Boxing History
22 years ago: the chicken dance was born! Kostya Tzsyu vs. Zab Juda
Published
5 months agoon
By
J. HumzaRemember when Douglas handed Tyson his ego in a takeaway box? Or when Holyfield gave Tyson a dish that tastes best… bitten? Those were the days, right? If you’ve been around Judy vs. Tszyu fought 22 years ago, you will remember it as the night when Judy’s beard checked out early and with his fists Tszyu wrote a check that Judy’s mouth couldn’t cash. It was the fight that sent boxing fans into a frenzy – Zab “Super” Judah, undefeated and brilliant with 21 KOs under his belt, against Kostya “The Thunder from Down Under” Tszyu, a man with a placid demeanor and an almost equally brilliant record.
While he was getting ready, Zab was too busy staring at his reflection to notice Tszyu. And speaking of reflections, to see Zab is to understand this man – raised in Brooklyn, whose speech is as fluid as his footwork, or at least he thinks so. In the interview, he was so confident of his victory that he might as well have asked Tszyu to send him the belts. “Winner takes all,” he said.
Zab was too busy polishing his own legend to notice that Tszyu was quietly fueling the machine of his own destruction. The man from Down Under was obviously underrated, but he was about to open a can of terrible taste that would send shockwaves through the boxing world.
When asked about a possible rematch with Tszyu should he win, Judy’s response dripped with an arrogance that would irritate a saint: “I said winner takes all, you know what I’m saying.” It’s this attitude, folks, that can turn cheers into jeers in the blink of an eye.
Tszyu? He played it cold, supporting Judah and assuring fans that it was more than just a warm-up performance. He may have been the underdog, but there was something about him that said he wasn’t just here to make up ground.
Judah’s entrance was less “gangsta” and more 4th of July parade, proudly parading the Stars and Stripes like a superhero cape. And who is in his corner? None other than the infamous Mike Tyson, because who else spells “gentlemanly conduct” like Iron Mike?
Tszyu entered the ring to the vocals of a lady whose fashion choices raised eyebrows higher than her vocal range. Song? A cheeky stunt about knocking someone out.
Judah came out in the first round and we all thought, “Here we go!” But if Tszyu were a book, its cover would read “Peace, Collection and Coming for You.” Tszyu, unimpressed with this pizza, acted like a hushed movie star and his actions spoke louder than Judy’s words.
Get to the second round and boy, the roles have been reversed! Tszyu, in a display of poetic brawling, offered a right hand that made Judah hit the canvas harder than a sack of potatoes thrown from a Soviet-era tractor. Judah’s recovery was a masterclass, a two-step swing that would make Charlie Chaplin stand up and clap. The “Chicken Judy Dance” was born!
The referee started counting, and before he hit four, Judah rose like toast from a toaster, only to stagger and fall again. It was like watching Bambi on ice – if Bambi was wearing boxing gloves and a look of utter disbelief. Judah staggered and stumbled, his legs apparently not communicating with his brain.
The aftermath was pure soap opera. Judah, now the horrible image of a man who had just been told his lottery win was a joke, threw a tantrum that would make a two-year-old blush. Judah won after judge Jay Nady and everything started spinning… chairs were flying, fists were waving – a real circus act, with Judah playing the role of a disgruntled clown.
And Tszyu? He was a placid emcee, basking in the glow of victory and undisturbed confusion. He was the eye of the storm – the placid, collected force that turned the boxing ring into a dance floor and Judah into a reluctant Tszyu Tango participant.
If Judas was escorted away by the police, still in a daze and denial, we all knew we had witnessed something special. It wasn’t just a fight; it was a lesson in humility, a warning about what happens when you let your mouth write checks that you can’t cash with your fists.
HBO’s Tim Smith conducted post-fight interviews.
Tim Smith: How hurt were you?
Zab Judah: (stammering in English) I mean… I’m fighting for the world title; I was hit with a good shot. But I got up without counting, that is, I fell, but I was definitely on top. I just feel like I wasn’t even given a chance or counted.
