Found this on YOUTUBE.
http://http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=yDYnO9gGwIQ
Found this on YOUTUBE.
http://http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=yDYnO9gGwIQ
Balls
I never held that loss against him. Duran is not a quitter but every man has a breaking point. If you watch the fight, even with all these things against him, it was a close fight going into the round he quit. His body just wasnt prepared to go 15 rounds and Leonard was making him work hard to catch him and he didnt like to be toyed with. Stomach cramps didnt help. I do credit Leonard because he had a shrewd plan to beat Duran and the timing was perfect for him. The media was quick to judge him and call him a coward and a quitter, unfairly imo. He was in an impossible situation. Duran is still the greatest of the fabulous 4 imo and my favorite fighter of all time.
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I agree, Duran's as hard as they come. I never held it against him that he didn't want to be embarassed out there by Ray that night. I give credit to any man brave enough to get up there in the ring & especially a guy like Duran!
It's a mental game, if you get beat mentally you are basically already beaten.
Leonard ran most of the fight.
If anybody is interested in reading more about that era I can thoroughly recommend the book 'Four Kings: Leonard, Duran, Hearns, Hagler and the Last Great Era of Boxing' by George Kimball.
Kimball was a writer for a Massachusetts newspaper so he was affiliated with the Hagler camp, but he was ringside for all the fights between those guys, was good friends with Michael Katz and has some great inside stories.
Really can't recommend that book enough - very well researched and a great read.
"I take good care of my people. I like to inflict permanent psychological damage."
Thanks for posting that, this is one of my favourite Duran fights he was ment to loose but took it to the younger bigger guy awsome
http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=lM9ivIVyhEE
Yeah Duran was great,no doubt about it,Leonard was greater IMO,another thing that was not covered in the youtube piece,is that Duran had done the same thing(blowing-up)in alot of his previous bouts,and as we all know,Boxing is not the type of sport that will tolerate that type of unprofessionalism.Also like Manny Steward,I though Ray won the first fight with Duran.(a
Without a doubt it was frustrtion...everyone who watched ot that night new that....Duran was a warrior and no one can deny that there are many fighters that have quit on their stool and you questioned there heart....Duran is not one of them for sure
Hidden Content IN CASE THEY ALL FORGOT WHAT REAL HEAVYWEIGHT POWER WAS!!!
These reasons make sense that an overweight and obviously distracted Duran was not ready both mentally and physically for Leonard 2.
The rematch should never have happened so quickly, well planned by the Leonard camp. The point is Duran was in a close fight at the time of him quitting, it's not as if he was getting well beaten such as Tyson against Holyfield and frustration got the better of him. His conditioning gave out and along with Leonards game plan of clowning about and running for the entire fight Duran simply gave up. A strange decision on his part, but so is blowing up to more than 200lbs between fights in less than 6 months.
The first fight was Duran's finest hour and Leonard had no answer to him in that fight, the scorecard flattered Leonard IMO.
Why was there no rubber match in 1981?
I disagree on 2 fronts.
1)leonard fought Durans fight the first fight,throughout the entirety of the first fight,and IMO,and the opinion of some observers Ray won A close fight.
2)Leonard did not run from Duran in the second fight,he simply boxed his ears off.
On A side note,I for one I`am the last person to get on A fighter for quiting in A fight,when A man is beat,he`s beat,Like Hoya when he fought Pac A few weeks ago,but in Duran`s case,And I truly believe he is A all-time great,but I think he deserved all of the flack that he got for quiting in that fight with Leonard,Duran had not taken much punishment,he was`nt beat-up,he simply did not train hard,and perhaps thought Leonard was just gonna fight his fight again,when he found out that that night was`nt gonna go like that.He quit!
I dont care what happened in between fight`s,how Duran partied,etc.
Bottom line, you take the fight,you make the weight,you cash the check,save all the other stuff for the excuse file`s.
The fight was pre-PPV, if memory serves... Imagine if it happened now, If I cough up my half-Benjamin, would I be wrong to consider Duran a quitter, and mark him as a no-no, next time my half-Benjamins are on duty. The guy was unmarked! It baffled me then, still baffles me now.
I actually become proud of PROVEN WARRIORS that "quit".
Koysta
Eric
Duran
dela hoya
It just proves that they have accepted their limit and are wise enough to say to themselves "i wont go on, it is best for me and my family i preserve myself"
that is how I look at it. Boxing is dangerous, warriors of the sport must come to this decision at the end of their career.
Duran was not at the end of his carear,not even close,he was much closer to his prime,then to his retirement,and unlike Hoya and Tszyu,Duran was not Bloodied and beaten.
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