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Boxing History

20 years ago: when Lennox Lewis and Vitali Klitschko went to war

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20 Years Ago Today: When Lennox Lewis And Vitali Klitschko Went To War

June 21, 2003 – Staples Center, Los Angeles. It was on this day that heavyweight king Lennox Lewis faced WBC number one contender Vitali Klitschko. The fight came on brief notice for both fighters, with Kirk Johnson, Lewis’ original foe, withdrawing with an injury.

Lewis was at the top of the mountain, the 37-year-old had beaten all the truly significant and valuable fighters and achieved all of his goals (undisputed champion, every fighter he faced was beaten, sheltered spot in the Hall of Fame).

Lewis only had one place to go, and that was down. Lennox, however, was sure that Klitschko would not bring him to his knees. In fact, Lewis was arrogantly confident that he would have no grave problems with the “unqualified” Klitschko, a man with a questionable heart. The knock on Vitali was that he didn’t screw it up like he should have during his fight with Chris Byrd in 2000; Vitali leaves due to a shoulder injury. Only later did we learn that if Vitali had continued to fight Byrd, a fight he was easily winning, it could have resulted in a lasting injury and ended his career.

There was nothing wrong with Vitaly’s heart, as he proved that day 20 years ago. There was nothing wrong with Lewis’s heart either.

Lewis was recovering from a punch from a faded Mike Tyson and had a potential big-money fight with Roy Jones Jr ringing in his ears (Jones had beaten John Ruiz for a piece of the heavyweight crown in March). Klitschko, wanting to restore his good name as a fighter after the unfair criticism that was thrown at him after the defeat against Byrd, won after a break against Larry Donald.

Dubbed the “Battle of the Titans,” the fight turned out to be a heavyweight fight that wowed the world. Lewis was 40-2-1 (31), Klitschko 32-1 (31). Klitschko, a player six years his junior, weighed 248 pounds, and Lewis achieved a career-high of 256.5 pounds.

At the sound of the bell, both men came out quickly and full of bloody aggression. These two substantial men set a great pace, a brutal pace for the heavyweights, and the war was on. There was a brutal exchange of bombs from the very beginning, with both players hoping for a quick knockout. Lewis, who may have had the weakest fight of his career, seemed to have no game plan other than to land a powerful right hand and end the fight.

Klitschko, fighting in his somewhat clumsy but effective, antiquated “European style”, may have shocked Lewis with his quick start and ability to take whatever the champion came home with. Klitschko won the first round and it was clear that this was not going to be an effortless fight for Lewis. In the second round, fans began to think about a possible upset as “Dr. The Iron Fist, as Klitschko was nicknamed, hit Lewis with a substantial right hand to the chin that visibly staggered him.

It was a street fight; it was as wild as it was fun. Both men punched, wrestled, absorbed every shot that came at them, and then landed some more. It was, as Jim Lampley said on HBO, “the fight on Pier Six.”

It didn’t take long for Lewis to feel the pace and the champion’s mouth was open. But at the same time Klitschko suffered a cut above his left eye. It was a bad cut from the start and soon became truly terrifying. However, Klitschko seemed unfazed by the gruesome facial damage Lewis inflicted on him, and the challenger fought harder. There was no doubt that Klitschko was in better shape than the overweight champion, perhaps wallowing in complacency.

But Lewis was throwing hydrogen bombs, his right hands were bouncing off Klitschko’s head. In the sixth round, with Klitschko’s face now a real mess, Lewis delivered a perfect uppercut that snapped Klitschko’s head back. Apart from the involuntary movements of his neck muscles, Vitali never flinched when the nuclear explosion occurred. Both men have shown they can eat up shot after shot. It was one of the wildest and seemingly unskilled heavyweight slugfests in years. It depended on who had the better shot and who wanted it more. Who could last longer.

Lewis was running on empty in a very grave way, while half of Klitschko’s face was hanging. It was certain that the fight would not last all 12 rounds. But who or what would do that? It turned out to be a gift from the stomach of the ringside doctor.

At the end of the sixth round, with Lewis hitting the stool difficult, the ring doctor decided enough was enough as far as Klitschko’s nasty cuts were concerned – one nasty injury above the eye and one unsightly injury below – and the fight was stopped. Vitali was furious, the challenger jumped up and attacked Lewis. “All right!” – said Klitschko. “All right!”

Klitschko and Lewis exchanged words in the middle of the ring, Vitali asked for a rematch and Lennox apparently agreed to it. “You promise?” – asked Klitschko.

