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Thread: Azumah Nelson

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  1. #16
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    Default Re: Azumah Nelson

    I personally like the Pat Cowdell performance myself.
    Do not let success go to your head and do not let failure get to your heart.

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    Default Re: Azumah Nelson

    Definitely lost the fight to fenech, no where near a draw. Havent watched the fight for a while but i remember thinking there is no way it was a draw.
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    Please see above for my opinion

  3. #18
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    Default Re: Azumah Nelson

    Quote Originally Posted by snakey View Post
    Definitely lost the fight to fenech, no where near a draw. Havent watched the fight for a while but i remember thinking there is no way it was a draw.
    Yes it wasn't nowhere near a draw your right, but i heard Azumah Nelson was ill and had malaria or something. And he faded down the stretch, which was very strange considering Azumah Nelson always had good conditioning.

    Whatever it was Azumah Nelson certainly wasn't 100 percent, and i think he fought one of his best fights in the rematch. He was alot better in the rematch, but also Jeff Fenech had been affected mentally from the 1st fight. And he was never the same.
    Last edited by ICB; 06-16-2009 at 12:49 AM.

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    Default Re: Azumah Nelson

    Quote Originally Posted by snakey View Post
    Definitely lost the fight to fenech, no where near a draw. Havent watched the fight for a while but i remember thinking there is no way it was a draw.
    I had Fenech losing the first 3 Rounds, if you watch closely Fenech lands a thunderous right hand in round 3 and Nelson did not fully recover changing the fight completely. It was a great fight, i had Fenech winning 117-111 amazing decision! Nelson in the 2nd fight caught a mentally drained Fenech and won by KO. Nelson often had nights where he wasn't always at his best.

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    Default Re: Azumah Nelson

    Quote Originally Posted by ICB View Post
    Quote Originally Posted by snakey View Post
    Definitely lost the fight to fenech, no where near a draw. Havent watched the fight for a while but i remember thinking there is no way it was a draw.
    Yes it wasn't nowhere near a draw your right, but i heard Azumah Nelson was ill and had malaria or something. And he faded down the stretch, which was very strange considering Azumah Nelson always had good conditioning.

    Whatever it was Azumah Nelson certainly wasn't 100 percent, and i think he fought one of his best fights in the rematch. He was alot better in the rematch, but also Jeff Fenech had been affected mentally from the 1st fight. And he was never the same.

    I remember it was a gift for Azumah that first fight .
    Hadnt Azumahs wife passed away that last week as well as him having the flu straight after wards?
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    Default Re: Azumah Nelson

    Whatever the reason, Nelson was poor in that first fight but the rematch he was awesome and convincingly beat Fenech in his own back yard and if he had that form in the first fight he would have beaten Fenech there too.

    Azumah was also ill for the Whitaker fight and he desperately wanted a rematch which he was never allowed to have.
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    Default Re: Azumah Nelson

    Back in 1982, a tough fighter out of Zambia named Charm “Shuffle” Chiteule, who did much of his work in Germany and the U.K., fought a Ghanaian by the name of Azumah Nelson. At stake was the prestigious African Featherweight Title which Nelson had won in 1981 by knocking out AustralianBrian Roberts in the fifth stanza in Accra, Ghana.

    This fight was held at the Woodlands Stadium in Lusaka, Zambia. Nelson was 11-0 while the slick “Shuffle,” who became the number one contender to the Commonwealth title, came in at 19-1. Chiteule had won the Zambian Featherweight Title in 1979 while Nelson had taken the Ghanaian featherweight title in 1980. Nelson knocked out Chiteule in the tenth round and in so doing was able to get a shot at the world title just five months later. Still, only aficionados knew who he was and that his amateur record (50-1) was an outstanding one.

    But Nelson made himself known throughout the global boxing landscape on July 21, 182 at Madison Square Garden when he gave the legendary Salvador Sanchez (42-1-1 coming in) all he could handle and then some before finally being stopped in the fifteenth round in a classic battle between two great fighters. It was a war from the start, as both fighters let their hands go in brutal exchanges marked by the great Mexican champion’s jarring left hooks. Even though Nelson had been dropped, the phone booth was still up for grabs going into the championship rounds, thought the booth in this instance was a bit larger since both fighters were winging from range.

    Finally, in the last round, a rejuvenated Sánchez decked a still very game but tiring Nelson with a malefic four-punch combo. The warrior rose but was wobbly. Sánchez went right after him, landed five more blows that badly staggered Nelson just before referee Tony Perez, in one of his best career calls, jumped in to halt the action at the 1:47 mark. At the end, Nelson’s right jaw was badly swollen and likely broken and blood was coming from his mouth, but the Garden crowd roared its approval for his valiant effort. They knew what they had just witnessed; they knew a future legend when they saw it.

    Sadly, Salvador Sanchez died shortly after this fight in an automobile accident on August 12, 1982. As for Azumah Nelson, this fight signaled his what was to come. After winning six straight, his come-from-behind knockout of Wilfredo Gomez in Puerto Rico in 1983 removed any lingering doubts as to championship stature. He would go on to win the WBC super-feather title in February 1988 when he won a disputed decision over Mario Martinez, but his attempt in 1990 to become a three division world champion failed when he lost a decision to Pernell Whitaker. He then bounced back to beat rugged Juan Laporte. After fighting to a draw against Jeff Fenech, he iced the future Hall of Famer in their rematch. He went 1-2-1 against Jesse James Leja, who seemed to have The Professor’s number.

