• Middleweight

Ireland's Lee stops Korobov to win world title

Dan Rafael
December 14, 2014
Andy Lee won his first title after defeating Matt Korobov by TKO © Getty Images
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Andy Lee spent most of his career at the side of the late, great Hall of Fame trainer Emanuel Steward. They travelled everywhere together and became almost like father and son.

Lee even spent several years living in Steward's Detroit home when he moved from Ireland to the United States. In their first title shot together, Lee got knocked out by Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. in the seventh round in 2012. A few months later, Steward died from cancer.

Vowing to win a world title in Steward's memory, Lee knocked out Matt Korobov in the sixth round to win a vacant middleweight world title on Saturday night on the Timothy Bradley Jr.-Diego Chaves undercard at the Cosmopolitan.

Lee, 30, and Korobov, 31, a 2008 Russian Olympian now living in Florida, were both tentative early on in what was a jabbing contest between southpaws as they each tried to establish control. It was a close contest all the way and neither man had taken control when the fight suddenly came to an end.

Out of nowhere, Lee (34-2, 24 KOs) landed a tremendous right hook that badly staggered Korobov. He did not go down, but he was in terrible trouble and Lee jumped all over him. Lee landed numerous punches until referee Kenny Bayless had no choice but to stop it at one minute, 10 seconds.

"We were trading and a lot of the times he was having the better of it but my right hook is a killer punch. I thought he wasn't going down but I wasn't taking any chances," Lee said.

"When I thought about this moment, I had a speech in mind," Lee said. "I would like to say thank you to my manager [and trainer Adam Booth], who has done so much for me over the last couple of years, but it's also for the man who made me, Emanuel Steward.

"We spent seven, eight years together and he said I would win a world title. His wife, Marie, came here today, flew all the way from Detroit, so from everybody from Detroit and Kronk [Gym], thank you very much. Matt Korobov was giving me nightmares but I could hear all the cheers from all that came to see me from New York and Detroit."

Korobov (24-1, 14 KOs) was ahead on all three scorecards, but had no complaints about the stoppage.

"I've never been hurt before but he got me with a tremendous hook," he said. "I was stunned. I couldn't continue."

Korobov's trainer, Charles Mooney, said: "He should have taken a knee but it didn't happen and he couldn't continue."

Lee won the fight with titleholder Gennady Golovkin at ringside and they could meet in a unification bout.

"Great performance and strong performance," Golovkin said of Lee's knockout.

Before a Golovkin fight, however, Lee had something else in mind.

"I am a champion now and I want to defend my belt in Ireland," he said.

Lee and Korobov were fighting for the 160-pound belt that Peter Quillin vacated rather than defend against Korobov, the mandatory challenger, for a career-high purse (about triple) of $1,428,630 (£908,971) under the terms of a purse bid won by Roc Nation Sports. Lee, the next leading available contender, quickly accepted the fight.

This article originally appeared on ESPN.com

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