As we all know, there was never a rematch. Lewis, pushed harder and more brutally than he could have imagined at the end of an illustrious career, wisely made the decision to refrain from pushing his luck, brain and body in the rematch. Instead, Lewis retired, leaving Klitschko asking for and hoping for a rematch for several years.

Here, Harold Knight, Lewis’ longtime co-trainer, says what he thinks would have happened had the fight continued:

“Klitschko was of course very badly injured, but not only his eye. Klitschko had a nasty busted lip and was weakening from swallowing his own blood,” Knight kindly took the time to tell me. “Lennox was on his way to knocking him out.”

We will never know.

But the world witnessed a great, explosively invigorating fight between two giants 20 years ago, a fight that – if it didn’t have too much Sweet Science on it – certainly had plenty of blood, guts and bombs on display. We fans would have preferred a part two, but Lewis was finished. Klitschko was just gaining momentum when it came to major fights, but for the remainder of his ring career he was never again in a fight as substantial or as glamorous.

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Boxing History

40 years ago: Tkacz – Dokes Draw and the decision that still angers “Hercules”

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Recalling A Forgotten Heavyweight Slugfest – The Astonishing Mike Weaver - James Pritchard Fight

Mike Weaver, one of the more underrated heavyweight champions, one of the so-called “lost generation” of heavyweights who held the world title on a rotating basis in the 1980s, contributed a lot to his weight class. Nicknamed “Hercules” for his ripped physique, Weaver served in Vietnam, and it was in the Marines that Weaver began boxing.

Weaver crushed the Marine Corps Heavyweight Champion, and it was all because the two men had an argument over a song on a jukebox, and everyone was telling Weaver how he should be a fighter. Weaver didn’t even know he had beaten the Marine Corps champion! After a fairly brief amateur career, Weaver turned professional in September 1972 at the age of 21.

After some early setbacks, including three losses in his first four fights, two by stoppage, Weaver began to, in his own words, “take boxing seriously.” Additional losses, including a pair of losses at the hands of the Bobick brothers, Duane and Rodney, followed before Weaver could get into his groove and become a contender, but by 1978 Weaver—with a record of 15-8(9)—was well on his way to becoming the unexpected world champion.

An October 1978 KO win over Bernardo Mercado sparked some discussion, and Weaver was given a chance to fight WBC heavyweight boss Larry Holmes. That happened in June 1979, and a huge fight ensued, with Weaver, now a nine-year pro, giving Holmes hell before being stopped too slow.

But would Weaver ever become champion? Fans got a dramatic answer in March 1980 when Weaver, trailing on points after 14 rounds in a fight with defending WBA heavyweight champion John Tate, sensationally turned Tate’s world upside down with a close-range left hook to the jaw that landed on Tate’s jaw with just: 45 clicks left on the clock.

Weaver’s reign would be quite short-lived, with his title controversially stripped from him by an itchy trigger finger from the referee who was working Weaver’s fight with Mike Dokes in December 1982.

Weaver, making his third defense, was caught early and taken to the ground, but he still got up and fought on the ropes, but Joey Curtis dove in and stopped the fight. It ended at 1:03. Thus, Weaver’s title reign began with a KO that came desperately slow in the fight and ended with a TKO that came prematurely, in a flash, early in the fight. Weaver got a rematch with Dokes – a fight that had taken place 40 years ago – but was again denied, this time by a highly controversial 15-round draw that allowed Dokes to retain the belt.

Here, Weaver kindly recalls some key moments from his ring career:

In its beginnings:

“Vietnam was a gigantic part of my life, and I got into boxing while I was in the service. But I don’t talk about that time, not even with my family. Not always. I was naturally gigantic, 6’1″ and 200 pounds. I got into a fight with another Marine over a fight I wanted to play on the jukebox. I knocked him out, and I found out later he was the Marine boxing champion!”

On the biggest punch he’s ever faced:

“[Bernardo] Mercado was the hardest boxer I ever faced. He knocked me down in our fight and he did it in sparring as well. He hit really challenging.”

On Holmes’ 1979 fight:

“I wasn’t afraid of Holmes. I told everyone I would beat him or at least give him the hardest fight of his life. Everyone just laughed. I pushed him really challenging and even scored a knockdown, but the referee called it a slip. Holmes showed his greatness by stopping me (in the 12th round).”

One of the sensational KO’s over Tate:

“I never took boxing seriously at first. But I was really grave about fighting Tate. I trained the hardest I’ve ever trained for that fight. I knocked him out with 45 seconds left in the 15th round. My team told me, ‘What are you waiting for?’ Go out there and knock him out now or don’t bother going back to that corner. It meant a lot to me to be a world champion. I was just an opponent and no one was really building me up.

