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Thread: IKE IBEABUCHI: "THE KING WHO WOULD OF BEEN MAN"

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    Default IKE IBEABUCHI: "THE KING WHO WOULD OF BEEN MAN"

    By Mike Casile

    www.Philaboxingreport.com


    In the late 90’s, the heavyweight division was all but dead. There were the Legends, like Evander Holyfield, and an angry, struggling Mike Tyson, but for the most part, Lennox Lewis was making his way through a bunch of fighters he should have fought when they actually had something in the tank. There was one man, who stood out above everyone. HBO did not jump on the bandwagon of Ike “The President” Ibeabuchi, they chose instead to invent a fighter who came to be known as Michael Grant. Grant proved he could not hang with the big guys, very quickly on television sets around the world, while Ibeabuchi proved, he was a force to be reckoned with. Not since the young Mike Tyson, did we see a man fight so viscously, and hit with so much bad intention. His story for the fringe boxing fan, started when he beat David Tua, for the WBC heavyweight championship, helping break a record, of the number of punches ever to be thrown in a heavyweight fight. That fight, more than any other catapulted Ike into the top of the late 90’s heavyweight crop, with an aging
    Holyfield, and a Champion named Lennox Lewis who had a great right hand, but no beard to speak of. Ike Ibeabuchi’s dreams for success, were about to come true.

    It’s amazing how the simplest dreams, can turn into the most complex nightmares. Immediately following the Tua fight, he began to complain of chronic headaches, but MRI’s revealed nothing.

    He began to seriously injure sparring partners. It was said he cracked the skull of one, and broke the leg of another. He had run in’s with the police, having to be forcibly detained in one case.

    He got 2 moths in jail, for abducting the son of a former girlfriend, then running his car into a concrete pillar. He had also been making outlandish claims about seeing demons, and began making impossible monetary demands of promoters. He continued to fight, with his reputation of being crazy, he beat 3 more fighters, most notably, undefeated Chris “Rapid Fire” Byrd, whom we took out in just 5 rounds. Not too long after that, he allegedly summoned a lap dancer to his room in a Las Vegas hotel. The dancer claims he became enraged when she asked for money up front, proceeded to throw her in a closet, and rape her. It took a more than a few cops, and a lot of pepper spray, to subdue the 250lb fighter.

    Struggling out of the ghettos and abject poverty of Nigeria, Ike rose to the top of, arguably one of the most difficult sports in the world. He had it all, and whether it was mental illness, greed, ego, or just plain stupidity. He lost would could have been, a history making career, along with tens of millions of dollars. As a fight fan, you think about what could have been. You think about the excitement and fanfare he would have brought to the Heavyweight division, but as a human being, you may have to agree that he is exactly where he belongs.

    Ike is currently at the Lovelock Correctional Center in Lovelock, Nevada stemming from a 20O1 criminal conviction for a bad encounter with a Las Vegas escort service representative in 1999. Ike is serving a 2-10 year sentence and a consecutive 3-20 year sentence. He was granted parole for his 2-10 year sentence in 2001. There was reason for many to believe that Ike would also be granted parole on his 2-10 year sentence in 2001. There was reason for many to believe that Ike would also be granted parole on his 3-20 year sentence at his last parole board hearing in 2004, but Ike was hit with an unexpected and very disappointing three (3) year denial. Ike is not expected to appear before the parole board again until 2007. All tolled, Ike has spent six (6) years incarcerated.
    doghouseboxing

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    Default Re: IKE IBEABUCHI: THE KING WHO WOULD OF BEEN THE "MAN"!!!!

    Yes, I and many others believe that if IKE wasn't incarcerrated he would of been champion, beating both Lewis & Tyson! and Vlad & Vitali

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    Default Re: IKE IBEABUCHI: THE KING WHO WOULD OF BEEN THE "MAN"!!!!

    I feel the same way, his fight with Tua was magnificant. In a limited heavyweight division like we have today he would have ruled supreme... what a wasted talent
    The Best There Is, The Best There Was, The Best There Ever Will Be

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    Default Re: IKE IBEABUCHI: THE KING WHO WOULD OF BEEN THE "MAN"!!!!

    Quote Originally Posted by NorthSideX4
    His story for the fringe boxing fan, started when he beat David Tua, for the WBC heavyweight championship,
    WBC "International" Championship

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    Default Re: IKE IBEABUCHI: THE KING WHO WOULD OF BEEN THE "MAN"!!!!

    Setting the record straight on Ike Ibeabuchi

    An Interview with his former Manager, Steve Munisteri

    By Mike Casile (PBR) (7/15/06)



    As the heavyweight division has floundered over the past few years, names from the past are constantly brought to the forefront.

