Boxing History
That day: Frank Bruno was born in 1961
Published
2 days agoon

Frank Bruno was born on November 16, 1961. He grew up with five siblings in Wandsworth, where his parents settled after moving from the Caribbean. Depressed by the temptations of a diminutive crime, Bruno found relief in the gym, and from the age of 14 he gave his energy to his muscles.
Until 1980, Bruno won the championship in hefty weight ABA and developed an amateur record of 20-1.
On March 17, 1982, Bruno abandoned the merit of the amateur ranks and became a professional. His first opponent was Lupe Guerra at Royal Albert Hall. Bruno won in the round. Many called a pliable operator for London, but the Mexican was a popular choice for talented. Over the next three years, Guerra was detained by the upcoming Tony Tucker, the past of Jerry Kamieniołom and the returning Leon Spinks.
The quality of the Bruno opposition was criticized by his entire career. The first perceived test took place in 1983, in its 15th Bout, against the disappearing pretender for Fringe, Scott Ledoux. The Canadian lost in seven rounds with Larry Holmes in the title of WBC the shot three years earlier and did not fight again after Bruno hit him in three. After Ledoux – who also faced the anger of Ron Lyle, Ken Norton, Greg Page, Gerrie Coetzee and Mike Weaver – announced the most hard Bruno strokes.
The crisis almost hit in October 1983 against the muscular American Floyd “Jumbo” Cummings. A resident of Chicago had an aging Joe Frazier for a draw in 1981, but since then he has not won – against good opposition. When the opening round came to an end, Bruno struck badly from the massive right hand and hit his corner like a whipped man. Admittedly, he fought, winning in seventh place, but his reaction to this early blow haunted him for the rest of his career.
In May 1984, Bruno lost for the first time, throwing out the huge points that lead to James “Bonecrusher” Smith, who stopped the British in the final round. Bruno dominated his brilliant stab for nine rounds, but he fell under an unexpected dam in 10th.
Bruno’s second defeat took place two years later. He rebuilt for Bonecrushing, defeating Anders Ekludd for the European title and former master Gerrie Coetzee. But in July 1986, the WBA master Tim Witherspoon survived the thrilling challenge before he stopped Bruno in 11th session. Bruno again showed weakness under fire.
The bitten Bruno was already extremely popular and soon returned to the competition. In February 1989 he was adapted to the fear of a heavyweight leader, Mike Tyson. It started badly – it was within 30 seconds – but he arose and shook the allegedly invincible man before the end of the opening round. But his challenge eventually ended in a failure when the newborn Slayer overpowered Substantial Frank in five.
Another opportunity for world glory capitulated in 1993, when Counthman and the head of WBC Lennox Lewis recovered from a snail-paced start and defeated a unique boxing from his opponent, he battered Bruno in the seventh round.
If you are not successful at the beginning, try again. Bruno, to the joy of the nation, won the global heavyweight version in 1995, defeating Oliver McCall through Nerva, but she deserved exactly the 12-round decision at Wembley. Bruno was perfect, but his success was compact -lived when Tyson broke the title of WBC the following year in three rounds. It was the most one -sided defeat of his career and after revealing an eye injury, Frank Ememerce. Away from the ring Bruno fought to cope with the launch of depression. The Englishman is still fighting demons.
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Boxing History
That day – Larry Holmes overcomes the fight against Bonecrusher Smith to win the first fight for the title IBF
Published
1 hour agoon
June 2, 2025
Larry Holmes in RSF 12 James “Bonecrusher” Smith
November 9, 1983; Riviera Hotel, Las Vegas, NV
Holmes, weighty weight number one in the world, gave the crawling IBF shot in the shoulder, parade as their master after he abandoned the title of WBC. Holmes was to face John Tate first, and then it was impossible to finalize the proposed fight with the head of WBA Gerrie Coetzee. So James “Bonecrusher” Smith, freshly after the last victory of Breath with Frank Bruno, was initiated. Holmes survived very terrifying moments before the end of cases in 12 ..
Do you know? Holmes would infirmly destroy the memory of the rocky Marciano after a defeat with Michael Spinks in 1985, ended the hopes for equalizing the Marciano 49-0 record. Before Smith’s fight, the seeds were sewn for this explosion when he raised Marciano’s certificates.
Watch out for: You will be able to watch Mike Weavera’s fight with Tony Anthony from Undercard. After the bell, to finish the first round, Anthony Cracks Weaver with his right hand, chasing him (although Weaver means his own business while returning to the stool), leaves him again, drops him strenuous and is disqualified.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xfvvujiijsu&t=4859s
Boxing History
When Chris Finnegan was one fight from a lucrative rematch with Bob Foster
Published
14 hours agoon
June 2, 2025
This week in 1972. In 1972. In 1972, in 1972 there were a number of talents in Wembley. Chris Finnegan and his brother Kevin (future British and European average medium title), European heavyweight ruler, Joe Bugner and future world champion John Conteh and Alan Minter were on the card. Chris was at the top of the bill in a fight, which promised to bring him to the second match for the title of world champion with the legendary Bob Foster. In his first title, less than two months earlier, he lost bravely in 14 rounds to support.
