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Thread: 100 Boxing's Most Influential (by Yahoo)

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    Default 100 Boxing's Most Influential (by Yahoo)

    100. Wilfried Sauerland, promoter – Boxing is huge in Germany largely because of the efforts of Sauerland, who negotiated television deals in the country that have lifted the sport to unprecedented heights.
    99. Michael Carbajal, boxer – An Olympic gold medalist, in 1994 Carbajal became the first junior flyweight to earn a $1 million purse.
    98. Robert W. Lee Sr., regulator – The founder of the International Boxing Federation, Lee was accused of soliciting bribes in 1999 to improve boxers’ rankings. Though he was acquitted on the bribery charges, he was convicted on several others, including money laundering, in 2000.
    97. Felix Trinidad, boxer – Trinidad was one of the foremost fighters of his time, combining an exciting style with devastating power and the willingness to take on all comers.
    96. Rocky Graziano, boxer – A former middleweight champion with an exciting style, Graziano was played by Paul Newman in the movie, “Somebody Up There Likes Me.”
    95. Riddick Bowe, boxer –Though Bowe won the heavyweight title, he is considered a wasted talent in that he didn’t train as hard as he should have and didn’t stay on top as long as many thought he should have.
    Lennox Lewis carried the heavyweight title with a sense of flair.
    AP

    94. Lennox Lewis, boxer – Lewis was often overlooked early in his career, but he went on to defeat Evander Holyfield, Mike Tyson and Vitali Klitschko and was held in high esteem when he retired.
    93. Jimmy Cannon, journalist – Canon wrote for several newspapers in New York and was a witty, insightful and knowledgeable boxing columnist.
    92. Teofilo Stevenson, boxer – A three-time heavyweight gold medalist for Cuba, Stevenson was always a curiosity because he never turned pro. Many wondered whether he could have beaten Muhammad Ali, but the fight never happened.
    91. Ray Mancini, boxer –Mancini was a popular lightweight champion in the 1980s best known for facing Duk Koo Kim in a nationally televised bout in 1982. Kim died of injuries sustained in that bout.
    90. Alex Wallau, broadcaster/network executive –Wallau was a boxing analyst on ABC who was highly regarded. He later went on to become the president of the network.
    89. Ross Greenburg, television programmer – Greenburg is the president of HBO Sports, but his impact just isn’t about broadcasting fights. Greenburg is responsible for the acclaimed “24/7” series as well as the “Legendary Nights” series that detailed many of boxing’s finest fights.
    88. Marc Ratner, regulator – Ratner ran the Nevada Athletic Commission during its peak and was regarded as the most astute regulator of his time.
    87. Panama Lewis, trainer – Along with Jose Sulaiman, Lewis is one of the two most notorious men on the list. A highly regarded trainer, Lewis was banned from boxing after it was discovered that he removed the padding in Luis Resto’s gloves and put plaster of Paris on his hand wraps before a 1983 bout in New York with Billy Collins.
    86. Aaron Pryor, boxer – Noted for his epic brawl with Alexis Arguello, Pryor was so tough and so talented that not even the great Sugar Ray Leonard wanted anything to do with him.
    85. Ferdie Pacheco, broadcaster – Pacheco, who worked as Muhammad Ali’s ringside physician, became a noted boxing analyst on NBC and Showtime.
    84. Jay Larkin, television programmer – Larkin built the boxing program at Showtime and did most of Mike Tyson’s major championship bouts. He also was known later in his career for his “Great fights, no rights,” mantra in which he’d sign highly anticipated bouts but did not lock his network up into a long-term commitment.
    83. Ike Williams, boxer – Williams was a former lightweight champion whose career took a dive when reputed organized crime members took over as his manager.
    82. Pernell Whitaker, boxer – Whitaker was a gold medalist on the powerful 1984 U.S. Olympic team and later became one of the best defensive boxers in the sport’s history.
    81. Charley Burley –Regarded as among the greatest boxers ever, Burley never got a shot at the welterweight or middleweight title, likely because of his race and because he was so good that top fighters avoided him. Legendary trainer Eddie Futch once said Burley was the best fighter he had ever seen.
    80. Floyd Patterson, boxer/regulator – Patterson was both the youngest man at the time to win the heavyweight title and later, the first man to regain it after losing it. After his career, he ran the New York State Athletic Commission.
    79. Jimmy Walker, politician – Walker was the former mayor of New York who managed to get boxing legalized in the state and the regulations adopted governing boxing that are still in use today.
    78. Bernard Hopkins, boxer – Hopkins came out of a Pennsylvania penitentiary to become one of the greatest middleweights ever, running off a streak of 20 consecutive successful title defenses.
    77. Roy Jones Jr., boxer – The best in boxing for many years, Jones in 2003 became the first ex-middleweight champion in 106 years to win a version of the heavyweight title.
    Trainer Lou Duva was one of the sport's most legendary characters.
    AP