On the controversial half-time loss to Dokes and the rematch that followed:

“Dokes never hurt me [in the first fight]. My friends told me that they (Las Vegas officials) would find any reason they could to stop the fight. They told me not to take the fight. After that, after what happened, I never trusted the authority in the sport again. My heart was never in the sport again, although I continued to fight for a long time. In the second fight, I beat Dokes, but I couldn’t beat the system and they called it a draw.”

Weaver retired in slow 2000 after losing a rematch to Holmes (“we were older guys, we just saw what we could do”) – and his record was a more than slightly misleading 41-18-1(28).

https://youtu.be/V3uu3jIhmHM?t=945

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Boxing History

Ernie “Indian Red” Lopez: The Utah Warrior Who Fought Griffith and Napoles

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Ernie “Indian Red” Lopez

Born: September 23, 1945 at Fort Duchesne, Utah.

He died: October 3, 2009 in Pleasant Grove, Utah.

Record: 61 fights, 49 wins (25 by KO/TKO), 11 losses, 1 draw.

I turned professional: June 1963.

Last fight: October 1974.

Weight distribution: Welterweight

Defeat: Armand Lourenco (twice), Pulga Serrano, Al Andrews, Johnny Brooks (three times), Jose Stable*, Tito Marshall, Musashi Nakano, Gabe Terronez, Hedgemon Lewis (twice), Raul Soriano, Chucho Garcia, Manuel Avitia, Ruben Rivera, Peter Cobblah, Manuel Fierro, Oscar Abalardo**, Sal Martinez, Manuel Gonzalez*,

Lost with: Don Minor, Johnny Brooks, Adolph Pruitt*, Raul Soriano, Hedgeman Lewis, Jose Napoles (twice)**, Emile Griffith (twice)**, Armando Muniz*, John H Stracey**.

I drew with:Armand Lourenco

** World Champion title holders

*World Champion Title Contenders


Lopez’s career

-1963/64 He won his first ten fights, then in December 1964 he was defeated on points by Don Minor to win the North American welterweight title.

-1965 It was a 3-0-1 draw with Armand Laouenco and his knockout

-1966 Ten fights and a record of 8-2, 2-1 in fights with Johnny Brooks, defeating Jose Stable and Tito Marshall, but losing to Adolph Pruitt.

-1967 Won all 9 of his fights, defeating Benito Juarez, Johnny Brooks, Musashi Nakano and Doug McLeod.

-1968 Improved to 6-0, defeating Raul Soriano and Gabe Terronez and stopping Hedgemon Lewis (22-0) in nine rounds.

-1969 Score 4-1: Stopped Serrano and defeated Chucho Garcia, then lost on points to Hedgemon Lewis in July and was stopped in the tenth round in October.

-1970 February was knocked down three times and defeated by Jose Napoles in a fight for the WBA and WBC titles. He defeated Manuel Avitia, Ruben Rivera and Cipriano Hernandez.

-1971 Lost by majority decision to Emile Griffith. Wins over Peter Cobblah, Danny Perez, Miguel Fierro and future WBA/WBC welterweight champion Oscar Albarado.

-1972 Lost again in a close decision to Emile Griffith. He scored wins over Sal Martinez, Manuel Gonzalez and Jose Luis Baltazar.

-1973 February was knocked out in the seventh round by Jose Napoles in a rematch for the WBA and WBC titles. It was a solemn knockout, Lopez was out of the fight for about three minutes. Lopez returned in July but was knocked down by Armando Muniz and retired at the end of the seventh round.

-1974 Lopez was stopped by John H. Stracey in seven rounds, with Lopez being cut above both eyes. Lopez retired after the fight with Stracey.


Ernie Lopez’s Life Story

Ernie Lopez was born on the Uintah and Ouray Indian Reservation in Fort Duchesne, Utah. His mother was a Ute Indian and his father was from another Native American tribe, and Lopez was the third of their eight children.

His father taught him how to box, and he began boxing in high school. He and his older brothers, Leonard and Danny “Little Red” Lopez, moved to California and boxed on a YMCA team there.

Brother Danny won the WBC featherweight title. The nickname Indian Red came from Lopez’s red hair and Indian heritage. He was 21-1-1 in his first 23 fights, but then suffered back-to-back losses to Johnny Brooks and Adolph Pruitt.

He rebuilt himself, winning 10 of his next 11 fights, losing only to Raul Soriano, before crushing and stopping Hedgemon Lewis (22-0) in July 1968. He defeated Soriano in a rematch, but then lost on points to Lewis in July 1969, but regained form in October and stopped Lewis again.

