Forgot how brilliant Cotto is.
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Forgot how brilliant Cotto is.
It may have been mentioned but I ran across some Regilio Tuur the other night. You don't hear a lot about him at all and remember him with solid speed and one punch power. Hard pressed to even name another fighter from Holland. I thought he beat Grove and after this devastating KO he just up and retired as champion??? Launched a comeback years later..most do and got in trouble with the law. Ramos looked like he was hit with a bat!
https://youtu.be/Nsz6AC6e_6Y
2 years ago today was chisora v fury and eubank v saunders
interestingly that was the last time me and my boxing buddies got together and watched a fight
its been too long don't you think?
we should try and keep this thread going
So our days are out a touch. we on the other side of the world.
Throwing leather day 28/11
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7flEkhpUe48
Dec. 1st 1995 The Professor looks to take back what was his. Ruelas came in off a ton of grief seeing his opponent die from injuries last fight.
http://youtu.be/80l1fj7KtI8
December 8th
Fight of the day
2012 Manny Pacquiao vs Juan Manuel Marquez
I have never seen it from this angle until today. Sometimes ringside is not the best seat in the house. The reaction of the (Marquez) fan and the complete inability to restrain his understandable elation and keep the shot steady only adds to it. Sums up one aspect of boxing that has probably brought many to this forum and the noble art itself. Was it such a shock ? Maybe it's hindsight but you can see Manny being caught and set up for it all round.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V7pwZ4njcw0
December 8 (continued)
2007 Floyd Mayweather Jr. vs. Ricky Hatton
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bJrCY2qwhgI
December 8 (continued)
1990 Mile Tyson vs Alex Stewart
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7_Azp136rMs
1903 Sam Langford defeats Joe Gans, 15 rounds, Boston, non-title.
Beanz is back!!! Welcome home.😉
December 9th 2006 - Danny Williams v Audley Harrison II
I remember Danny coming in at short notice and clearly wasn't in any shape, he was slouched on his stool before the fight began
real big mistake for him I think, signalled the beginning of the end, he'd been out of shape against skelton the fight before too
was a decent card all together tho, Kel Brook, Amir Khan, Wayne Alexandra, Nicky Cook, Paul Mclousky, Anthony Crolla, Denton Vassell
and I cant believe it was 10 years ago
This was Tyson's second comeback fight. Stewart recently died too. :-\
12th December 2012 was a decent night of boxing
I watched the Groves v Johnson, Saunders v Blackwell card
there was also shaun porter v diaz and khan v Molina, which I definitely saw, must have been the day after though
Can we make this thread a Sticky?
2001, Holyfield v Ruiz and Ricky Hatton defended his WBU title
thing is tho, while Ricky had that title, for a short while at least, the WBU were getting noticed
there were a few of those belts hanging around
obviously it was never a world title, but for a while they were threatening to be recognised
Tyson v Mathis was Tyson's second fight back from coming out of prison.
From boxing news online - On This Day: Season's beatings courtesy of Harry Greb - Boxing News IT’s fair to say the ‘Pittsburgh Windmill’ Harry Greb and the ‘Philly Phantom’ Tommy Loughran, were not unknown to one another. Their paths crossed six times, initially in the summer 1922 until their last fight in the autumn of 1924.
Greg was Loughran’s master four times, they drew once and Tommy got the nod in their fourth battle in October 1923.
But it was in their fifth fight, just two months later, that they squared off on Christmas Day.
Sandwiched in between these two fights, Loughran outpointed two of Britain’s most notable middleweights of the day in Ted Moore and Roland Todd respectively.
While the prolific Greb – now middleweight champion of the world – had beaten, in non-title fights, Lou Bogash, Soldier Jones, Chuck Wiggins and defended his crown against Bryan Downey, before losing – what Boxing News called a fortunate decision – to his fiercest and biggest rival in future heavyweight champion Gene Tunney.
That was the third of Greb’s three-fight series with Tunney, by the way.
So, at just 21 years old, Tommy Loughran had size and youth on his size, but heading to Pittsburgh’s Motor Square Garden to face the middleweight king was like fighting the devil in hell.
As was the case in those days, the report from the fight didn’t filter through to print for a few weeks and eventually appeared in our January 23 issue of 1924.
Swirling from his corner like a Kansas twister, at the start of every round, Harry Greb, the Pittsburgher who holds the middleweight championship of the world, gave Tommy Loughran a bad beating on Christmas Day, in a ten-round decision fight in the light-heavyweight class.
Greb got the decision and there was no question that it belonged to him. It was Greb’s second appearance in his home town since the new Pennsylvania boxing law became effective permitting decisions.
In the later rounds of the fight Loughran became weary, discouraged and bewildered. He refused to fight back and busied himself trying to brush away the clawing rushes of Greb.
Greg and Loughran have fought several times. In the previous bouts Loughran usually made some effort to outfight Greb, but this time he was boxing defensively and making a poor defence at that.