    76. Lou Duva, trainer/manager/promoter – Duva helped train a slew of great fighters, including Evander Holyfield, Pernell Whitaker and Mike McCallum.
    75. Akihiko Honda, promoter/manager – Honda has long been the top promoter in Japan. He put on the famous Mike Tyson-Buster Douglas heavyweight title bout.
    74. Jimmy Jacobs, manager – Jacobs amassed a large collection of fight films, but is best known for the brilliant job he did with partner Bill Cayton in guiding Mike Tyson’s career.
    73. Frank Warren, promoter – Based in the United Kingdom, Warren has long been one of the elite promoters in the game. He helped build the careers of Ricky Hatton, Joe Calzaghe and Naseem Hamed.
    72. Gil Clancy, trainer/broadcaster – A sharp trainer, Clancy forged a strong second career as a boxing analyst on CBS and later on HBO.
    71. Sam Taub, broadcaster – Taub called many fights on radio and later in his career hosted a radio talk show dedicated to boxing that lasted for more than 20 years.
    70. Floyd Mayweather Jr., boxer – Mayweather is one of the finest boxers of his era and became part of the largest fight in boxing history when his 2007 bout with Oscar De La Hoya sold 2.45 million on pay-per-view.
    69. Harry Markson, promoter – Markson had a 40-year career as one of boxing’s top promoters, working out of New York. He promoted both Joe Louis and Muhammad Ali at one stage in their careers.
    68. Evander Holyfield, boxer – Holyfield is a former undisputed heavyweight champion who is best known for his two wins over Mike Tyson. Tyson, in a fit of rage, bit the top of Holyfield’s ear off in their second bout.
    67. Emanuel Steward, trainer/broadcaster – Steward founded the famed Kronk Boxing Club, which produced Thomas Hearns, among many, many other elite fighters. He’s also become a respected analyst at HBO.
    66. Arthur Donovan, referee – Donovan was the son of a middleweight champion who became a high-profile referee. He worked 20 Joe Louis fights.
    65. Ruby Goldstein, referee/judge –A one-time boxer himself, Goldstein was known as one of the top referees of his day as well as one of the most prominent judges.
    64. Billy Conn, boxer – Conn, “The Pittsburgh Kid,” was a light heavyweight champion best known for blowing a heavyweight title bid against Joe Louis when, while way ahead on points, he went for the knockout and was knocked out himself.
    63. Bob Fitzsimmons, boxer – Fitzsimmons was the first man to win championships in three divisions and, until Roy Jones did it in 2003, was the last former middleweight champion to win the heavyweight belt. He won the heavyweight crown in 1897.
    Leon Spinks is best known for defeating Muhammad Ali for the heavyweight title.
    AP

    62. Leon Spinks, boxer – Spinks won a gold medal in the 1976 Olympics and then won the heavyweight title in just his eighth pro fight by upsetting Muhammad Ali.
    61. James J. Jeffries, boxer – A heavyweight champion around the turn of the 20th century, Jeffries is best remembered as being the “Great White Hope” who came out of retirement – unsuccessfully – to fight Jack Johnson.
    60. Michael Spinks, boxer – A gold medalist on the mighty 1976 U.S. Olympic boxing team, Spinks was the light heavyweight champion and won a heavyweight belt in 1985 by upsetting Larry Holmes.

