very interesting article on boxers that dont know when to quit
	
	
		from barry mcguigan, apologys if already done....
Boxing must protect  old fools looking to fight on from themselves  By Barry Mcguigan  6/03/2010 
Well done to all  those who are showing no interest in shelling out for next month's  pay-per-view bout between Roy Jones Jnr and Bernard Hopkins.
There  is not a sane voice in boxing that supports the idea of Jones boxing  on.
It is a shame that view does not extend to Evander Holyfield,  who was inexplicably granted a onefight licence last week by the Nevada  Commission.
Frans Botha is the man lined up to meet him. Who  cares? Ditto Jones-Hopkins. With the exception of 45-year-old Hopkins  it's over.
And he does not have long left. Boxing has to stop  this seniors' tour. It's rubbish. More than that, it is dangerous.
You  can do it in golf when you are not taking punches to the head. Allowing  these old guys to box each other demeans and tarnishes the sport.
Jones,  41, is a shambles. His reflexes are gone. His punch resistance is shot.  Three months ago he was blitzed in two minutes by Danny Green.
That  defeat was not unlike his hammering at the hands of Antonio Tarver six  years ago. Yes that's right, six years ago.
It has largely been a  tale of woe since. For the moment Jones retains his faculties but with  the punishment he is taking these days there must be some concern for  his long-term health.
It takes years for the consequences of  sustained beatings to show themselves. It is not just the blows taken in  championship bouts.
It is the punishment sustained in  preparation for them. Boxers spar hundreds of rounds before they get in  the ring. As Ricky Hatton puts it, this isn't a tickling contest.
I  listen to Holyfield and my heart sinks. At 47, he needs saving from  himself.
His speech is seriously impaired, yet here he is seeking  to satisfy some absurd desire.
The sanctioning bodies bear  responsibility for this nonsense. The Nevada Commission are, like the  British Boxing Board of Control, supposed to be one of the finest  governing bodies in the sport.
It is shameful that they have  allowed Holyfield back into a ring. He would not get a car park pass in  England, never mind a permit to box.
Fighters like Holyfield and  Jones are high on affirmation. They cannot bear the silence in their  lives when they are not boxing.
The idea of walking away from the  sport destroys them. They are defined by boxing and cannot leave it  behind.
I know how difficult that is. There is no feeling on  earth like walking into a room as the champion of the world.
You  can see the effect it has on people. It is like switching on a light.  That feeling is massively seductive. Holyfield at his best was one of  the greats. The Jones that beat Hopkins first time around, the Jones  that beat James Toney was an incredible fighter.
What we are  seeing now are caricatures. They have done untold damage to their  reputations and risk further humiliation.
If that were not bad  enough they bring the sport down with them. It does no one any credit  when they step into a ring.
If the sanctioning bodies won't act  then it is down to us to lead the way by not endorsing the product.
Keep  your money in your pocket.
It is the only language they  understand.
	 
	
	
	
		Re: very interesting article on boxers that dont know when to quit
	
	
		Good article, thanks for posting. He's right in what he says, these guys fighting on just doesn't make sense, and it does add ammuntion to those that against boxing
	 
	
	
	
		Re: very interesting article on boxers that dont know when to quit
	
	
		Give that man a hand - agree 100%. This fight is a crock and I don't know why anyone would want to see it.
	 
	
	
	
		Re: very interesting article on boxers that dont know when to quit
	
	
		
	Quote:
	
		
		
			
				Originally Posted by 
Greig
				 
			Give that man a hand - agree 100%. This fight is a crock and I don't know why anyone would want to see it.
			
		
	 
 
Not even entirely sure if its being broadcast in the uk at all with or without PPV
Bit of the article that effected me was his take on holyfield. If the guy is really as desimated in person as mcguigan is claiming then please for the love of god someone revoke his licence:(
	 
	
	
	
		Re: very interesting article on boxers that dont know when to quit
	
	
		This from a guy who retired in his 20's and thinks Valero should stop fighting...
 
:rolleyes:
	 
	
	
	
		Re: very interesting article on boxers that dont know when to quit
	
	
		I met Holyfield about 2 years ago and the guy could barely speak.
 
It wasn't a case of the lights are on - but nobody's home... the lights were off so I couldn't tell if anybody was home or not :-\
	 
	
	
	
		Re: very interesting article on boxers that dont know when to quit
	
	
		There are so many sad cases of fighters who continue on way past their best.
Ali and Frazier both should have finished after The Thriller In Manilla, Jones jr and Holyfield are two modern day examples of fighters who are just destroying their legacy by continuing on. In the case of Jones Jr they embarrass themselves by losing to fighters who really would not be in the same class when in their primes. Duran, Chavez, Camacho etc all went to long. Maybe Hagler was right to quit when he did? Tszyu knew when to give it up, injuries and age beats everyone in competitive sport. Is Hatton next? Mosley is 39 in September and before we get to excited about his match up with Mayweather bare in mind he has not fought since January 2009, come fight time that will be 15 months of inactivity. Mosley could get very old very quickly in this fight.
Hopkins is the only exception to the rule, he has been remarkable these past 10 years.