Tim Smith: There is no indefinite 8 meter in Nevada.
Zab Judah: He just stopped…4 and that’s it?
Tim Smith: So you thought it was an early stop?
Zab Judah: It was an early break… I mean… you see how quickly I pulled myself together and um, you know, I was ready to come back, you know what I mean?
Tim Smith: Did you get up too speedy?
Zab Judah: Yes, you know what I mean, yes, maybe due to inexperience I got up quickly, but soon after I was ready to go again, you know what I mean? He just waved his hand, it was crazy.
Tim Smith: OK, we’ll take a look at the knockdown, so tell me what’s going on, Zab? (Last fight scene shown)
Zab Judah: Okay, you know what I mean. (Stumbles over words) I backed off, I bet. I was hit with a good shot. I fell… maybe I got up too speedy…
Tim Smith: You’re a little wobbly…
Zab Judah: Yeah, I mean, you’re hurt… OK. I mean, okay, you know. I was unsure, you know what I mean? This is the kind of fight… I got up too speedy, you know… they have to give you time to get up… It’s not like some… you know… this is a world title fight.
Tim Smith: What do you tell the judge?
Zab Judah: He already stopped it… I said, why are you stopping it? You know what I mean… I saw players rolling around on the floor… he just never gave me a chance. However great this fight is. They should never have stopped it like that.
Tim Smith: But you were really shaky, Zab…
Zab Judah: Ok, I’m on the floor Tim… I can’t wobble on the floor, come on man, don’t try to be astute. Look, look, he didn’t even start to count me… look, look…
Tim Smith: Do you think he stopped because you fell a second time?
Zab Judah: I mean… I guess… I don’t know what the judge was thinking… listen, look, I’m back… I tell him, what are you doing? Hey, I can’t cry about this… you know what I mean… the only thing I can do is come back… I’m a juvenile player, Kostya Tszyu is a legend… you know what I mean? I’m just joyful to be there… Thank God no one got hurt… and I’ll be looking for revenge.
Tim Smith: After the fight, your emotions got the best of you and you went up and had a few words with the referee. Do you regret doing it?
Zab Judah: Yes, of course, I mean, you know what I’m saying… I have no intention of hurting anyone in a championship fight… it’s just an vital fight… and you have to I understand that in a substantial fight like this… the stakes are on the line… you have to understand that there are emotions involved, you know what I mean? So… whatever I did to the referee… or anyone else… I’m sorry for… (his coach can be heard in the background saying that the referee owes Zab an apology.)
Tim Smith: This was a highly anticipated match with a controversial ending. Would you like to see it again?
Zab Judah: Of course, I mean I’m the real champion… I’m pretty sure Kostya Tszyu is the real champion and I’m sure he wouldn’t want to win a fight like that… you know what I mean… it’s a mega fight… the best thing this division has to offer… I mean what are you going to do now… fight other fighters? I mean… I feel like we should do it again because we’re the best ever… it was a controversial fight, you know what I mean? Of course I fell, but I got up like the soldier I am. And maybe I overreacted a little, and I’m sorry about that, but I still could have continued. You have to feel me… in a substantial fight like that… emotions come into play… I mean for him to come and wave at me, I just thought, ‘It’s over, can’t it be over?’ I mean, it’s a mega fight, so I think it was inappropriate to stop it like that.
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Boxing History
30 Years Ago: George Foreman’s Final Redemption
Published
7 hours agoon
November 5, 2024We can never know for sure, and we may have no reason to even ask, but it’s entirely possible that if heavyweight legend George Foreman hadn’t done what he did on that day a full 30 years ago – and that would have ruined the odds and would have done the same Michael Moorer’s defending heavyweight champion “Large George” would never, ever find complete peace after what happened to him in Africa some 20 years earlier.
We all joyfully celebrate the 50th anniversary of the events of October 30 in Zaire, when the incomparable Muhammad Ali shocked the planet by beheading the 25-year-old Foreman to regain what was unjustly taken from him in 1967: namely the heavyweight world championship. Ali’s majesty still resonates, and rightly so.
