Boxing History
An experienced writer recalls his first boxing show
Published
1 month agoon
AUGUST 18, 1969 will be the 55th anniversary of my first professional boxing appearance. Unfortunately, I haven’t kept an exact count of how many times I’ve visited since then, but it’s secure to say that few people have visited more.
There were legendary fights that this writer watched from the stands, such as the Fight of the Century between Muhammad Ali and Joe Frazier, Roberto Duran lifting the world lightweight title from Ken Buchanan, and the miraculous comeback of Diego Corrales stopping Jose Luis Castillo. But this is the first show and the people who boxed during it will always hold a special place in my heart.
The modern Madison Square Garden had opened just over a year earlier. On this August Monday evening, it was still the Mecca of boxing. But not all performances in the hallowed arena were huge. Many relied solely on the live goal, even some at MSG.
All the men boxing that night had dreams. For some, fate will be kind. Others later went the wrong way. But on this night, they all had one thing in common: they were allowed to go as far as their in-ring talents would allow them. What happened next to some of the contestants on the show is fascinating to look back on.
There were 7,000 people in attendance at MSG that evening and the upper balcony was closed, meaning even the economical seats weren’t bad. Tickets ranged from $3 to $10. I sat in the $3 seats as a content teenager who was just content to be in the arena.
The main event of the evening was the fight between George Foreman and Chuck Wepner. More on this later. But this is the first professional match I’ve seen that stands out, between heavyweights Randy Neumann and Jeff Marx. It was won by a first-round knockout of Neumann, who was making his debut that evening. Neumann had a solid career, never achieving contender status but being in good company. He lost two of three fights to Chuck Wepner, beat Jimmy Youthful on his way to the top, and was brutally stopped in four rounds by Duane Bobick.
The highlight of Neumann’s career was probably his appearance in the MSG main event against Jerry Quarry on January 5, 1973, and he was stopped in seven rounds. He finished with a record of 31-7, 11 KOs. Neumann gained notoriety as a referee, working several crucial matches. Among my souvenirs is an autographed photo of Neumann, showing him standing over Marx with the words “You were there.”
As for Marks, he never boxed again, finishing 2-1, 2 KOs. Decades later, I talked to author Ron Ross and learned that he managed Marx. Ross planned a victory party for Marks after the fight, which for obvious reasons didn’t take place.
I don’t remember the exact order of the fights, but of the six fights shown in the program, there was one that I don’t remember at all. The welterweight fight between Angel Jose Ortiz and Juan Rueda ended in a four-round draw. Since I arrived at MSG on time, I have to assume it was a strike after the main event, which was common at the time. I may have seen it, but I don’t remember. In any case, neither of them made it far in their careers.
Novel York delicate heavyweights Angel Oquendo and Charley Devil Green fought a thrilling eight-round fight, which was a rematch from two years ago. Oquendo won this one and it seemed like he won this one too, but the judges thought otherwise. Green rocked Oquendo at one point, but I thought he looked overworked. Back then, fights in Novel York were scored based on rounds. I had it 5-2-1 for Oquendo, but Green managed to avoid a decision with a majority of 4-3-1, 4-3-1 and 4-4.
As for Oquendo, he became a respected journeyman, boxing 19 times over the next seven years before calling it a 27-20-1, 6 KO career. Oquendo mixed in elite company with the likes of Victor Galindez, Vicente Rondon and Marvin Camel, going the distance more often than not.
It is questionable whether Green should have been allowed to box Oquendo on the show. Just a month earlier, he had been knocked out in two rounds by Jose Torres in bizarre circumstances. Green was an emergency replacement that night for Jimmy Ralston, who left the arena and headed back to Buffalo mid-performance.
Green followed up his Oquendo win with several more, which earned him a spot in the main event at MSG against former heavyweight champion Floyd Patterson. Green was stopped with a body shot in 10 rounds. This began a disastrous decline in both his professional and personal life. He never won another match, losing his last nine.
The last fight was against Larry Holmes, who stopped Green in one. Green’s final record was a misleading record of 13-15, 8 KOs, after losing his last nine fights. Outside the ring it was worse. In 1983, the drug-crazed Green was convicted of triple murder. He spent the rest of his life in prison and died in 2014 at the age of 75.
Undefeated in 19 fights, Garden matchmaker Teddy Brenner had huge plans for Puerto Rican heavyweight Pedro Agosto. These plans largely went to waste when the once potential Forest Ward landed miniature to the side of Agosto’s jaw, knocking him to his knee. Agosto stood up very unsteadily, jumping up and down, trying to get his legs straight.
