Re: British boxing – The Decades
OK so boxing is back!! To some degree. But fuck it, lets do the 90's. I make no apologies for having Benn and Bruno in the 80's and 90's. How could I not. Here's a few important ones to me and by chance, all happened in 1995.
September 30th 1995. Steve Robinson defends his WBO World featherweight title against a moving up in weight Naseem Hamed. Robinson was the classic boxing fairy-tale. 50 quid a week storeman jacks in job to concentrate full time on boxing. Columbian Ruben Palacio tests positive for HIV and is unable to fight John Davison for the vacant WBO featherweight title. On the back of a loss two months prior, Robinson steps in to save the show and the boxing gods shine on him. Davison was 34 years old at the time, the Palacios fight was cancelled twice meaning he was in camp for five months and it all caught up with him. Robinson walked away a World champion on a split decision.
Hamed was scything his way through a who's who of bantam and super bantam yard sticks and fringe contenders with notable wins over teak tough Italian Vincenzo Belcastro for the European bantamweight title, and former Robinson victim Steve Cruz. I was disappointed Hamed didn’t stick around longer at the super bantam limit. He was an absolute nightmare at the weight and a World title would surely have come his way, instead, he moved up to challenge what many believed to be a step too far at this point in time against the bigger stronger, more seasoned Robinson.
Hamed proved to be far too good for the game but outgunned, outmanoeuvred Robinson and put on a one sided beating in front of Robinsons home fans at a packed Cardiff Arms Park. The only trouble Hamed had on the night was keeping his feet dry with plastic bags during the ring walk and his towel draping over his head after he flipped the top rope. Hamed laid Robinson bare with his speed, movement, power and usual theatrics. There was nothing Robinson could do, Hamed did as he pleased until putting an end to proceedings after eight rounds of one way traffic. Hamed went on to defend and unify World titles at featherweight against top opposition without ever having that 'great' win on his leger. Hamed's reign and career all but came to an end at the hands of Mexican great Marco Antonio Barrera. It wasn’t quite the drubbing some would have you believe, but if Hamed laid Robinson bare that cold wet night in Cardiff six years prior, Barrera returned the favour in Vegas with a clear points victory. Hamed knew at that point what separated the great, from the really great and he knew he no longer had it, if ever he did. Hamed returned to the ring just once more. A low key points victory over Manuel Calvo for the IBO 'World' featherweight title. Calvo in his previous fight had beaten Steve Robinson on points.
Hamed had a brilliant career without ever being great. Multiple World title's against World class operators, a true superstar of the sport who crossed over into the mainstream. The fucker appeared on top of the pops singing something about uppercuts for Christs sake. Whilst for me his boxing career wasn’t quite all it could and should have been. Hamed was British boxing for a while and he picked up where the soon to be retiring Benn and Bruno left off and carried the flag and inspired many (annoyed plenty too) all over the globe. The lower weight classes get ignored by the masses. Oblivious to the craft and skill level South of ten and a half stone. I guess we naturally gravitate to fighters that are our own size and salivate over the power of the heavyweight monsters. Little Arab bantamweights out of Sheffield aren’t supposed to set the boxing World alight and earn millions in the process. Naz did. Naz was special.
February 25th 1995 The Dark Destroyer Nigel Benn defends his WBC Super Middleweight Word title against fearsome American powerhouse Gerald McClellan. Benn had seen and done it all by the time McClellan came to town. A long and illustrious career, multi weight multiple World Champion. The heart-breaking losses to Eubank and Watson, the rebuilding across the Atlantic. All this experience in Benn's favour counted for little. He was on the back nine of his career, McClellan was on the up and obliterating anything that got in his way. A murderous puncher with a bad attitude and worse intentions. He was coming over here to destroy Benn and you wouldn’t have found many to disagree with him.
London, England, Isle of Dogs, Millwall. When I say those words I think violence, can't help it. Other than some dimly lit cobbled back alley, what better a setting for the unfiltered violence that would unfold on that tragic but brilliant night.
McClellan did as scripted, bombs from the opening bell and almost had Benn out. A series of clubbing left hooks to the body and right hands to the head had Benn down and out of the ring in the opening session. The way Benn slumped through the ropes and on to the ring apron, he looked out, fight over. McClellan was everything we were told he was and Benn was no match for his unrelenting assault.
But then…
Benn got up. Some will still have you believe he was helped upright by those at ringside but that’s bollocks. A few hands went out to stop his head crashing against broadcasting tables and equipment, but help? No, Nigel Benn got Nigel Benn off the floor and back into the ring. The mad bastard.
McClellan smelled blood and went after Benn like a mad man. Benn was given extra seconds by an overly fussy referee who insisted throughout on keeping the pair apart for far longer than was necessary and for reasons only he knows. Some might say he was helping Benn, on the payroll if you like. I think he was just a bit shit.
People say that McClellan started to break down in the later rounds but I've always said it was almost immediate. The gumshield that would be so prominently sticking out of McClellan's mouth as the fight wore on, was starting to go as early as the first round. McClellan had his man beat, there was no way he was backing off, but all of a sudden, he had to and as the second round started he was going backwards, trying to box Benn at range. Benn was encouraged and ploughed forwards, he caught McClellan with a series of left hooks and right hands to the delight of the contorted face of Frank Bruno at ringside who was decked out in an orange suit. Naseem Hamed two to Bruno's left, silent, shocked, seated. Frank Warren, face drained of all colour shitting himself between the two of them.
It was early in the fight. I was once again watching with the old man. He was no more of an expert than he was in the 80's, still fucking about with pigeons watching a bit of sport here and there. I turned to my Dad and said he's going to do this, Benn's going to win. E got no chance. Man of few words was my Dad. It was nothing to do with boxing knowledge, I had none. I, like everyone else had no idea what was unfolding with McClellan at the time. It was just a gut thing. He'd come through the opening explosion and I fancied Benn to get the job done.
I've never really been one for scoring fights, especially ones like that but the general feeling was that Benn was slowly but surely clawing his way back into it with work rate and aggression. McClellan was by no means done. A series of right hands in the eighth round and a wild swing from Benn saw McClellan score a second knockdown of the fight but it didn’t seem to matter. At this point I was convinced Benn was going to win.
Benn was good in the tenth and ultimately final round. He hunted McClellan down and forced two knockdowns. McClellan was taking heavy shots and twice took a knee. The quit talk started. "He's quit Reg!!! He's quit!!" He had indeed quit. The monster from America who left fighters in ruins, had bottled it when the going got tough. How little we knew.
I was hooked on boxing from that point on. Went to the newsagents and ordered a boxing monthly just so I could absorb more information about that particular fight and somehow stay in the moment.
News started to circulate about McClellan's condition and what he was battling, besides Nigel Benn and it wasn’t a pretty picture. All of a sudden those quit remarks, Benn up on turnbuckles pointing at a stricken McClellan all seemed a bit dirty.
As time has moved on, we never forget what happened to McClellan and the battles he must go through on a day to day basis since. But it also has afforded us the opportunity to in a way separate the fight, from the aftermath and allowed us to celebrate what was one of the most brutally barbaric yet beautiful things I've ever seen in a boxing ring and in sport. It had the Marquess of Queensbury wrapper around it, but it wasn't a boxing match, it was war.
Last edited by Memphis; 09-06-2020 at 11:34 PM.
When God said to the both of us "Which one of you wants to be Sugar Ray?" I guess I didnt raise my hand fast enough
Charley Burley
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