By Per Ake Persson & Alexey Sukachev

Copenhagen, Denmark - The First Lady, Cecilia Braekhus (26-0) added the IBF title to her collection and retained the WBC, WBA and WBO female welterweight titles with a shutout win over Croatian Ivan Habazin (13-2) after ten rounds of boxing. Braekhus dictated the fight all the way and closed out with a strong final round. Cecilia Braekhus is now the first woman ever to hold all four major titles.

Unheralded Ukrainan light heavyweight Yevgeni Makhteinko (3-2) upset Norwegian Alexander Hagen (4-1) stopping him in three of a scheduled six-rounder. Hagen floored Makhteinko in the first and seemed to dictate what was a fastpaced fight with few clean punches. But then Yevgeni clipped Hagen with a dynamite right and Alexander went down in his own corner pretty much out of it and as he got up it was stopped. It was ruled as a KO.

Erik Skoglund (21-0, 11) retained the EU and won the vacant IBF light heavyweight titles with a unanimous decision over Italian challenger Stefano "the Hammer" Abatangelo (18-2-1) after twelve messy rounds of boxing where there were lots of holding and wrestling. Skoglund came out fast and the short, stocky Italian was forced to smother his opponent and did so well. In the later rounds the Swede tired somewhat and Abatangelo had his moment but by now there was almost only wrestling. Skoglund had points deducted in the fourth and eleventh for headbutts. It was scored 118-109, 120-106 and 118-108.

The Swedish Princess, Klara Svensson (14-0) won the WBC female interim super lightweight title with a ten round unanimous decision over German Marie Riederer (15-2-1). It was scored 100-90 twice and 99-91. Riederer kept coming but walked into one counter after another and was outboxed in most of the rounds. Svensson have made big improvements since Joey Gamache took over as trainer.

Cruiserweight Micki Nielsen (15-0 (12) had it easy against soft-looking Hungarian Tamas Bajzeth (10-13-1) and stopped in two. Bajzeth was hurt at the end of round one by a southpaw right hook and floored three times in the second for a stoppage at 1.51. The official announcement was again by KO.

Germany-based Armenian Arman Torosyan (13-0-1, 10 KOs) fights abroad only on occasions. However, his best wins occurred outside Germany - firstly with the TKO 1 victory over 21-8-1 Vasily Dragomir in Austria and TKO 7 against 27-2 Reda Zam Zam in Denmark, and now with another first-round TKO over previously undefeated Dane Torben Keller (10-1-1, 3 KOs).

Torosyan, 30, immediately jumped on Keller, 27, and soon landed a right hand to put the Dane down. Keller wasn't dazed, but he was unstable. Sensing his strength, the Armenian slugger wen in and landed a left hook soon thereafter to send Keller down again. Now, Torben was clearly wobbled and had blood dripping from one of the cuts. Torosyan continued to stalk Keller but was overly anxious and thus went down himself - on a slip. He wasn't cautious even after that, and ate a major left hook, almost going down. But it wasn't the Keller's night.

Torosyan found a room for two more left hooks to the jaw in succession, flooring Keller for the third time. Referee Torben Seemann Hansen didn't bother to count and waved it off at 2:00. Huge win for the Armenian boxer.

Middleweight Abdul Khattab (8-0) outscored Serbian Goran Milenkovic (7-4) over six. It was scored 60-52 twice and 60-51. Milenkovic was down in the first and third and was too slow for Khattab, who has during the summer been sparring with Mikkel Kessler.

Landry Kore (2-0, 1 KO) TKO 3 Michal Vosyka (2-13-1, 1 KO). Time - 0:11. Profuse bleeding from a cut around the left eye.

Sauerland Promotions´ show at the TAP 1 Arena opened with Swedish heavyweight Adrian Granat (or Granate as the Germans have it). Granat (5-0, 4) outscored durable Czech journeyman Tomas Mrazek (9-48-6) over six. Granat, promoted by EC Boxing in Hamburg, won every round clearly and worked the body well with hooks from both hands. Mrazek however was tough and got through with a southpaw left every now and then and it was a good learning fight for the Swede. It was scored 60-54 twice and 60-53.