Ireland has a new boxing world champion in TJ Doheny

Australian based bantamweight beat Japanese favourite and defending champion

Ireland’s TJ Doheny  reacts after winning the 12-round IBF super bantamweight title bout against Japan’s  Ryosuke Iwasa  in Tokyo. Photograph: Toshifumi Kitamura/AFP/Getty Images
Ireland’s TJ Doheny reacts after winning the 12-round IBF super bantamweight title bout against Japan’s Ryosuke Iwasa in Tokyo. Photograph: Toshifumi Kitamura/AFP/Getty Images

Ireland has a new boxing world champion in Australian based TJ Doheny. The Portlaoise 31-year-old earned his strap the hard way by upsetting Japanese favourite and defending champion Ryosuke Iwasa in Japan’s Korakuen Hall to secure the IBF world super bantamweight title on Thursday morning.

The win was as unforeseen as that of Ireland’s Barcelona Olympic silver medallist, Wayne McCullough, who also travelled to Japan in 1995 to earn his WBC bantamweight world title somewhat under the Irish radar.

Doheny won by unanimous decision 115-113, 116-112, 117-112 in the hostile arena and although he sustained a cut under his eye early in the fight, the Irish southpaw recovered to take the bout to 12 rounds.

Ireland’s TJ Doheny in action  against Japoan’s  Ryosuke Iwasa  during their IBF super bantamweight title boxing bout in Tokyo. Photograph: Toshifumi Kitamura/AFP/Getty Images
Ireland’s TJ Doheny in action against Japoan’s Ryosuke Iwasa during their IBF super bantamweight title boxing bout in Tokyo. Photograph: Toshifumi Kitamura/AFP/Getty Images

Fine margins ultimately decided the outcome with the judges going against most of the local opinion as well as some ESPN analysts. In fact the crowd were stunned by the outcome believing their local man had done enough to retain his title in just his second defence.

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The most significant victory of his career to date takes Doheny’s professional record to 20 wins and no defeats with 14 of his victories coming via KO and now more to come.

It may also give Paddy Barnes and Carl Frampton a lift as they head into a hugely important weekend for their careers. Both 31-years-old Barnes, a twice Olympic bronze medallist, is also hoping to win his first professional title in Windsor Park on Saturday after just six fights. If he succeeds he will beat Katie Taylor's mark of taking the WBA world lightweight title in her seventh professional bout.

Barnes will step into the ring with the Nicaraguan boxer Cristofer Rosales for the WBC world flyweight belt as part of the undercard to Frampton's fight against Australian Luke Jackson, which is a hoped for stepping stone in his journey back to a world title shot.

Johnny Watterson

Johnny Watterson

Johnny Watterson is a sports writer with The Irish Times