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    Default Re: 100 Boxing's Most Influential (by Yahoo)

    59. Alexis Arguello, boxer – Arguello was one of the classiest and most skilled boxers of his era. He won titles in three weight classes and his 1982 fight with Aaron Pryor remains one of boxing’s best ever.
    58. James J. Braddock, boxer – Known as the “Cinderella Man,” Braddock upset Max Baer to win the heavyweight title and became the subject of a high-profile movie of his life.
    57. Jose Torres, boxer/author/regulator – A world champion boxer, Torres wrote biographies of Muhammad Ali and Mike Tyson and was the executive director of the New York State Athletic Commission.
    56. Hugh McIlvanney, journalist/author – A London-based journalist and author, few ever have written with McIlvanney’s style and insight.
    55. Jack Fiske, journalist – Fiske wrote in San Francisco and his column was filled with insider news and nuggets that were must-reads in the industry. He often knew of fights that were made before the fighters did.
    54. Budd Schulberg, author/journalist/screenwriter – One of the greatest writers ever, Schulberg wrote brilliantly on boxing for decades. He also wrote the screenplay for the boxing-themed Academy Award-winning movie, “On the Waterfront.”
    53. Sonny Liston, boxer –Liston was one of the meanest, most powerful heavyweights who ever lived. He was Mike Tyson years before Tyson was born.
    52. Jim Lampley, broadcaster – The voice of boxing for the modern fan, Lampley has been the play-by-play man at HBO for 21 years.
    51. Larry Hazzard, referee/athletic commissioner – Hazzard was one of boxing’s elite referees and then had a long stint running the New Jersey Athletic Control Board.
    50. Larry Holmes, boxer – Holmes had the unenviable job of following Muhammad Ali as heavyweight champion, but he was a brilliant fighter who soon became regarded as one of history’s best big men.
    49. Chris Dundee, trainer/promoter – Dundee, the brother of trainer Angelo Dundee, is best known for being the proprietor of Miami’s Fifth Street Gym, where Cassius Clay (later to become Muhammad Ali) prepared early in his career. Dundee also was among the tutors of eventual Hall of Fame matchmaker Bruce Trampler.
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    48. Whitey Bimstein, trainer – Bimstein partnered with Ray Arcel to train many of the elite fighters of the middle of the 20th century, including Benny Leonard, Gene Tunney and Rocky Graziano. He worked for James J. Braddock in the famous “Cinderella Man” win over Max Baer.
    47. A.J. Liebling, journalist –A magnificent writer, Liebling covered boxing expertly for The New Yorker. His work is among the best ever done on boxing.
    46. Jose Sulaiman, sanctioning body president – Sanctioning bodies have had an undeniable impact upon modern boxing and Sulaiman has presided over the World Boxing Council for nearly 35 years. He’s hardly universally admired in the sport, but the WBC championship is the most well-known title belt in the world.
    45. Arthur Mercante Sr., referee – Arguably the finest referee ever, Mercante is renowned as the third man in the ring for the March 8, 1971 “Fight of the Century” match between Muhammad Ali and Joe Frazier. He worked 145 world title fights, most of them in an era when there were just eight weight classes and one champion per class.
    44. Ray Arcel, trainer – Arcel ranks among the greatest trainers in boxing history and helped mold the career of Roberto Duran, as well as dozens of others.
    43. Paul Gallico, sports writer – Gallico was one of the finest sports writers of his era and was at his peak in the 1920s, when boxing was neck-and-neck with baseball as the most popular sport in America. Gallico is also the founder of the Golden Gloves.
    42. Irving Rudd, publicist – Perhaps the sport’s most creative and inventive publicist, Rudd worked with stars such as Sugar Ray Robinson and Sugar Ray Leonard and most all of the major figures of the game in between.
    41. Murray Goodman, journalist/publicist – Goodman, whose son, Bobby, is also a member of the International Boxing Hall of Fame, was a creative publicist whose work helped boost the careers of such greats as Sugar Ray Robinson, Henry Armstrong, Rocky Marciano and Muhammad Ali.
    40. Joe Frazier, boxer – The ‘B’ side of boxing’s greatest rivalry, Frazier not only defeated Ali in their epic 1971 match, but he pushed Ali to perhaps his limit during “The Thrilla in Manila,” a sensational bout in the Philippines that remains one of the finest in the sport’s history.
    39. Carlos Monzon, boxer – Monzon is a former middleweight champion who at the time of his retirement held the record, subsequently broken, for most consecutive successful title defenses, with 14.
    38. Willie Pep, boxer – Many boxers have evoked comparisons to Pep over the years for their defensive skills, but few were better.
    37. Oscar De La Hoya, boxer/promoter – De La Hoya is not only one of the greatest boxers of his era, an Olympic gold medalist and a six-division professional world champion, but he’s the biggest pay-per-view star in history and an elite promoter. In 2001, he founded Golden Boy Promotions and has subsequently become the only boxer to successfully maintain a high-level promotional company.
    36. Gene Tunney, boxer – Tunney twice defeated Jack Dempsey in heavyweight title matches that drew more than 100,000 fans. In one of those, he got up from the canvas in the famous “Long Count” match.
    35. Max Schmeling, boxer – Schmeling was seen as the symbol of Adolf Hitler’s Nazi Germany when he met Joe Louis for the heavyweight title in 1938, but Schmeling was known as a class act who did not support the Nazi cause.
    34. Archie Moore, boxer – Moore was a pro for 16 years before he got his first shot at a world title. He won the light heavyweight belt in 1952 and held it for nearly 10 years.
    33. Ed Schuyler Jr., journalist – Schuyler was the boxing writer for The Associated Press for more than 30 years and delivered tightly written results pieces and provocative feature stories consistently.
    32. Bruce Trampler, matchmaker – Trampler has been responsible for helping to keep Top Rank as one of boxing’s two leading promotional entities. He’s responsible in large part for building the careers of Oscar De La Hoya, Floyd Mayweather Jr., Kelly Pavlik and Miguel Cotto, among many others. Bob Arum often says he never makes a move without consulting Trampler.
    31. George Foreman, boxer/broadcaster – Foreman won world heavyweight championships 22 years apart, becoming in 1995 at 45 the oldest man to win the title. He is one of the biggest punchers in boxing history and later became a popular member of HBO’s commentary team.
    30. Damon Runyan, journalist – A sports columnist in New York, Runyan wrote with authority on boxing for more than 30 years and is the man who tagged James J. Braddock as “The Cinderella Man.”