Come on peeps we need to all chip in to maintain this thread.
"CUS D’AMATO, the trainer and guru whose master-work was Mike Tyson, had his own much-quoted theory about fear. Control and use it, he taught, and it will become a weapon with which to beat your opponent, but let it get out of control and it will destroy you like a forest fire.
That, I suspect, is what happened in Frank Bruno’s mind on that Saturday night (March 16, 1996) in the hours and minutes before he left his dressing room at the MGM Grand Garden to face the most terrifying and intimidating opponent since Sonny Liston.
Bruno, making his first defence of the WBC heavyweight title, had talked a great fight during the build-up to this hugely-important match which drew a capacity crowd in the 16,000-seat arena and millions more on pay-per-view in America and Britain. But when the time came for him to leave the sanctuary of his changing room and make the long walk into the arena, he did so with the air of a man trudging towards the electric chair.
That is not said lightly, or with a view towards disparaging the immensely likeable and brave Bruno. All fighters, even Tyson, feel fear, and the man who says he doesn’t is a liar. Tyson, famously, was once filmed in tears before an amateur match, with his then-trainer Teddy Atlas having to comfort him and stiffen his resolve. No doubt Tyson, too, had his secret fears about Saturday’s rematch with a man who had hurt and dazed him when they first met seven years ago, but as he has repeatedly and regrettably demonstrated to his cost, he is a naturally violent and abusive man who, paradoxically, feels safest and most at home in the ring, in the only environment in which he is in absolute control of his own destiny.
He turned his fear into a weapon of destruction, using it to fuel the thrilling aggression which carried him to a decisive and dramatic victory in the third, but Bruno (17st 9lbs) allowed himself to be consumed by it. I have rarely seen a man more uneasy about his immediate future, or with less confidence in his own ability to determine it. The inner doubts showed in his face and in his body language and demeanour, which had none of the focused and frightening intensity of Tyson’s.
The fight meant everything to the disgraced and now rehabilitated former champion; it was what had occupied his dreams during the long months and years in jail, and the strength of his emotions showed in the unusually demonstrative nature of his reaction in the minutes after referee Mills Lane had rescued the beaten Bruno 50 seconds into the round.
Tyson (15st 10lbs) spread his arms wide with an expression of unrestrained joy and exultation, before sinking to his knees in the middle of the ring. He then walked across to the beaten and disconsolate loser, kissed him and rubbed his head in a comforting gesture while speaking quietly to him. But as he left the ring, he stopped on the ring apron and yelled in exultation, pointing to the WBC belt around his waist.
It was almost primeval, reminding me of nothing so much as a gorilla beating his chest and bellowing its supremacy in the herd. It was a rare and out-of-character display by a man whose emotions are normally locked away behind an expressionless mask, and it showed how much the victory had meant to him. He had shared Bruno’s doubts and apprehension, but now he felt unbounded relief where Bruno knew only despair....."
the rest here - http://www.boxingnewsonline.net/on-this-day-mike-tyson-ends-the-career-of-frank-bruno-in-las-vegas/
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HXe3NEOOeaE
Tyson was a shell of the fighter before he went to prison but he had the style to beat Frank no matter how shot he was. That night he looked spectacular.
Maquez - Barrera - 17/03/2007
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U4KM3TwOI2c
Can we please Sticky this in honour of IamInuit ? @Fenster @Memphis @Master @smashup
It might make it easier to find and for people to contribute. Great funnel for attracting boxing fans of all ages here to. Everybody loves a bit of nostalgia or a reminder of what might not have been quite how we remember it.
A Classic today. 30 years on now.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WJQhQLQoT2c
I agree with the sticky
I think its a good enough idea for a sticky regardless
Keep it up to date though (don't mean just you everyday @Beanz).
Poor old Iamuniut unsticked it last time in a right huff because I questioned why it was stickied when it had been neglected for about a month or so.
you cunt
Saturday 6th April 2002
Jonny Nelson beat Sellers
BoxRec - Cirkusbygningen
I never realised this was in Denmark.
I was a big Carl Thompson fan and his fight with Nelson was as lame a stoppage as youll see, best fight Nelson was ever in tho (courtesy of Carl)
if Thompson had have beaten Sellers it would have been him fighting Nelson and not Sellers, big low point for Britains most exciting warrior
On this day in 1896 Benny Leonard was born
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NSxreC59N9c
On this day April 7 1972
Bob Foster v Vincente Rondon
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vwP6VajAgAM
Naz Barrera
Oh, good one erics!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1ISwivnhMpI
James 'Buster' Douglas was born. Joe Calzaghe fought Manfredo Jr.
He asked how to find it on another board so I stickied it for easy access, he was going through a ton of shit, but said he wasn't sure it needed it a few days later. I think Master or myself unstickied it after that and I updated it. It's a great reference point and he always talked about having a 'history' board on here.
April 8
um....Norris v Santana II
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iEVdO71sqZg