declan Roughan/INPHO

Bristol native Haskins carried a 34-3 record into the ring and had only tasted one defeat in nearly 10 years.  The 33-year-old southpaw was brave in his second full defence of the IBF crown, but scorecards of 119-117 from both England’s Dave Parris and American Jerry Jakubco in favour of Burnett were fully justified.

However, somehow Rhode Island’s Sammartino managed to score the fight 118-108 for Haskins as the official scripted his own bizarre fairytale result.

Promoter Eddie Hearn claimed in the post-fight press conference that Sammartino had quizzed a ringside photographer about the identities of the fighters, suggesting that the judge may have bizarrely mixed up his scorecard.

Walking to the ring to Queen’s ‘Another One Bites the Dust’, wearing red with gold trim, Burnett’s entrance music signalled his intentions to extend his unblemished record.

Champion Haskins, wearing grey, was treated to a fairly hostile reception by the Belfast faithful, who appeared to number somewhere around the 3,000 mark.

The first round was a cagey affair as expected, although Burnett landed the sharper punches, spurred on by a vocal crowd with ‘The Fields of Athenry’ ringing around the Odyssey.

Burnett was a livewire in the opening couple of rounds, constantly on his toes and enjoying success with short right hands and looping right hooks, while a relaxed Haskins attempted to lure the home fighter in and counter.

Lee Haskins v Ryan Burnett - Odyssey Arena Belfast Brian Lawless Brian Lawless

In a southpaw versus orthodox battle, Burnett came off the worse for wear from a clash of heads in the second and blood began to quickly trickle down his face.

Both corners did a good job on patching their men up for the beginning of the third, a round which saw Haskins warned by referee Marcus McDonnell for punching off the break, while by the end of the round, a cut by the champion’s right eye was bleeding.

Burnett’s speed continued to be the difference in the fourth as he landed some nice right hands and one-twos.

With gym-mate Andy Lee — working for Sky TV — cheering him on at ringside, Burnett was still bouncing towards the midway point, working his way past Haskins’ awkward southpaw reticence with his busy and energetic approach.

Dominant

The champion was by no means being outclassed, but Burnett was fairly dominant at this stage and he put Haskins down towards the end of the sixth with a big right hand — electrifying the Odyssey crowd — before the bell came at a good time for the Bristol man, who seemed to complain to his corner about a problem with his right shoulder.

A cagey seventh round followed before the Adam Booth-trained home fighter reasserted control in the eighth, again landing right hands regularly, with both men’s faces scarred and bleeding.

McDonnell gave Burnett a talking to over use of his head at the beginning of the ninth and despite picking up more cuts — beside his left eye, seemingly from another clash of heads, and the right ear — the Irishman was in complete control in the 10th.

Haskins was down again in the penultimate round and while it appeared that the champion may have slipped, the force of a right-left combo from Burnett sent him on his way to the canvas.

Again Burnett went for the kill, but again the bell came to the rescue of the brave Haskins, who continued to battle.

The champion fought valiantly in the closing round in an effort to save his title, but Burnett continued to fight energetically and with intelligent aggression until the closing bell.

Matchroom promoter Eddie Hearn had stated in the build-up to the bout that victory for Burnett would lead to more regular fight dates in the northern city, suggesting that the 25-year-old could aim for a world-title unification alongside Katie Taylor in three months’ time.

In the chief support bouts, Belfast pair James Tennyson and Paul Hyland Jr both claimed stepping-stone titles with early finishes.

Lee Haskins v Ryan Burnett - Odyssey Arena Belfast Hyland jr finishes his bout. PA Wire / PA Images PA Wire / PA Images / PA Images

Undefeated Hyland Jr made impressively easy work of St Helens’ Adam Dingsdale to pick up the preposterously-named vacant IBF East/West Europe lightweight title.

Earlier, Irish champion Tennyson came through a seesaw contest to claim the WBA international super-featherweight title as Manchester’s Ryan Doyle was retired by his corner after six rounds of their bout.

Cork-based Cuban Mike Perez enjoyed a slightly-farcical victorious cruiserweight debut as opponent Viktor Biscak retired after just 29 seconds of their six-rounder, with the Slovakian claiming to have picked up a foot or leg injury.

And Swindon’s Luke Watkins — boxing on an Irish licence through his Wexford-born mother — claimed the vacant Irish cruiserweight title with a fourth-round knockout win over Dubliner Ian Tims.

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