a bit late but since you posted gabe's fight it reminded me that rafael ruelas v freddie pendleton was on the nineteenth of february ninety four
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a bit late but since you posted gabe's fight it reminded me that rafael ruelas v freddie pendleton was on the nineteenth of february ninety four
https://youtu.be/QS3eixPERvI 22 year old O'Grady vs the first word champion trained by Emanual Steward and the first champion of Kronk Gym. Hilmer Kenty was also the first fighter from Detroit since the great Joe Louis. Ironically enough Joe Louis had passed away earlier this same day at the age of 66.
Sean O'Grady was a very good commentator too, but did not realise he was Manny first champ.
Anthony Joshua got off the canvas to beat Wladimir Klitschko in a classic world heavyweight title contest on this day in 2017.
Roared on by the majority of the 90,000 crowd at a packed Wembley Stadium, the Briton recovered from a knockdown in the sixth round to stop the Ukrainian great in the 11th.
The then 27-year-old’s victory, which heralded the start of a new era in the heavyweight division, saw him add the WBA belt to his IBF crown.
Both fighters appeared on the brink of defeat at various stages of a see-saw clash which burst into life when Joshua floored veteran Klitschko in the fifth round.
The 41-year-old recovered to put Joshua down, for the first time in his career, in the next but the younger man hit back in brutal fashion to drop Klitschko for a second time in the 11th.
Klitschko regained his feet but was felled again by a left hook and referee David Fields intervened to stop the contest moments after his next attempt to continue.
“I came out and I won,” said Joshua. “I didn’t go into the slugfest, I came back and fought my heart out.
“Boxing is about character. As I said from the get-go, it will be a boxing classic.”
Klitschko was gracious in defeat and retired three months later, marking the end of an era in which he and his brother Vitali had dominated the heavyweight division.
He said: “It was really sad I didn’t make it. I was planning to do it, it didn’t work – but all respect to Anthony.
“I thought he wouldn’t get up, he managed to get up. Respect.”
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/sport/boxi...fe05732b&ei=63
the Day of boxing is very tired and very hard bu had many enjoyment
Saturday May 4, 2024 at 730 pm United Kingdom time, click this link
https://us05web.zoom.us/j/9682991385...mn=85359554331
For Saddo boxing fun
James DeGale made history by claiming the vacant IBF super-middleweight title with a thrilling unanimous decision victory over Andre Dirrell in Boston on this day nine years ago.
DeGale became the first person to win Olympic gold and a world crown in the professional ranks for Britain after withstanding a fierce comeback from his American opponent.
The Londoner appeared on course for a sensational early stoppage after dropping Dirrell twice in the second round, with the first knockdown coming from a brutal overhand left.
Dirrell weathered the storm in the early rounds as DeGale, who won middleweight gold at the Beijing Olympics in 2008, looked for the knockout and even came on strong in the second half of the fight.
But DeGale finished strongly and two judges scored the fight 114-112 in his favour, with the third of 117-109 seemingly a bit harsh on Dirrell.
After improving his record to 21-1 (14KOs), DeGale said: “I’ve finally done it. It’s an unbelievable feeling, I’m world champ. I made history.
“I will take on any super-middleweight in the world, I’m hard to beat when I’m at my best.
“(Dirrell) is a very, very good opponent, he’s very talented, he’s hard to beat, if anything it’s me and him second and third in the rankings. Andre Ward’s there and there’s me and him. There’s no other super-middleweight that would beat me on my day.”
DeGale held the title until 2017 when he lost it to Caleb Truax before regaining it in a rematch with the American the following year.
He retired from professional boxing after a defeat by Chris Eubank Jr in February 2019.
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/sport/boxi...41c2e8e5&ei=33
I do not like Bellew but when I saw the short promotional montage of Tony fighting for this world title fight at his beloved Football team I had to support him.
Tony Bellew won the vacant WBC world cruiserweight title on this day in 2016 with a third-round knockout of Ilunga Makabu at Goodison Park.
The Liverpudlian, then 33, recovered after being knocked down in the opening round to seal a world title at the third attempt after previous bids against Nathan Cleverly and Adonis Stevenson had ended in defeat.
Bellew, a staunch Everton fan, got the chance to fight for the belt after reigning champion Grigory Drozd vacated it due to injury.
It looked like Congolese Makabu was set to stun a partisan crowd after sending the home favourite to the canvas with just 10 seconds remaining in the first round.
But Bellew regained his composure in the second despite a broken nose and delivered a barrage of left hooks in the third that floored Makabu, with the referee intervening.
It was a glorious moment for Bellew, who said later: “He broke my nose with that left hand. I’m talking through my nose now and it’s smashed to bits.
“But I have a green and gold belt. If you had to take my nose off my face for that belt I’d take it.”
A crowd of around 15,000 cheered their local hero to victory in the first ever boxing show at Goodison.
Bellew successfully defended his title the following October by knocking out American BJ Flores in three rounds before stepping up to heavyweight to settle his rivalry with David Haye.
Haye was stopped by Bellew in both encounters at the O2 Arena in London, the first in the 11th round in 2017 and then in the fifth in the rematch in 2018.
Bellew returned to cruiserweight to take on former undisputed champion Oleksandr Usyk in November 2018, but was knocked out in the eighth round and announced his retirement in the ring after his third professional defeat.
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/sport/boxi...c403877&ei=184
https://youtu.be/7C4IgGapXME An all-time favorite. Always interesting how Benn came to the States for his career rebuild after the Watson loss. Back when US network exposure was a thing.
Nigel Benn improved as a boxer coming to USA. Had some exciting contests with some champions Dewitt and Iran Barkley.
Benn went back to UK and fought a brutal war against Eubank and the rest is history.
Nigel never lost to a US fighter.
that fight is an argument against the three knockdown rule
Was the oddest thing as ref Padilla seemed lost at the end looking to time keeper. On all three knockdowns his count was tame and not assertive.Either way I think Barkley had his fill that day. Great memories with this one. Fights are funny like that. Specific ones you recall the who what when and where precisely, your point in life etc.