    One name that is spoken of, in an almost mythical way, is Ike Ibeabuchi. A lot has been written about the imprisoned Nigerian heavyweight, most of it true, but some of it pure speculation, I spoke with Steve Munisteri, Ike’s former manager, about the accusations, the speculations, and what really happened to one of the best heavyweight prospects of the 1990’s. Steve’s professional relationship began with Ike, following the Tua fight, and ended when Ike was imprisoned. This is the real story.





    PBR:

    What of the Myth of Ike Ibeabuchi that he was seemingly unbeatable, and he would have swept up the Heavyweight division with ease.



    SM:

    He is not a mythical figure, he was a very good, probably, the best, prospect of that time, but people forget that he won a very close decision to Marion Wilson in 1996, and Wilson was not a very good fighter. He was not a guy nobody couldn’t beat, or that couldn’t be exposed. He was a good prospect in the 1990’s, but not unbeatable.



    PBR: Ike just seemed like a mauler, with limited boxing skill. Was his power his weakness?



    SM:

    I disagree. Ike was one of the best technical fighters I have ever seen. He had an almost like a cross block defense, like an Archie Moore. He was a student of boxing with an unbelievable memory. He studied tapes constantly. He was a great defensive fighter. He was very intelligent. He could remember any conversation with anybody. I had to be careful what I said to him sometimes, because he could remember something I said 2 years before to tee. He was like” rain man” in that respect.



    PBR:

    What to all these Rumors of IKE? How about the rumor that Cedric Kushner and Lou Dibella were threatened by Ike at knife point?



    SM:

    I was there, it never happened. We were all discussing a contract; Ike was eating a steak, and had it in his hand during the conversation.



    PBR:

    What about the rumors of Him cracking the skull of a sparring partner, or breaking another leg?



    SM:

    I have never heard anything about the skull, however, the leg rumor came from his scuffle with Ezra Sellers, which was well publicized, during the scuffle, he bent Sellers back, and Sellers tore his ACL. There was NO broken leg.



    PBR:

    What about the voices he heard, and the demons he thought possessed him?



    SM:

    Some of that is true, the state of Nevada had him evaluated during the course of his incarceration and ruled him mentally incompetent, so he couldn’t be tried.

    PBR:

    Was he ever evaluated while he was fighting?



    SM:

    After the incident in where the child was injured in the auto accident, I recommended to the family that he seek help, and as far as I know he did.



    PBR:

    At one time did you officially manage him?



    SM:

    I planned his comeback. After the Tua fight, and the injury to the child, he was incarcerated, and no one would touch him. He dropped out of the rankings.



    PBR:

    So you had him with his last 3 fights?



    SM:

    Yes from 1997 to 2000



    PBR:

    If he gets paroled next year, will he fight, and do you think he will fight, and do you think he should fight?



    SM:

    Well, number one, he is not an American citizen. That’s very problematic, because if you’re convicted of a felony, you get deported. He is a boxer, its he does, and he should have a right to make a living. He was ruled competent at some point, he if he wasn’t, he wouldn’t be in prison, and he would be in a mental hospital. His age may be an issue too. He is listed as being born in 1973, that would make him 34 if he got paroled. Some believe he is older. Maybe closer to 38. But because of the layoff, it would be very hard. The odds are against it, but it’s possible. He is a hard worker, and motivated.



    PBR:

    Do you think if you had Ike earlier, he would be in prison?



    SM:

    I was his manager when he went to prison; there was nothing I could have done. The reason he was in Las Vegas, the night he get in trouble was to meet Don King, even though he was under contract to Cedric Kushner. I was told this by Ike; I have no first hand knowledge of this. He did not inform any of us, he was going to Vegas. This was not the first time King has tried to do this. He had sent first class tickets for Ike to go and have dinner with him in Florida, but Ike had been bumped off the plane and never went. So the night he got in trouble, he decided to go without, my

    Knowledge. I had no idea.











    Mike Casile

    www.Philaboxingreport.com

    MC@philaboxingreport.com

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    Default Re: IKE IBEABUCHI: THE KING WHO WOULD OF BEEN THE "MAN"!!!!

    nice interview have a cc

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    Default Re: IKE IBEABUCHI: THE KING WHO WOULD OF BEEN THE "MAN"!!!!