This gave him a shot at the WBA and WBC welterweight titles. Unfortunately, the great Jose Napoles knocked Lopez down in the first, ninth and again in the fifteenth round, and the fight was stopped with twenty-two seconds remaining.

He bounced back, winning ten of his next twelve fights, with two of his losses coming to Emile Griffith – the first by majority decision, the second by unanimous decision, but by the narrowest of margins.

Two wins later that year earned him a comeback fight with Napoles in February 1973 in a fight that changed his life. Lopez was reportedly ahead after six rounds, and Napoles cut his eye and the bridge of his nose.

In the seventh round, Napoles exploded with a devastating punch that knocked Lopez down and left him unconscious for three minutes. The loss crushed Lopez’s spirit, and marital problems sent Lopez into a downward spiral.

He fought twice more, but lost both fights by distance. Then he slowly drifted away from his friends and family, who would appear unexpectedly from time to time, before losing contact with them for twelve years. He wandered from city to city and state to state, and was eventually reported missing.

When talk of Lopez being inducted into the California Boxing Hall of Fame began in 2004, his ex-wife and children decided to determine once and for all whether he was still alive.

He was eventually tracked down by Social Security number at the Presbyterian Night Shelter in Texas. Lopez’s former promoter and Californian Boxing Hall of Fame president Don Fraser arranged for Lopez to fly to Los Angeles, where he met his family, including 23 grandchildren. Lopez was inducted into the Californian Boxing Hall of Fame and died on October 3, 2009, at the age of 64.

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Boxing History

Always wonderful: Hagler’s greatness will never be forgotten

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On This Day 40 Years Ago: The Great Marvin Hagler Was Floored For The Only Time In His Career

Today, if he were alive, if he had not been so cruelly taken from us, and most of all from those closest to us, the Marvelous Marvin Hagler would be celebrating his 69th birthday. Hagler, born in Newark, Up-to-date Jersey in 1954, is of course considered one of the greatest middleweights in history. Some say Hagler should be called the GREATEST in middleweight history.

It’s still difficult to believe that Hagler is gone, dead far too soon, no longer here with his fellow Kings, ready, willing and able to tell the tales of those epic, super-special fights. Of course, you know the fights I’m talking about – Hagler-Hearns, Hagler-Duran, Hagler-Leonard. And those are just the Kings.

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Hagler also fought, as destroyed, Alan Minter, Vito Antuofermo (in a rematch), Caveman Lee, Mustafa Hamsho, Fulgencio Obelmejias, Tony Sibson, John Mugabi, Juan Roldan and Wilford Scypion. In all, Hagler defended his beloved middleweight crown 12 times. Ultimately, only a still hotly debated decision loss to Leonard ended Marv’s time at the top. And in the sport.

Hagler was so devastated and disgusted by the split decision that was handed down against him in April of 1987 that he never fought again. In fact, Hagler once said that he never put on a pair of gloves again after losing/getting robbed (take your pick) in the Leonard fight, so bitter was it that he was left.

But we, the fans, never stopped loving Hagler, and we never stopped watching his many great fights. Today, in an era when the sport has changed so much that there are so many titles up for grabs, and fighters in their prime only get to box once a year (Hagler’s activity level dropped in later years, but that was after Marvin had more than his share of ring time in his, shall we say, lean years), we have never missed the days of Hagler, Hearns, Duran, or Leonard as much. Or the “Four Kings.”

But those glory days will never return. We have to pop a DVD in the player if we want to relive those special moments, the days when superfights like Hagler-Hearns and Hagler-Duran could be signed relatively easily. In those days, the best liked to prove themselves by competing with the best. And Hagler didn’t shy away from anyone. It could be argued that Hagler was never, ever truly beaten by anyone (as for the honor of the cleanest fighter Hagler ever faced, that probably went to Willie Monroe during his March 1976 battle with Hagler).

Hagler was special, we all know that. In fact, all fight fans, both casual and hardcore, know that. How many of us immediately associate the name, Hagler! We all know. Hagler was and is a fighter that if you want to find a description of what a great fighter is, he is a perfect example in any dictionary or encyclopedia.

Halger once said that he was a born fighter and that if anyone “ever cuts open my bald head, they’ll find one massive boxing glove.”

Hagler was sincere: “This is everything I am. I live this,” he said of the sport to which he has given so much.

Hagler should still be here, but he isn’t. But a lot of Marvelous Marvin’s great fights are. And for the great memories, we all owe him so much.

The wonderful Marvin Hagler – middleweight king from September 1980 to April 1987. 62-3-2(52).

What is your favorite Marvin Hagler fight?

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