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    Default Re: 100 Boxing's Most Influential (by Yahoo)

    29. Larry Merchant, broadcaster/journalist –Merchant is best known as the outspoken color analyst on HBO’s boxing broadcast, but he was also one of the best sports columnists of his day and wrote eloquently on boxing.
    28. Bert Sugar, author/journalist/historian –Sugar has authored numerous books on boxing, was the editor of Ring Magazine and has become an in-demand historian.
    27. Julio Cesar Chavez Sr., boxer – The biggest star from boxing-mad Mexico, Chavez was a mainstay on big cards in the late 1980s and throughout the 1990s. He won world titles at three weight classes and fought all the best of his era.
    26. Roberto Duran, boxer – Arguably the greatest lightweight ever, Duran went on to be a dominant force as high as middleweight.
    Manny Pacquiao is the biggest boxing superstar Asia ever produced
    AP

    25. Manny Pacquiao, boxer –One of the elite active boxers whose passionate Asian following has helped make him an international superstar and fodder for non-traditional boxing media such as CNN, Time Magazine and GQ.
    24. Thomas Hearns, boxer – Hearns was one of the most exciting fighters ever and eagerly took on all comers.
    23. Marvelous Marvin Hagler, boxer – Hagler was so tough, it took years for him to get a championship shot. He became one of the great middleweights of all time and was the winner in arguably the best three-round fight in boxing history, when he knocked out Thomas Hearns in 1985.
    22. Cus D’Amato, trainer – D’Amato is the man who discovered Mike Tyson and built him into a fearsome title contender. He was a strategic genius and Muhammad Ali relied on his advice to defeat George Foreman in 1974. D’Amato also helped build Floyd Patterson and Jose Torres into championship fighters.
    21. Jake LaMotta, boxer – LaMotta probably had the best chin in boxing. He also has a win over Sugar Ray Robinson when Robinson was in his prime, a testament to his skill. He was also the subject of the Academy Award-winning movie, “Raging Bull.”
    20. Eddie Futch, trainer – Futch is arguably boxing’s greatest trainer ever and trained champions such as Joe Frazier, Larry Holmes, Alexis Arguello and Riddick Bowe. He worked into his late 80s.
    19. Angelo Dundee, trainer – Dundee was the primary trainer of Ali and Leonard and was a gregarious personality who worked tirelessly to promote the fight game. He also trained George Foreman during Foreman’s comeback to boxing.
    18. Mike Jacobs, promoter – Jacobs was the sport’s dominant promoter in the 1930s and 1940s and controlled the New York boxing scene. He promoted many of Louis’ fights, including Louis’ memorable match with Billy Conn.
    17. Don Dunphy, broadcaster – For decades, Dunphy was the quintessential boxing play-by-play man. He called fights for years on radio before moving to television and becoming a star in that medium, as well.
    16. Mike Tyson, boxer – He became the youngest heavyweight champion in history when he won the title at just 20 in 1986 and became far and away the biggest star in the sport. He still holds many of boxing’s gate and pay-per-view records.
    15. Rocky Marciano, boxer – Marciano retired unbeaten as heavyweight champion. He had an exciting style and developed a passionate following.
    14. Nat Fleischer, journalist – Fleischer wasn’t the best boxing writer, nor was he its finest journalist. But he founded Ring Magazine in 1922 and for the rest of his life, until his death in 1972, Ring was boxing’s foremost journalistic authority. Its influence faded somewhat in the latter part of the 20th century, but it is a big part of the sport’s history.