    Quote Originally Posted by NorthSideX4
    In the late 90’s, the heavyweight division was all but dead. There were the Legends, like Evander Holyfield, and an angry, struggling Mike Tyson, but for the most part, Lennox Lewis was making his way through a bunch of fighters he should have fought when they actually had something in the tank. There was one man, who stood out above everyone. HBO did not jump on the bandwagon of Ike “The President” Ibeabuchi, they chose instead to invent a fighter who came to be known as Michael Grant. Grant proved he could not hang with the big guys, very quickly on television sets around the world, while Ibeabuchi proved, he was a force to be reckoned with. Not since the young Mike Tyson, did we see a man fight so viscously, and hit with so much bad intention. His story for the fringe boxing fan, started when he beat David Tua, for the WBC heavyweight championship, helping break a record, of the number of punches ever to be thrown in a heavyweight fight. That fight, more than any other catapulted Ike into the top of the late 90’s heavyweight crop, with an aging
    Holyfield, and a Champion named Lennox Lewis who had a great right hand, but no beard to speak of. Ike Ibeabuchi’s dreams for success, were about to come true.

    It’s amazing how the simplest dreams, can turn into the most complex nightmares. Immediately following the Tua fight, he began to complain of chronic headaches, but MRI’s revealed nothing.

    He began to seriously injure sparring partners. It was said he cracked the skull of one, and broke the leg of another. He had run in’s with the police, having to be forcibly detained in one case.

    He got 2 moths in jail, for abducting the son of a former girlfriend, then running his car into a concrete pillar. He had also been making outlandish claims about seeing demons, and began making impossible monetary demands of promoters. He continued to fight, with his reputation of being crazy, he beat 3 more fighters, most notably, undefeated Chris “Rapid Fire” Byrd, whom we took out in just 5 rounds. Not too long after that, he allegedly summoned a lap dancer to his room in a Las Vegas hotel. The dancer claims he became enraged when she asked for money up front, proceeded to throw her in a closet, and rape her. It took a more than a few cops, and a lot of pepper spray, to subdue the 250lb fighter.

    Struggling out of the ghettos and abject poverty of Nigeria, Ike rose to the top of, arguably one of the most difficult sports in the world. He had it all, and whether it was mental illness, greed, ego, or just plain stupidity. He lost would could have been, a history making career, along with tens of millions of dollars. As a fight fan, you think about what could have been. You think about the excitement and fanfare he would have brought to the Heavyweight division, but as a human being, you may have to agree that he is exactly where he belongs.

    Ike is currently at the Lovelock Correctional Center in Lovelock, Nevada stemming from a 20O1 criminal conviction for a bad encounter with a Las Vegas escort service representative in 1999. Ike is serving a 2-10 year sentence and a consecutive 3-20 year sentence. He was granted parole for his 2-10 year sentence in 2001. There was reason for many to believe that Ike would also be granted parole on his 2-10 year sentence in 2001. There was reason for many to believe that Ike would also be granted parole on his 3-20 year sentence at his last parole board hearing in 2004, but Ike was hit with an unexpected and very disappointing three (3) year denial. Ike is not expected to appear before the parole board again until 2007. All tolled, Ike has spent six (6) years incarcerated.
    doghouseboxing


    Obviously a HUGE Lennox Lewis fan
    3-Time SADDO PREDICTION COMP CHAMPION.

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    Default Re: IKE IBEABUCHI: "THE KING WHO WOULD OF BEEN MAN"

    Dont forget to Credit the articles with a CLICKABLE LINK






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    Default Re: IKE IBEABUCHI: THE KING WHO WOULD OF BEEN THE "MAN"!!!!

    Quote Originally Posted by PHILABOXINGREPORT
    Setting the record straight on Ike Ibeabuchi

    An Interview with his former Manager, Steve Munisteri
    By Mike Casile (PBR) (7/15/06)
    PBR:
    What of the Myth of Ike Ibeabuchi that he was seemingly unbeatable, and he would have swept up the Heavyweight division with ease.
    SM:
    He is not a mythical figure, he was a very good, probably, the best, prospect of that time, but people forget that he won a very close decision to Marion Wilson in 1996, and Wilson was not a very good fighter. He was not a guy nobody couldn’t beat, or that couldn’t be exposed. He was a good prospect in the 1990’s, but not unbeatable.

    Mike Casile
    www.Philaboxingreport.com
    MC@philaboxingreport.com


    Nice interview

    Keeping things in perspective
    3-Time SADDO PREDICTION COMP CHAMPION.

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    Default Re: IKE IBEABUCHI: THE KING WHO WOULD OF BEEN THE "MAN"!!!!

