Photos by Sumio Yamada
JEAN PASCAL W12 ADRIAN DIACONU
Bell Centre, MONTREAL, June 19
If every fight was as good as the one between Jean Pascal and Adrian Diaconu on Friday night, boxing would surely mount a comeback. Unfortunately, though, fights such as this tend to be few and far between.
The all-Quebec clash at Montreals Bell Centre had everything. There was the human interest angle, with two fighters from the Montreal area meeting to decide who was best, the rugged and heavy handed Romanian Diaconu and the flashier, more charismatic Haitian-born Pascal and the tension in the big arena fairly crackled.
Then there was the fight itself, with its skill and courage, its drama and its swings of fortune.
Pascal was, I thought, magnificent as he boxed and fought his way to the unanimous decision to capture Diaconus WBC light-heavyweight title.
This was an upset, but even though Pascal lost to Carl Froch last December I was impressed with his chin, heart and fighting spirit in that memorable meeting. I had the feeling that the Froch fight would have brought Pascal to another level, because although he lost it was an honourable defeat that contained more of the positive than the negative.
I didnt, though, expect quite such a stirring performance from Pascal in Friday's fight.
As Wally Matthews noted in the Versus commentary, Pascal seemed to living dangerously as he moved around the ring with hands low, but his punch-anticipation and sheer speed allowed him to make Diaconu miss time and again with huge hooks and right hands.
Diaconu was a dogged pursuer, though, and he always seemed to be in with a chance.
Every so often, Diaconu served up a reminder that he was still very much in the fight.
Down from a left hook in the fifth, Diaconu hurt Pascal with a right hand late in the round and he had him hanging on in the 11th.
Pascal, though, kept firing back, unleashing some spectacular combinations and ripping shots into Diaconus sturdy body. It was breathtaking stuff, and Pascal closed out the fight in style with a rousing last round, hitting, moving yet also standing and fighting rather than trying to play it safe.
It was a dazzling display by Pascal, but Diaconu fought well and bravely in defeat and, as ever in fights such as this, boxing itself was the biggest winner.
Last Updated:
June 21, 2009 - 4:57am 