But now it’s George’s turn.
Wearing the same swimming trunks that his much slimmer body wore in Africa, and, crazy enough, Ali’s former – and only – trainer, Angelo Dundee, this time working on his side, the 45-year-old Foreman challenged the undefeated two-division champion southpaw, Michael Moorer.
Moorer, who forged much of his talent in the hallowed halls of the Kronk gym, defeated Evander Holyfield to become heavyweight king. Foreman won our hearts (again) by pushing Holyfield to the end in his previous attempt to regain the title; a once grim ghetto bad guy losing a 12 round decision. Moorer went one better, picking up a close decision victory over Holyfield in 1994.
Now, in a fight dubbed “One for the Ages,” Foreman has taken us all back in time.
Heavily overmatched, overshot and faster than the 26-year-old Moorer (“George’s sweatshirts are older than Moorer,” joked HBO’s Larry Merchant), Foreman nonetheless groomed this first, and perhaps still, hotshot for the fall. Foreman was certainly being overtaken, but Moorer was made to work difficult. And the defending champion was gradually being attacked by Foreman and his still deadly hands.
Moorer spoke before the fight about his desire to become the first man to knock Foreman out – to knock out the beloved folk hero. Ali did the job largely through attrition tactics, but Moorer wanted to beat Foreman into true oblivion. And this desire costs him. That and Foreman’s clever, always astute tactics.
Teddy Atlas screamed at Moorer to stay away from Foreman’s right hand, but Moorer wasn’t listening. Or he was, but he had his own plan in mind (remember, the stubborn Moorer, in his up-and-down war with Bert Cooper, as he later said, you might say, boasted that the tactics that gave him victory after he was dressed was his own, not Emanuel Steward’s).
In any case, Moorer made a perilous mistake by straying a little too far into Foreman territory; into his striking range. Foreman landed a stiff right hand to the head and then another, a ’70s bomb that George was holding, that landed a little lower on Moorer’s head. On the chin. And just like that, Moorer was lying on the mat and seemed to be looking up, trying to figure out what the hell happened.
“It’s happened,” roared HBO’s Jim Lampley. Foreman knelt in the corner, thanking his Master.
Today, 30 years later, fight fans remain grateful and moved by what Foreman gave us in Las Vegas. Ali came full circle by beheading Foreman in 1974, and then, 20 years later, Foreman himself came full circle by beheading Moorer.
The best memories.
Boxing History
Heavyweight great Larry Holmes turns 75, and Holmes boxed 75 times as a professional!
Published
2 days agoon
November 3, 2024Former heavyweight king Larry Holmes celebrates his 75th birthday today, and that all-important number has added significance because it just so happens that the “Easton Killer” boxed exactly 75 times as a professional. Holmes, who boxed from 1973 to 2002 and who retired from the sport with a final record of 69-6(44), ruled the heavyweight world from June 1978 to September 1985.
Holmes is today considered one of the best, most talented, toughest and bravest massive men in the history of the division. Holmes is also unique for his incredible left jab, arguably the BEST ever, and for his sometimes almost supernatural regenerative powers.
Holmes’ stab was a thing of beauty, and the weapon stunned and even charmed his opponent. Holmes’ ability to recover after raw, chin-slapping bombs from Earnie Shavers and Renaldo Snipes crushed him remains the stuff of legend. But it’s all true, Holmes somehow not only survived after top-scoring Shavers and Snipes, but rose to win by stoppage.
Holmes also gave us what probably ranks as the greatest round in heavyweight history, an epic one, and it all came in the 15th round of his war with Ken Norton. Yes, Holmes was special. Holmes never shied away from anyone, reigning for over seven years, and the fighter from Easton, Pennsylvania, racked up an impressive 20 world titles.
Among the great fighters Holmes defeated during his long career:
Shavers
Norton
Mike Weaver
Snipes
Gerry Cooney
Randy “Tex” Cobb
Tim Witherspoon
James “Bonecrusher” Smith
Carl Williams.
