Jerusalem hopes to end Japanese dominance in title fight vs Shigeoka


At a glance

  • Melvin Jerusalem aims to put an end to the string of misfortunes of his fellow Filipino boxers against the dominant Japanese pugs when he challenges Yudai Shigeoka for the WBC minimumweight title on Sunday, March 31.


Melvin Jerusalem aims to put an end to the string of misfortunes of his fellow Filipino boxers against the dominant Japanese pugs when he challenges Yudai Shigeoka for the WBC minimumweight title on Sunday, March 31.

 

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Melvin Jerusalem (third from right) and his team arrives in Nagoya, Japan  (Sanman Boxing photo)


 

Team Jerusalem, headed by Sanman Promotions chief JC Mananquil and trainer Michael Domingo, already arrived in Japan for the scheduled 12-round fight at the International Conference Hall.

The Land of the Rising Sun has already caught three Filipino victims recently, with Marlon Tapales and Jerwin Ancajas suffering knockout losses against their champion rivals.

Tapales absorbed a 10th round stoppage against Japanese superstar Naoya Inoue in their undisputed world super bantamweight bout last December while Ancajas fell in the ninth round against Naoya's brother Takuma in their WBA bantamweight fight last February.

Even the much-experienced Jonas Sultan also sustained a first-round knockout loss against Japanese foe Riko Masuda in the Ancajas-Inoue undercard.

Jerusalem, however, can cling on to the fact that he once won in Japan to wrest his mini-flyweight crown. He defeated Masataka Taniguchi via a second-round knockout in Osaka.

The 30-year-old pug, however, immediately surrendered his belt after losing to Oscar Collazo of Puerto Rico via seventh round stoppage.

Experience should be an advantage for Jerusalem who currently sports a 21-3 record with 12 knockout against the only 8-0 record, 5 KOs of the 26-year-old Shigeoka.

Shigeoka, who vowed to take revenge for Taniguchi, made a successful first title defense against Thai Panya Pradabsri via a 12-round unanimous decision win.