    13. Teddy Brenner, matchmaker – Brenner became the sport’s top matchmaker, always adhering to the maxim that he wouldn’t make a match unless he’d be willing to buy a ticket to see it himself. He put together many of Ali’s bouts and is responsible for training Bruce Trampler, who himself would go on to a Hall of Fame career as a matchmaker.
    12. Sugar Ray Leonard, boxer – Henry Armstrong popularized the concept of a boxer going for multiple weight division titles, but Leonard perfected it. An Olympic gold medalist with a charismatic personality, Leonard won world titles at 147, 154, 160, 168 and 175 pounds and was the biggest star in the sport after Ali retired. He later went on to become a popular television analyst and was briefly a promoter, but his influence on the game clearly came from the fans he made in his numerous big fights against the likes of Roberto Duran, Thomas Hearns and Marvelous Marvin Hagler.
    11. Henry Armstrong, boxer – Considered by many to be the second-best fighter ever, Armstrong once held the featherweight, lightweight and welterweight titles simultaneously, when there were only eight weight divisions. He popularized the idea of a fighter chasing titles in multiple divisions.
    10. Howard Cosell, broadcaster – Cosell was the voice of boxing for ABC and was closely tied with Ali’s career, covering not only his fights but also his battle to avoid the Vietnam War. It wasn’t long before Cosell’s presence at ringside connoted a major fight.
    9. Seth Abraham, television programmer – HBO began airing boxing in 1973, five years before Abraham joined the network. But it was Abraham, whose deft touch in signing matches and his genius for putting together broadcast teams, who made HBO a major player in the sport.
    8. Jack Johnson, boxer – Johnson is the boxer who opened the door in many ways for African American fighters to compete. He defeated James J. Jeffries in what was the first “Fight of the Century.” In the early part of the 20th century, he was virtually unbeatable but his career was harmed by racism and he was forced to flee to Europe.
    7. Jack Dempsey, boxer – The heavyweight champion who was the first boxer to consistently attract $1 million plus gates, he became an icon in the sport whose influence lasted for decades past his retirement.
    6. Sugar Ray Robinson, boxer – While many boxing fans consider Ali the greatest fighter ever, Ali always considered Robinson the best. Ali patterned his style, in and out of the ring, after Robinson. Robinson was voted the greatest boxer, the greatest welterweight and the greatest middleweight of the 20th century by The Associated Press. He was a true showman and became popular outside of just the boxing crowd.
    5. Don King, promoter – King, a former numbers runner in Cleveland, is a natural showman who promoted boxing like a carnival huckster. He, along with Arum, was the dominant promoter of the second half of the 20th century and promoted 12 of the top 20 largest-grossing fights in history.
    4. Bob Arum, promoter – The founder of Top Rank, Arum has been one of, if not the, top promoters in boxing for nearly 50 years. He promoted many of the sport’s superstars, including Ali, Sugar Ray Leonard, George Foreman, Marvelous Marvin Hagler, Oscar De La Hoya, Floyd Mayweather Jr. and Roberto Duran. He was the first promoter to regularly utilize boxing on cable television with his “Top Rank Boxing” series on ESPN and in his latter years, he recognized the extraordinary interest in the sport among Hispanic Americans and created a series to cater to them.
    Was there ever any question who is No. 1?
    AP

