Originally Posted by
jokaleras
Originally Posted by
Scrap
Mike was getting his arse handed Him, shut His eyes and let one go
No he didn't actually. That was a brilliantly executed move. McCallum said he had noticed Curry retreating backwards and leaving his chin exposed whenever Mike went for the body. Mike feinted with an uppercut and caught Curry with his hands down.
Excerpt from Sports Illustrated Article,
A Loud Left From A Quite Champ:
Junior middleweight titleholder Mike McCallum knocked out - 07.27.87 - SI Vault
"Normally a slow starter, McCallum planned to jump on Curry right from the opening bell. "I have studied him," McCallum said. "He has a great right hand and a good hook. Let's see if he can handle the pressure and my body shots."
In the second round Curry buckled McCallum's knees with a right to the head. McCallum slumped and then steadied himself. "It was a great hook," the champion said. "It was the closest I've ever come to being knocked down."
Curry stepped up the pace in the third round and was in command until the end of the fourth when McCallum caught him with a solid right to the head. The momentum shifted. During the minute's rest after the round, McCallum told his corner that Curry was starting to cover up to protect his body.
Thirty seconds into the fifth round McCallum threw a right hand to the body, and, as Curry covered, he fired a harmless hook to the head. McCallum was testing Curry, and inwardly he smiled. Soon, he thought.
A few moments later McCallum hooked twice and then showed Curry a slow right uppercut to the body. "I just wanted him to see the right hand," McCallum said later. With his eyes locked on the decoy, Curry leaned back and lowered his hands. "I just got careless and relaxed," Curry said.
He picked a poor moment to take a breather. Stepping to his left, McCallum turned hard, cracking the hook against Curry's jaw. The challenger never saw the punch. He fell backward, bounced once and then lay stiff, his hands over his head. Curry's eyes were open but unfocused. He heard nothing as referee Richard Steele counted him out.
Afterward, McCallum wore a wide smile across his unmarked face. "Do you think everybody knows who Mike McCallum is now?" the champion said."
It was a great fight. For Donald Curry, it was to give meaning to the word on the back of his robe, and that word was redemption. What impressed me is that this fight was fought consistently at mid-range. It gets tricky because the distance often changes rapidly, and the fighters have to have a good sense of each other in order to stay competitive. In the end, McCallum brought Curry's hands down by feinting the right uppercut to the body, and then with a Patterson-esque left hook the fight was over.
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