    Quote Originally Posted by Fenster
    Quote Originally Posted by PHILABOXINGREPORT
    Setting the record straight on Ike Ibeabuchi

    An Interview with his former Manager, Steve Munisteri
    By Mike Casile (PBR) (7/15/06)
    PBR:
    What of the Myth of Ike Ibeabuchi that he was seemingly unbeatable, and he would have swept up the Heavyweight division with ease.
    SM:
    He is not a mythical figure, he was a very good, probably, the best, prospect of that time, but people forget that he won a very close decision to Marion Wilson in 1996, and Wilson was not a very good fighter. He was not a guy nobody couldn’t beat, or that couldn’t be exposed. He was a good prospect in the 1990’s, but not unbeatable.

    Mike Casile
    www.Philaboxingreport.com
    MC@philaboxingreport.com


    Nice interview

    Keeping things in perspective
    That was a good read...here's the thing about keeping things in perspective though...I don't really care that much about Ike having a tuff fight with a journeyman...every fighter does at one time or another...but just keeping things in perspective...Ike beat two of the more gifted heavies of their primes towards the end of his career...that's the perspective that I keep regarding Ike.

    Ike was a force in the division that was very feared...& rightfully so. Doesn't make him mythical...I agree.

    What woulda coulda shoulda been will never again happen...& that is that...but Ike was a great fighter that was powerful & technically sound with heart determination & chin...he was just missing some mental capabilities.

    Most people laude Tyson to this day as being a possible candidate for savior of the weak state of heavyweight boxing...but many refuse to acknowledge Ikes greatness.

    Interesting.
    Never beg a 40 dollar hooker...specially after she's just turned down your mom's credit card!!

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    Default Re: IKE IBEABUCHI: "THE KING WHO WOULD OF BEEN MAN"

    Quote Originally Posted by wacko3205
    Quote Originally Posted by Fenster
    Quote Originally Posted by PHILABOXINGREPORT
    Setting the record straight on Ike Ibeabuchi

    An Interview with his former Manager, Steve Munisteri
    By Mike Casile (PBR) (7/15/06)
    PBR:
    What of the Myth of Ike Ibeabuchi that he was seemingly unbeatable, and he would have swept up the Heavyweight division with ease.
    SM:
    He is not a mythical figure, he was a very good, probably, the best, prospect of that time, but people forget that he won a very close decision to Marion Wilson in 1996, and Wilson was not a very good fighter. He was not a guy nobody couldn’t beat, or that couldn’t be exposed. He was a good prospect in the 1990’s, but not unbeatable.

    Mike Casile
    www.Philaboxingreport.com
    MC@philaboxingreport.com


    Nice interview

    Keeping things in perspective
    That was a good read...here's the thing about keeping things in perspective though...I don't really care that much about Ike having a tuff fight with a journeyman...every fighter does at one time or another...but just keeping things in perspective...Ike beat two of the more gifted heavies of their primes towards the end of his career...that's the perspective that I keep regarding Ike.

    Ike was a force in the division that was very feared...& rightfully so. Doesn't make him mythical...I agree.

    What woulda coulda shoulda been will never again happen...& that is that...but Ike was a great fighter that was powerful & technically sound with heart determination & chin...he was just missing some mental capabilities.

    Most people laude Tyson to this day as being a possible candidate for savior of the weak state of heavyweight boxing...but many refuse to acknowledge Ikes greatness.

    Interesting.
    Ikes greatness?? You pissed already?

    You mean great prospect/potential?
    3-Time SADDO PREDICTION COMP CHAMPION.

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    Default Re: IKE IBEABUCHI: "THE KING WHO WOULD OF BEEN MAN"

    Maybe it is because Ike is black ?









    If God wanted us to be vegetarians, why are animals made of meat ?

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    Default Re: IKE IBEABUCHI: "THE KING WHO WOULD OF BEEN MAN"

    Nice posting,I agree Ike was great and I believe if he didn't get in trouble he could of been next HW Champion.He have boxing skills and power to give anyone trouble.IMO if Lennox would of fought Ike I would go with Ike beating him. CC for interview Phila

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    Default Re: IKE IBEABUCHI: "THE KING WHO WOULD OF BEEN MAN"

    Quote Originally Posted by Fenster
    Ikes greatness?? You pissed already?
    Posted that before I was sauced...so yeah...Ike's greatness.

    Quote Originally Posted by Fenster
    You mean great prospect/potential?
    He left prospect status at the door when he went toe to toe with Tua for 12 rounds & one & then posted his potential on a billboard the day that he beat Byrd so viciously...

    Problem is...he hung his potential out to dry when he whipped the shat outta that hooker & those rent-a-cops in Vegas.

    Never beg a 40 dollar hooker...specially after she's just turned down your mom's credit card!!

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    Default Re: IKE IBEABUCHI: "THE KING WHO WOULD OF BEEN MAN"

    I always enjoyed Ibeabuchi , He was a great fighter!

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