By Per Ake Persson

Copenhagen, Denmark - Super middleweight veteran Lolenga "the Dane" Mock (37-14-1) scored his sixth straight win as he outscored reigning French champion Nicolas Dion (16-4) over ten hard-fought rounds of boxing.

As almost always when aging, 43-year-old Mock made it even in the first half of the fight, and then Mock - who was in excellent shape - came on strong in the later rounds and he wore down the strong Frenchman with hard work on the inside, heavy hooks to the body and his always, and still, dangerous right. Dion was shaken twice in the third but had a good fourth before fading down the stretch. At the end it was scored 98-92 twice and 99-91.

Should WBA 'regular' champion Giovanni De Carolis get past Tyron Zeuge on November 5 it´s possible that a defence against Mock is next. Mock won their first fight on a close decision.

Heavyweight Pierre Madsen, also trained by Sherman Williams, knocked out Colombian champ Manuel Banquez (8-6-2) 1.39 into the first round. Banquez, a southpaw, looked much too heavy but boxed well against his aggressive opponent. Madsen waded straight in and slugged away and scored with a right hook to the temple and the Colombian went down and out. Madsen is now 4-0, 3 KOs, and is improving but still needs to work on the defence.

In a scheduled eight-rounder super middleweight Daniel Heinze (5-0) stopped Hungarian Roland Oroszlan (a misleading 7-2) in the second. Oroszlan entered the ring in gym shoes and had big problems with his balance throughout the short fight. After yet another slip the referee asked Oroszlan wanted to continue and the response was negative and it was stopped. The Hungarian was down in the first.

Cruiserweight Ditlev Rossing made his pro debut and knocked out Hungarian Denes Toth (2-3) 1.49 into the first round

The all-Danish matchup at super lightweight between Osama Hadifi (11-2) and debutant Enoch Poulsen fell through when Hadifi earlier in the week pulled out due to bad preparations. Instead Georgian veteran Kakhaber Avetisian (45-38-1) stepped in on short notice. Poulsen impressed in outboxing his opponent and won on scores 40-36 on all cards. Poulsen showed some slick moves and Mogens Palle compares Enoch with another Team Palle star also of African descent from yesterday in former WBA super welterweight champ Ayub Kalule.

Light heavyweight Jeppe Morell (5-0) got a TKO win in the second when Serbian opponent Ivan Jakovljevic (1-2-1) injured his foot and retired. The fight was even when Jakovljevic tripped and hurt his foot. He limped to his corner and got the mandatory eight count but said he couldn´t continue and it was stopped.

Cruiserweight Tobias Soerig, trained by Sherman "Tank" Williams and a record of 4-0-1, stopped Serbian Slobodan Culum in the sixth. Culum was under pressure but wasn´t hurt and the referee called it off. It was one-sided but Culum could certainly have been allowed to finish the fight and he protested vehemently the stoppage and even did some pushups to show he was all right.

As for Williams, he is still active and have his next fight set for December 3 in Aarhus in the sixth and final Danish Fight Night show of the year.

Lightheavy Jonas Madsen (6-0) knocked out Beka Aduashvili (18-8) with a short right hook 59 second into the third round of a scheduled six-rounder. Madsen, with only eight amateur fights behind him, shows promise and is one to watch.

The perhaps best prospect of them all in the new Palle / Nielsen stable is featherweight Ali Mohamed (3-0). Ali outscored Portugal´s Mario Goncalves (1-5) in a fast paced six-rounder and won on scores of 60-53 twice and 60-52. Goncalves took a standing eight count in the fourth.

Heavyweight Mortens Fruensgaard (3-0) opened this edition of Super Brian Nielsen and Mogens Palle Promotions´ Danish Fight Night with a first round knockout over Latvian Ostaps Basin (2-7). Basins was down twice and it was over 1.11.

In the second fight of the evening super middleweight Andreas Lynggaard (5-0) stopped Georgian George Gogebashvili (10-3-2) in the sixth and final round. Gogabashvili did well in the first few rounds with his switch hitting and heavy hooks but tired badly and could only hold on in the last round with Lynggaard putting him under pressure. Gogbashvili was counted over once but was down all in all four times more tired and off balance than hurt and it was finally stopped.