    3. Tex Rickard, promoter – Rickard built Madison Square Garden in New York and promoted many fights at the venue which for decades would host the majority of the country’s major matches. He promoted many Jack Dempsey fights in the 1920s that had gates in excess of $1 million, figures that would be good even today.
    2. Joe Louis, boxer – Louis was an American hero at a time when African Americans were decades away from achieving civil rights. The legendary sports writer, Jimmy Cannon, once wrote of Louis, “Joe Louis is a credit to race: The human race.” His 1938 victory over Max Schmeling did wonders for national morale.
    1. Muhammad Ali, boxer – Ali wasn’t the greatest fighter who ever stepped into the ring. But he was among the finest and no one before or since has had the impact he’s had upon the game. His style, with his hands at his side, circling the ring and flicking out jabs, has influenced generations of fighters. His ability to promote an event and give one a reason to watch has been unmatched.

    Source: Boxing’s most influential: Nos. 1-50 - Boxing - Yahoo! Sports

  4. #4
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    Default Re: 100 Boxing's Most Influential (by Yahoo)

    David Haye is a glaring omission.
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    Default Re: 100 Boxing's Most Influential (by Yahoo)

    Kid Thunder?

    Thought he would be cracking the top 30?

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    Default Re: 100 Boxing's Most Influential (by Yahoo)

    Quote Originally Posted by skel1983 View Post
    Kid Thunder?

    Thought he would be cracking the top 30?
    Yeah. Wassup with that.

    He should be up there with Zeneloff.

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    Default Re: 100 Boxing's Most Influential (by Yahoo)

    Trainer Monkey is a shocking omission. Fact.
    3-Time SADDO PREDICTION COMP CHAMPION.

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    Default Re: 100 Boxing's Most Influential (by Yahoo)

    Quote Originally Posted by Fenster View Post
    Trainer Monkey is a shocking omission. Fact.
    TM has made more phone calls to more people on this list then any person on this list has made themselves. That's a fact.

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    Default Re: 100 Boxing's Most Influential (by Yahoo)

    PSL you live in Dawson Springs? I just spent the weekend in Hopkinsville which is like 35 mins away.

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    Default Re: 100 Boxing's Most Influential (by Yahoo)

    Quote Originally Posted by amat View Post
    Quote Originally Posted by Fenster View Post
    Trainer Monkey is a shocking omission. Fact.
    TM has made more phone calls to more people on this list then any person on this list has made themselves. That's a fact.
    And there we're not counting the phone calls he made to train some of his fighters in the distance, which propel him to even greater heights.
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    That's the way it is, not the way it ends

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    Default Re: 100 Boxing's Most Influential (by Yahoo)

    I can't believe Henry Bruseles isn't on that list.

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    Default Re: 100 Boxing's Most Influential (by Yahoo)

    A purely "Opinionated" list. "By Keven Lole" He outlines no criteria what so ever. "fill-in-the-blank" could have come up with a list like this.

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    Default Re: 100 Boxing's Most Influential (by Yahoo)

    Quote Originally Posted by amat View Post
    PSL you live in Dawson Springs? I just spent the weekend in Hopkinsville which is like 35 mins away.
    Yeah. Hopkinsville is 20-35 mins drive south from where I live. I inherited a land here.

    There's nothing here. It's a redneckville.

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    Default Re: 100 Boxing's Most Influential (by Yahoo)

    No Naz on that list?

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