    It looked as if time had finally caught up with the Ghanaian when he lost a rematch with Leija, who promptly lost the crown in his next fight to Gabriel Ruelas. When he fought Nelson, many considered it a “safe fight” for Ruelas, but he TKOd the champion in the fifth canto in one of his more satisfying wins as it showed he was not through after all.

    Eventually, with a record of 38-6-2, he would be inducted into the International Boxing Hall of Fame. He gained national hero status in coastal West African nation of Ghana as the greatest fighter ever to come out of that country (David Kotei became Ghana's first World boxing champion when he won the WBC featherweight title in 1975). Indeed, many regard “The Professor” as the greatest fighter ever to emerge from the African continent.

    Hope this helps, mate.

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    Default Re: Azumah Nelson

    Just to confirm in the first Fenech fight he was suffering from Malaria. Proved what he could do with Fenech in a hostile environment (fenech's back yard in Oz) in the rematch.

    Defo the greatest African fighter of all time.
    Tip of the month: Protect yourselves at all times. You never know when the scheming bitch will come back for more.

  9. #24
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    Default Re: Azumah Nelson

    Quote Originally Posted by holmcall View Post
    Back in 1982, a tough fighter out of Zambia named Charm “Shuffle” Chiteule, who did much of his work in Germany and the U.K., fought a Ghanaian by the name of Azumah Nelson. At stake was the prestigious African Featherweight Title which Nelson had won in 1981 by knocking out AustralianBrian Roberts in the fifth stanza in Accra, Ghana.

    This fight was held at the Woodlands Stadium in Lusaka, Zambia. Nelson was 11-0 while the slick “Shuffle,” who became the number one contender to the Commonwealth title, came in at 19-1. Chiteule had won the Zambian Featherweight Title in 1979 while Nelson had taken the Ghanaian featherweight title in 1980. Nelson knocked out Chiteule in the tenth round and in so doing was able to get a shot at the world title just five months later. Still, only aficionados knew who he was and that his amateur record (50-1) was an outstanding one.

    But Nelson made himself known throughout the global boxing landscape on July 21, 182 at Madison Square Garden when he gave the legendary Salvador Sanchez (42-1-1 coming in) all he could handle and then some before finally being stopped in the fifteenth round in a classic battle between two great fighters. It was a war from the start, as both fighters let their hands go in brutal exchanges marked by the great Mexican champion’s jarring left hooks. Even though Nelson had been dropped, the phone booth was still up for grabs going into the championship rounds, thought the booth in this instance was a bit larger since both fighters were winging from range.

    Finally, in the last round, a rejuvenated Sánchez decked a still very game but tiring Nelson with a malefic four-punch combo. The warrior rose but was wobbly. Sánchez went right after him, landed five more blows that badly staggered Nelson just before referee Tony Perez, in one of his best career calls, jumped in to halt the action at the 1:47 mark. At the end, Nelson’s right jaw was badly swollen and likely broken and blood was coming from his mouth, but the Garden crowd roared its approval for his valiant effort. They knew what they had just witnessed; they knew a future legend when they saw it.

    Sadly, Salvador Sanchez died shortly after this fight in an automobile accident on August 12, 1982. As for Azumah Nelson, this fight signaled his what was to come. After winning six straight, his come-from-behind knockout of Wilfredo Gomez in Puerto Rico in 1983 removed any lingering doubts as to championship stature. He would go on to win the WBC super-feather title in February 1988 when he won a disputed decision over Mario Martinez, but his attempt in 1990 to become a three division world champion failed when he lost a decision to Pernell Whitaker. He then bounced back to beat rugged Juan Laporte. After fighting to a draw against Jeff Fenech, he iced the future Hall of Famer in their rematch. He went 1-2-1 against Jesse James Leja, who seemed to have The Professor’s number.

    It looked as if time had finally caught up with the Ghanaian when he lost a rematch with Leija, who promptly lost the crown in his next fight to Gabriel Ruelas. When he fought Nelson, many considered it a “safe fight” for Ruelas, but he TKOd the champion in the fifth canto in one of his more satisfying wins as it showed he was not through after all.

    Eventually, with a record of 38-6-2, he would be inducted into the International Boxing Hall of Fame. He gained national hero status in coastal West African nation of Ghana as the greatest fighter ever to come out of that country (David Kotei became Ghana's first World boxing champion when he won the WBC featherweight title in 1975). Indeed, many regard “The Professor” as the greatest fighter ever to emerge from the African continent.

    Hope this helps, mate.
    I thought Azumah Nelson beat Jesse James Leija in there 1st meeting, it should of really been 2-1 to Azumah Nelson. The 4th fight should of never happened.

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    Default Re: Azumah Nelson

    Quote Originally Posted by Bukom Battler View Post
    Just to confirm in the first Fenech fight he was suffering from Malaria. Proved what he could do with Fenech in a hostile environment (fenech's back yard in Oz) in the rematch.

    Defo the greatest African fighter of all time.
    I have never bought the Malaria story from Nelson, if he had any sign of Malaria he would not have been passed to fight. The Symptoms of Malaria are great, you cannot hide them and you cannot fight a world championship fight with the symptoms of Malaria. 'The Professor' was very good at making excuses in fights, he is the greatest African fighter ever, but he was soundly beaten in that first Fenech fight. In fact the 2nd fight was close up until the KO, despite the first round knockdown Fenech fought back well until nailed. People are selling Fenech's performance that first fight well short.

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