And of course, when Holmes finally lost both his grip on the heavyweight crown and his undefeated record, it came after his most controversial decision, a 15-round loss to Michael Spinks. The rematch resulted in an even more controversial decision, with Spinks defeating Holmes again. Retreating with a bad taste in his mouth, Holmes returned, his attacks coming at the peak of Mike Tyson. We all felt that was the end. But surprisingly, Holmes, a natural fighter, was back again, with no fewer than 24 additional fights under his belt after the Tyson disaster. Holmes earned the title back twice, winning hard-fought decisions in honorable performances against Evander Holyfield and then Oliver McCall.
Holmes’ last massive win came in 1992 when he upset Ray Mercer. Holmes was 42 years ancient at the time. Stopping only once, when he entered the ring rusty before the Tyson fight, Holmes had one of the best chins in heavyweight history. And that jab… and that ability to come back when she gets hurt… and that title defense… and that pretty amazing list of defeated opponents.
Yes, Larry Holmes is a very special player.
This month, sitting unnoticed at York Hall was a former player who once made as many headlines as Chris Eubank and Nigel Benn.
Writers have made comparisons between Colin “Sweet C” McMillan and Sugar Ray Leonard.
“When I was growing up, my inspirations were Muhammad Ali and Sugar Ray Leonard,” said McMillan, a former WBO featherweight champion, now 58.
“Ali and Leonard were smart fighters, fighters who punched and didn’t get hit.”
At his peak, McMillan was almost untouchable, as Dennis Adams knows better than anyone.
Adams and McMillan fought countless rounds of sparring when both were trained by the overdue Howard Rainey.
They stayed in touch after their boxing careers ended, and McMillan now works as an advisor to Adams’ son, Billy, who he saw win all six rounds against Marvin Solano at York Hall this month to improve to 4-0.
“His jab was like lightning,” recalled Dennis Adams of his sparring sessions with McMillan.
“The gym used to say, ‘When you feel it, throw it.’ As soon as he hit you, you had to throw him. If you had waited a split second, he would have been gone.
Those he didn’t hit had doubts about McMillan.
The Boxing News headline before his fight with Maurizio Stecca for the WBO featherweight championship in May 1992 read: “Fighter Or Phoney?”
There were those who considered McMillan a fraud in this most arduous business. He was too shrewd, too pretty and too nice for boxing.
“My parents wanted me to go to university and become a lawyer or an accountant,” he said, but instead he struggled for money and had the confidence to take on the venture.
“I had problems in the boxing world,” he said, “because I wanted to take more control of my career.
“I went to the promoters and asked, ‘What can you do for me?’ and they didn’t like it because they were used to deciding.
“But if you’re a fighter who has some potential, you can take care of yourself and still be successful.
“I talked to many former champions and learned from their mistakes.
“I wanted to be in control of my career so that when it all ended, I wouldn’t have anyone else to blame. I wanted to make all the decisions.
“Sweet C” was good enough to do it and attracted celebrities to the ring who loved his lisping suaveness and breathtaking skills.
Coming off an early defeat to capable north London midfielder Alan McKay, McMillan took the British featherweight title from Gary DeRoux in May 1991.
“I remember being told before the fight, ‘He doesn’t like pressure being put on him,’” DeRoux recalled, “but it’s challenging to execute your game plan when you’re getting hit with quick shots from behind the scenes.” all angles.”
What was better was that 26-year-old McMillan challenged Stecca at the Alexandra Pavilion.
The Italian won gold at the 1984 Los Angeles Olympics, and in 45 previous professional fights he had only been beaten by high-class cinematographer Louie Espinoza.
Stecca reigned as WBO champion for the second time, winner of six of seven world title fights and known as a boxer who made few mistakes.
Promoter Frank Warren had enough faith in McMillan to pay Stecca handsomely to come to north London and voluntarily defend his championship.
Stecca “Sweet C” achieved such versatility that he became arguably the top British boxing star of the time.
“I had a great time,” McMillan said. “Chris Eubank, Nigel Benn were there and my name was there with them. I was in good company.”
