MOSES ITAUMA racked up the fourth win of his career with a one-sided points win over Kevin Espindola in Telford.

Itauma, 18, won 60-54 on the referee’s scorecard but it is now two fights in a row without a stoppage as he was unable to really hurt the Argentinean visitor at any point over these six rounds.

Itauma is adamant he has what it takes to beat Mike Tyson’s record as the youngest ever world heavyweight champion and is hoping to be 8-0 by the end of the year when he turns 19.

He was 3-0 with two inside the distance before this against Espindola, whose last outing was a fourth-round stoppage at the hands of Frazer Clarke in Manchester six months back.

Itauma refused to look his opponent in the eyes as the referee brought them together to deliver his final instructions but he was straight to work as the first round started.

It was a patient start from the teenage southpaw who landed with a couple of good body shots and lead hook in an otherwise unremarkable first round.

He started to put his shots together more in the second round but appeared to be frustrated by the lack of anything in response from Espindola, who he was regularly beckoning on to fight.

It was more of the same in the third round as he backed the visitor onto the ropes before attempting to pick a way through his defence. Espindola, however, was doing well to absorb everything although he did ship a big right hook right before the bell.

The final three rounds followed a similar pattern with more target practice for Itauma, who only occasionally had to worry about anything coming back. At the end of the sixth and final round he decided to unload with a bit more reckless abandon but Espindola was able to hang on.

Earlier, Eithan James boxed beautifully en route to the most significant victory of his career as he widely outpointed James Moorcroft over 10 rounds.

James arrived in Telford with an 11-0 record but without a single stoppage on his record but his prowess was evident as he controlled the majority of the fight, switching stances and frustrating his opponent.

Moorcroft, trained by Manchester favourite Anthony Crolla, just could not pin James down and was regularly getting caught by long jabs and crisp rear hands.

As such, it was little surprise when all three judges scored James a clear winner with two of them scoring him a 98-92 winner while the other had it slightly closer at 97-94 to make him the winner and new holder of the WBO European welterweight champion.

Before that, Owen Cooper moved to 9-0 (3) by virtue of an eight-round decision following an entertaining encounter with Nicaraguan journeyman Robin Zamora. Referee Chris Dean scored  Cooper an 78-74 winner.