Finnegan manager, Burns himself, claimed that fatigue was partly guilty for the loss and said that his man would be better in return. Bob was reserved for two weeks, and therefore to a match in ponderous weight with Muhammad Ali, but was open to a rematch with Finnegan, who was still positioned as his competition. The British Harry Levene organized a potential fight in London, while the Detroit promoter offered Chris 39,000 pounds for a fight, provided he defeated his next opponent, German champion Rudiger Schmidtke. Schmidtke was a solid 25-3-3, but he never went outside Germany and was considered a low-risk opponent to the British.
Finnegan began as a favorite favorite, and in the first five rounds these chances looked justified. Schmidtke, blonde hair was a male model, seemed disturbing Chris forcing and edged blows. But the subtle change in sixth place began to shoot. Finnegan was still attacked, but he took too many meters. Streaming from his right eye, but he was still gathering, apparently elated that he took German blows to land.
In the 12th policy, this fundamental legitimacy when Finnegan approached the crashing right hand. The impact caused him to go back, and a few seconds later the blood sprayes from a wound crashing on his nose. Dr. Ringside looked at the injury and allowed him to continue the fight. But only briefly. As Chris accused in the hope that he would finish the case-his face is now bloody-bloody-mess-he landed more blows on the damaged priest. The judge rightly stopped the fight, thus releasing Finnegana from his European title and throwing all hope for a quick return with Foster.
On Undercard Joe Bugner stuck Tony Doyle from Utah to defeat in eight and Kevin Finnegan, the prevailing master of the Southern Medium Southern weight, he had a win in the win in Carlos Marks from Trinidad. Former Master ABA and bronze Olympic medalist Alan Minter performed miniature work on John Lowe Middlesbrough, forcing to intervene in the third match, and in the heavyweight match John Conteh Ko’d Johnny Hudgins with Miami in the same round.
Conteh and Chris Finnegan were on a collision course. After realizing that he was too airy to make a ponderous weight assessment (Ali apparently told him: “Get out of my division-you are too diminutive!”), Conteh would fall on a slight ponderous crown and took the senior European crown of Finnegan from Schmidtke to create Showdown with Chris to European, British and community. John would win this point and return a year later over space. In October 1974, Conteh reached the peak of sport when he defeated Jorge Ahumada for the empty WBC title.
Finnegan fought until 1975, when the detached volleyball forced him to box. In his last performance, he regained the British title of ponderous airy from “Gypsy” by Johnny Franham to win the Lonsdale belt. It was a proper ending of an outstanding career – a career that could have been circumscribed by the world crown, if not for his misfortune to the box in the era of the Great Bob Foster.

- Brian London (January 1959)
After he was overtaken by Joe Erskine in his first attempt to win the British heavyweight belt in September 1957, Cooper won the title in his second shot, ahead of the former victim of London. - Joe Erskine (November 1959)
In the third meeting, a couple Cooper won his first victory over Erskine, lost from the previous two competitions. In the 12th round of stopping Cooper stops the belt for the first time. - Joe Erskine (March 1961)
Cooper was holding his crown for the second time, forcing Erskine to retire with five frames. The victory also caused Cooper to receive after two wins in his series with Erskine. - Joe Erskine (April 1962)
The fifth and decisive fight between Cooper and Erskine went through Cooper’s path, with a nasty cutting of Erskine eyebrows, which leads to the detention of the ninth round and the third successful defense of Cooper. - Dick Richardson (March 1963)
Despite the fact that they had to fight the cuts with both eyes, Cooper was able to maintain his master status for the fourth time. As he did during the first fight, Cooper defeated Richardson on the fifth. - Brian London (February 1964)
London suffered a third loss from the hands of Cooper in a one -sided trilogy. The point triumph for Cooper meant the title number Friday. - Johnny Prescott (June 1965)
One knocking out in the eighth round and two more in 10. He eliminated the fight against Prescott, which did not come out at 11. It was the sixth opportunity in which Cooper kept the belt. - Jack Bodell (June 1967)
The seventh triumphant defense of Cooper was also the fastest, because the collection of sticking left hooks on the head caused the bodell stop in the second session. - Billy Walker (November 1967)
Almost nine years after he became a champion, Cooper referred another claimant to his throne, stopping Walker in the sixth to equalize his eighth successful defense. - Jack Bodell (March 1970)
Because Cooper left this title, Bodell won the empty championship, defeating Carl Gizzi in October 1969. Then Cooper became a two -time letter through Bodell.
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