The performance against Stecca was compared to British champions of previous eras.
“Master McMillan’s show is a throwback to the days of Winstone, Buchanan,” we read on the front page of Boxing News after McMillan’s masterclass.
For all his experience, Stecca had no answer to what Jim Watt described in commentary for ITV as “perfect boxing” from the challenger.
Already after the bell that ended the second second, the Italian expressed his frustration, and McMillan never allowed him to fight.
Time and time again, Stecca missed and ate the pricks. McMillan barely threw a right hand until the final rounds. He didn’t have to.
“This evening was the culmination of all the years of challenging work by both amateur and professional,” McMillan said, “and I was perfectly prepared for it.
“I didn’t want to miss my chance.
“I wanted to show everyone that I am the best in the world. I have always been very competitive and wanted to be the best.
“I went in there, took control and put on a show. I controlled the pace. I fought my fight.”
McMillan won by eight rounds on two cards, two on the second, and what’s more, he left the ring without a trace.
This night looked like a possible platform for McMillan. Instead, it turned out to be the highlight.
McMillan was ruled out of his first defense with a shoulder injury in the eighth round against underrated Colombian Ruben Dario Palacio.
After seven arduous rounds, McMillan was ahead on all three scorecards.
“I was in good shape and so much was expected of me,” McMillan said. “There was talk of fighting for unification [WBC champion] Paul Hodkinson.”
McMillan finally got a chance to regain his world title. Palacio tested positive for HIV just 48 hours before his scheduled defense against John Davison, with Welshman Steve Robinson stepping in to fight the North East crowd favorite for the vacant belt.
Boxing without nerves Robinson, whose record was an unflattering 13-9-1, won a deserved split decision. In his first defense, he faced McMillan and defeated him on points.
“After the shoulder popped out, I was never the same again,” McMillan said. “I became British champion but I wasn’t the same player anymore. A shoulder injury interrupted my career.”
The end came after Paul Ingle took the British title in January 1997.
“I’m philosophical about it,” said McMillan, who finished with a 31-4 (14) record.
“Looking back on it, I’m glad the shoulder injury happened after winning the world title and not before it.
“My goal has always been to go to the Olympics and win the world title. I didn’t go to the Olympics, but I beat the Olympic champion and won the world title.
“I know I could have achieved bigger and better things. But it wasn’t meant to be.
McMillan sees similarities between himself and Billy Adams, the stylish southerner from Upminster who won all 18 rounds he boxed as a professional.
“Billy’s dream was to go to the Olympics,” he said, “and that was my dream too.
“Billy couldn’t keep that weight. It wasn’t supposed to be for either of us.
Although he didn’t make the Olympics, Adams gained international experience with Great Britain during his 53-7 amateur career and showed his skills coaching the threatening Solano.
“I watched a lot of Billy’s amateur fights,” McMillan said. “I saw it had potential.”
McMillan thought he was done with boxing management after working with Audley Harrison early in his professional career, as well as Terry Dunstan, “Mighty” Joe Youthful and Nigel Benn’s cousins Paul and Michael Bowen.
Since 2012 he has focused on the Colin McMillan Boxing Training Academy based at the Redbridge Sports and Recreation Center and also visits local schools to promote the values of boxing.
McMillan received the British Empire Medal in the 2019 Up-to-date Year’s Honors list in recognition of his charitable work, before returning to professional boxing with Hamzah Sheeraz and his cousin Umar Khan.
“I still go to shows and do a dinner show once a year for the Barking Amateur Boxing Club,” he said.
“Hamzah’s dad, Kam, is energetic among amateurs [with Five Star ABC] and he wanted me to see Hamzah and Umar.
“I saw them working, I talked to them and I said, ‘Yes.’ I came as a technical advisor and mentor.
“I give them some technical tips and advice about life outside of boxing.
“I have been with them for four or five years. It’s electrifying to be able to fight some talented fighters again.”
Sheeraz said: “I watched Colin fight and he was restless and swift. Boxing is like chess and the key is to think a move or two ahead. You don’t want them to know what you’re going to do next.
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