But when the action resumed, he fell again just as Forrest attacked. At this point, referee Davey Feld stopped the match, much to the chagrin of Brenner, who felt he had abandoned the match too early. I remember thinking it was stopped sooner than it should have been, but not in such an egregious way.
Brenner never forgave Feld. When he learned that the referee had been assigned to officiate the Patterson-Green game, he used his influence on the committee to replace him. Furious, Feld refused to accept this and literally took matters into his own hands, heading to the ring in a referee’s uniform, determined to put up a fight. However, security intercepted Feld and carried him out of the ring. He never fought another fight.
Ward has never relied on results. Two months later, he was stopped by Canadian Bill Dover and retired with a record of 8-2-2.
As for Agosto, he was never the same, losing to Wepner before the end of the year, but managed to blend into elite company, being retained by the likes of Foreman, Patterson and Leon Spinks. Agosto’s final score was 28-14-1, 22 KOs.
A high-class competitor in eight rounds, Jeff Merritt overtook Henry Clark in eight rounds by scores of 6-2, 6-2 and 5-3 (same as me). The year before, Clark was a contender and some predicted he would beat Sonny Liston in the fight, but he was dominated and stopped after seven rounds.
From that point on, the California heavyweight became something of a journeyman goalie, racking up some handy victories, such as icing Merritt 47 seconds into the 1974 rematch, but being unable to compete with the division’s elite fighters like Ken Norton and Earnie Shavers. Clark retired with a record of 32-12-4, 9 KOs.
Merritt’s career turned out to be a great mystery. Promoted by Don King and serving as Muhammad Ali’s sparring partner, Merritt was a heavyweight with great potential who never quite broke through. Four years later, he stopped Ernie Terrell in the round at Madison Square Garden, but his defeat was due to problems with substance abuse. He never became a grave contender, ending his career with a record of 22-3-1, 17 KOs. Merritt just disappeared, a real loser.
Which brings us to the main event of Foreman vs. Wepner. It was Foreman’s fourth fight since turning professional two months earlier. Wepner was already a seasoned professional who had boxed 25 times, winning the most, but was outclassed against a superior opponent such as Buster Mathis, who stopped him in three.
As expected, the two met head-to-head from the opening bell of the scheduled eight-round fight. Foreman was very raw, but his talent level was clearly superior to Wepner, who was the prototypical club player at the time. True to his nickname, “Bleeder Bayonne,” Wepner was stopped in three rounds.
Foreman (76-5, 68 KO), of course, won the heavyweight division twice in dramatic fashion. He first knocked out Joe Frazier in 1973, which was considered a major upset at the time. His title loss to Ali in Zaire in 1974 is considered one of the more legendary fights in boxing history.
Foreman’s return from a 10-year absence from the ring, culminating in regaining the heavyweight title at the age of 45, is an inspiring story that is unparalleled. Who would have thought that the great, rugged heavyweight, then only 20 years venerable, would enjoy the status and popularity he eventually achieved. Ironically, Foreman made more money outside the ring as a pitcher for his barbecue machines than he ever made in it, selling his stake in the company for a reported $137 million.
Wepner’s tendency to cut back haunted him in subsequent fights, where he was stopped by Sonny Liston and Joe Bugner. Chuck was still considered a club fighter when he unexpectedly got the chance to win the heavyweight crown against Al in 1975. Rising to the challenge, Wepner had the fight of his life, but was unsuccessful as he was stopped with just 19 seconds to go. go in the 15th round.
A newborn actor, Sylvester Stallone, was sitting in the stands. He was so inspired by Wepner’s work that he wrote a screenplay based on it, which became the basis for the Oscar-winning film “Rocky”. If Wepner hadn’t boxed Ali and put in as much effort as he could, it’s more likely that the Rocky movies wouldn’t have been made at all. This in itself makes Wepner’s contribution to boxing legendary.
There’s something special about the first boxing show any of us ever attended. It stays with us for life.
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Boxing History
Mike Tyson’s biggest knockouts! – Latest boxing news
Published
17 hours agoon
November 14, 2024As we all anxiously await the fight that will take place on Friday night in Texas, when the remnants of Mike Tyson will face the much fresher, but also somewhat ordinary (in terms of boxing skills, not business sense and acumen) Jake Paul, many boxing websites have been busy taking a walk down memory lane and reminiscing about “Iron Mike’s” best moments.
