By Alexey Sukachev

Brandenburg Halle, Frankfurt, Brandenburg, Germany - Susi Kentikian (29-0, 16 KOs) added another strap to her ever-growing assortment of titles after a one-sided drubbing of tough but techincally weak 19-year old Thai boxer Teeraporn Pannimit (14-4, 5 KOs). Kentikian gradually turned more and morre aggressive and was close to stopping the Thai in the later rounds with her non-stop attacks. The German Armenian, who won a sweepout decision - 100-90 across the board - is now WIBF, WBA and WBO flyweight champion.

Rising middleweight star Christina Hammer (11-0, 7 KOs) retained her WBO/WBF titles with a convincing decision over tough-as-nails but ultimately limited American Vashon Living (5-2, 1 KO). Living was... well... livid and lively but her ring vitality and also her stature were ultimately not enough to keep Hammer away, while Hammer did exactly what her second name means, and finally got a well-deserved unanimous decision over ten rounds. 100-90 (twice) and 99-91.

After six years of honorable activity inside the ring, 24-year old German light heavyweight prodigy Xaxhi "Robin" Krasniqi (36-2, 12 KOs) finally acquired his first professional regalia after an impressive stoppage of usually durable Frenchman Abdelhakim Derghal (14-12-1, 8 KOs). The native of Algeria, now representing France, was never actually in the fight with Krasniqi, who came forward behind an educated left jab, landed a good right hand time and again and wisely stepped back to avoid being hit.

Derghal was down in the third after a huge right hand by Krasniqi and was floored by the very same punch in the fourth. He got up but was obviously in no condition to continue as his corner waived the bout off at 1:45. Derghal was stopped only for the second time in his career. Krasniqi is the new WBO European light heavyweight titleholder, and he is expected to enter the next WBO rankings.

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Germany-based Italian heavyweight prospect Francesco Pianeta moved up to 24-0-1, 14 KOs, with a workanlike eight-round unanimous decision over fight veteran Robert Hawkins (23-19, 7 KOs), who suffered his ninth loss in a row since upsetting Dominick Guinn in December 2007.