Washington: Bernard Hopkins, the oldest world champion in boxing history at age 49, became the eldest fighter to unify world titles Saturday when he defeated Beibut Shumenov in a light-heavyweight showdown.

Two judges gave ageless wonder Hopkins a split-decision victory by the same score, 116-111, while the outvoted third saw Shumenov as a 114-113 winner.

“I had a great night,” Hopkins said. “I’m special. Special is what it is. There is no definition for special.”

Hopkins, who knocked down his younger and larger foe in the 11th round, kept his International Boxing Federation crown and took the World Boxing Association title from Kazakhstan’s Shumenov.

Now his aim is to add the World Boxing Council title and become an undisputed champion before turning 50 next January.

“My job is not to worry about the judges. My job is to get ready to unify the championship before 50,” Hopkins said.

Hopkins improved to 55-6 with two drawn and 32 knockouts, while Shumenov fell to 14-2 before 6,823 at the Washington Armory.

“I wasn’t concerned with the scorecard. I was concerned with the fighting,” Shumenov said. “I chose the wrong strategy. I’m quite angry. It didn’t happen that I could get the victory but I am a true warrior.”

Hopkins used a left jab to set up a hard right that dropped Shumenov and summed up a masterful performance by Hopkins of wearing down a fellow champion physically and mentally.

“He ran right into it because he likes to spin into it,” Hopkins said. “It was there the whole fight. I finally clicked in there and got it.”

Fans chanted “B-Hop, B-Hop” in the final round, when Hopkins dropped his hands, leaned toward Shumenov and smiled, then attacked after his rival showed frustration.

“I’m a 15-round fighter,” Hopkins screamed from the ring. “I’m a throwback.”