It’s a lot of fun ranking Tyson’s most terrifying knockouts and his deadliest displays of skillful workmanship. Tyson was exceptional in the 1980s and early 1990s, and his terrifying mix of speed and power was too much for so many high-profile fighters. Tyson was also entertained when he was in (all too brief) great form, as the following knockouts remind us.
Tyson’s 5 greatest hits!
1: KO 2 by Trevor Berbick.
Tyson was able to defeat better, better fighters than Berbick, but his coronation, which occurred at the tender age of 20, was unique and unforgettable. Tyson, with his burning hands and razor-sharp reflexes befitting “bad intentions,” ruined a good, tough heavyweight. And Tyson did it in a terrifying and humiliating way. Who can forget how Berbick fell time and time again after one punch from Tyson! His senses gone, Berbick was toasted within two rounds.
2: KO 1 Michael Spinks.
Absolute pinnacle Mike Tyson, that’s what the experts say and say. Before the “Once and For All” unification showdown, some good judges picked the undefeated Spinks as the winner. Instead, Tyson, who famously “punched holes in the dressing room wall” before the fight, annihilated Spinks in 91 seconds. Yes, Spinks, the former lithe heavyweight king who rose to dethrone Larry Holmes and become the heavyweight boss, was terrified when he entered the ring, but the way Tyson’s devastating punches were delivered, would it have made much of a difference if Spinks had entered the ring? ring? ring ready for battle?
3: KO 4 by Larry Holmes.
Holmes was 38 years venerable, had been inactive for several years, and Larry only came back for the money. Still, after his fourth-round KO, Tyson is the only man to ever knock out Holmes. And when we remember what Holmes did after his date ended in disaster (winning against Ray Mercer, Holmes pushing Evander Holyfield and Oliver McCall quite tough in their world title fights), it becomes clear that Tyson destroyed a fighter who was far from shot. This 1988 fight really makes the fan wonder what Tyson’s encounter with the peak Holmes might have been like……
4: KO 6 Pinklon Thomas.
Tyson’s combinations have never been more impressive and ruthless. In brief, Tyson blew the game away, having once defeated “Pinky” with everything he had in his wicked arsenal: hooks, body shots, uppercuts, lefts and rights. And the final 16-punch combination in which Tyson crushed Thomas amazingly highlighted how astonishingly true Tyson’s deadly hands were.
5: KO 1 Marvis Frazier.
The most devastating 30 seconds of Tyson’s career? Maybe. Marvis was no Joe, and his pop was later heavily criticized for putting his son on Tyson’s team. On this night, however, “Kid Dynamite” was behaving like a beast, and his power shots left Frazier, a good boxer, in a half-sitting position, his head getting punched over and over again. Tyson was speedy, wild and ruthless. Tyson really smoked that night.
Boxing History
25 years ago: Lennox Lewis and Evander Holyfield and their “unfinished business”
Published
2 days agoon
November 13, 2024Not long after the stink died down and the outrage at least partially calmed down, everyone in the boxing world knew there would have to be a rematch. It was on this day, a quarter of a century ago, that heavyweight kings Lennox Lewis and Evander Holyfield met again in a fight dubbed “Unfinished Business.”
The draw, which had taken place earlier in March of the same year, had thrown the boxing world into a real state of confusion, anger and suspicions of corruption. Don King, Holyfield’s promoter, bore most of the burden. But the March fight, in which Lewis won fairly comfortably all but two of the three judges, was not under King’s control. Two judges simply behaved poorly. As a result, both men returned home claiming to be the heavyweight ruler.
But what will happen in the sequel? Surely Lennox, the bigger and younger man, would get the victory this time, a deserved victory? Perhaps it will be by KO or stoppage.
The rematch took place in Las Vegas, Fresh York, not in the mood to host a sequel. Lewis was now 34 years elderly and in great shape. The current WBC champion had a record of 34-1-1(27). Holyfield, who had achieved so much in the sport at both cruiserweight and heavyweight, was now 37 years elderly and had a record of 36-3-1(25).
This time the fans got a good fight and, ironically, a much fiercer fight than the so-called draw fight. Holyfield, always exceptional in rematches, lost the first rounds, but in the middle rounds “The Real Deal” occurred and he scored points. Lewis was cautious when many people thought he would pick the brute and win by KO without a doubt. It was a good fight and the seventh round was exceptional in terms of double action.
Lewis won most of the championship rounds, with the 12th and final round split by three judges. Once again, everything was decided on the cards and this time Lewis won by scores of 117-111, 116-112 and 115-113.
Some eminent reporters had a victory at Holyfield, such as Briton Colin Hart. But Lewis was now the undisputed ruler of the heavyweight division, and his career was at its peak. There will be no third fight. Both men, of course, continued to fight. Lewis defended his title three times before being sensationally upset by Hasim Rahman. Lennox gained revenge via KO and then defended the title three times. Whatever; Lewis was stripped of his WBA belt shortly after defeating Holyfield.
Evander continued to fight for some time after losing to Lewis, becoming the first-ever four-time heavyweight champion by defeating John Ruiz and winning Lewis’ stripped WBA belt.
Two great warriors, each with a different style and personality. It’s up for grabs as to who is the better player of the two – Lewis or Holyfield.
Lewis retired with a record of 41-2-1(32). Holyfield left with a mark of 44-10-2(29).
Boxing History
28 years ago: Sky Sports ‘Judgment Night’ marathon!
Published
5 days agoon
November 9, 2024And we think that today we will have a great marathon, all-night fight cards! Well, here we are, saying what you want (and have said) about Turki Alalshikh and his seemingly hellish desire to “take over” boxing. Still, we had some great stacked fight cards thanks to a Saudi financier’s involvement in our great sport (let’s just hope it always remains ours for all to enjoy and respect).
But there have been great all-night parties before – many times. But one of the very special, most memorable and outstanding all-night boxing events worth the money took place on this day in 1996. Slightly older UK fight fans may remember where they were on Judgment Night – November 9, 1996.
Sky Sports was still up-to-date to the UK at the time, while pay-per-view services were even newer and cheaper than they would become. But regardless of the price, fight fans knew they could NOT miss it. This bill. Live, from the comfort of their front rooms, millions of British boxing fans made themselves comfortable, ordered pints and takeaways and watched the action:
From the Nynex Arena in Manchester:
Ronald Winky Wright Ensley Bingham Fight
Naseem Hamed vs. Remigio Molina
Danny Williams Michael Murray fight
Steve Collins Nigel Benn fight (rematch)
Herbie Hide vs. Frankie Swindell
Michael Brodie Miguel Matthews Fight.
Then from MGM in Las Vegas:
Scott Welch Daniel Eduardo Netto Fight
Christy Martin vs. Bethany Payne
Henry Akinwande vs. Alexander Zhovkin
Michael Moorer Frans Botha fight
Mike Tyson vs. Evander Holyfield.
Phew!
And on top of a yearly subscription, it was all available to fight fans in the UK for just £10! Of course, the Tyson fight really got us all involved. So many of us, in fact almost all of us, felt that Tyson would almost kill Holyfield – the brave fighter who had recently suffered a “heart attack” and who was now being “fed” with the “better than ever” Tyson. I remember almost getting laughed at in the pub the night before the fight. This suggests that Holyfield may have a chance against Tyson!
It was depressed to see Nigel Benn end at the hands of the teak-proof Collins, while ‘Prince’ Naseem was established as a massive star in the UK. It was great to see the wonderful Winky Wright box in the UK, which was avoided by the elite as Winky was in the US, you might say, dodged. Herbie Hide has always been entertaining, while Danny Williams, like Mike Tyson, is still fighting (or trying to do so) today!
Women’s boxing was still too up-to-date for most of us to appreciate and understand, but Christy Martin proved to be a true pioneer who changed our perception when it came to watching women fight in the ring. Michael Moorer, of course best known then as now for being on the wrong side of George Foreman’s punch for the ages (or ages) in November 1994, put in a fine performance against a stubborn but ultimately held off Botha.
And then came the BIG one. Tyson vs. Tyson Holyfield – “Finally!”
It was already early morning in the UK, but none of us at my party were thinking about going to sleep. Accompanied on screen by superstars Barry McGuigan, Paul Dempsey and Emanuel Steward (who gave excellent interviews during the long broadcast), we were all wide awake when Tyson entered the ring. Quite amazingly, Tyson was met with a few boos mixed with cheers. Holyfield was a hero and plenty of fans were rooting for him to become an even bigger hero.
And it happened. Holyfield shocked, stunned, excited and moved us when he fought one of his best fights, defeating Tyson. Knocking Tyson down, punching him, beating Tyson, and then, in the 11th round, stopping the man he had always wanted to fight, “The Real Deal” was a hit, a puncher, on top of the world. It was a great moment, the culmination of a truly great, multi-hour thriller marathon or fight night.
“Judgment Night”.
Where were you and do you still clearly remember the magical glow that illuminated us that night 28 years ago?
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