hears vs hagler rounds 1-3 are the greatest hree rounds of all time.
No they aren't.
Round 2 featured a rubbery legged Hearns trying to use movement, but failing to do so without Hagler getting to him. Round 3 was more of the same.
If not for the magnitude of the event, Hagler-Hearns was probably not a better 3 round fight than the Tim Littles-Frankie Liles rematch.
......
There were rounds like that in Briggs- Liakovich?
Or are you thinking of Liakovich- Brewster
Or are you being sarcastic?
he is definetlyh talkin about lyko-brewster. there were some tremendous action rounds in that fight.
or maybe hes talking about the 12 round... that was pretty good...
I don't remember what round in Briggs-Liakhovich they both were beating the crap out of each other the most... But you could probably stick in one of those rounds somewhere.
......
There were rounds like that in Briggs- Liakovich?
Or are you thinking of Liakovich- Brewster
Or are you being sarcastic?
I don't remember what round in Briggs-Liakhovich they both were beating the crap out of each other the most... But you could probably stick in one of those rounds somewhere.
Most saad muhammad fights should make this list.
How did u guys forget about round 15 between larry holmes and ken norton. That was some crazy shit, it put holmes on the map.
Good read.
I have the Shavers-Williams fight somewhere but I haven't seen it in years.
I've only seen highlights of the LaMotta comeback, not the whole fight or even the whole 15th round.
Matthew S. Muhammad was such an entertaining fighter. He was taking just hammering to the body by Lopez on the ropes before turning it around.
muhammad had to have had the greatest heart in boxing history. Certainly top 5 EVER.
Its not a coincidence that the most entertaining fighters are the ones who show the most heart.
Ted The Bull's Five Favorite Rounds (FROM HIS WEB SITE)
1. Round 10 of the Diego Corrales- Jose Luis Castillo battle in 2005: With his left eye almost totally closed and already down twice in the 10th, Corrales miraculously climbed off the deck and battered Jose Luis Castillo into submission along the ropes to score one of the most dramatic TKO's in boxing history. Ring Magazine Fight of the Year and Round of the Year. “All the nobility, all the savagery, and all the brutality of boxing was captured in one three-minute round Saturday night.” – Ron Borges/Boston Globe
2. The 15th round of the 1950 Jake LaMotta-Laurent Dauthuille championship fight was unparralelled for its ending when LaMotta,. playing possum, suddenly erupts and takes out Dauthuille with only 13 seconds left. He was trailing on the scorecards at the time he staged this miraculous 15th-round knockout to retain his Middelweight belt. Scoring at time of knockout: 72-68, 74-66, 71-69 Dauthuille. It was named the 1950 Fight of the Year and Round of the Year.
3. The ninth round of the Roy "Tiger" Williams- Earnie Shavers fight on December 11, 1976 saw a big change both ways (but it was the 10th that was memorable). The Tiger started strong in the ninth and landed a number of solid shots He seemed in charge but then tired midway though the round and Ernie came on, bombing away and Roy had to hold on and regroup. With about a minute to go, it happened. Roy snapped off one of the hardest left hooks I have ever seen and staggered Earnie who was now in big trouble. Ernie had no answer and likely was saved by the bell. He staggered back to his corner a very tired boxer.
The 10th and last round began and Shavers came out visibly exhausted while Williams appeared confident and ready to end matters and finally emerge as a serious heavyweight contender. He quickly moved Earnie into a corner and applied brutal, non- stop punishment until the Referee called a standing 8 count. Roy thought the fight had been stopped, turned around and raised his hands in victory but when he turned back to see a determined Shavers still standing. The Tiger's spirit visibly sagged. Still, he came on and hit Shavers with blows that would surely have knocked out anybody else. Then, all of a sudden, Shavers started to connect with some medium hard blows to Roy's body which slowed him down. Suddendly he connected with one of his deadly uppercuts with Tiger on the ropes and it straightened him up. He was now hurt and Ernie sensed it. He moved the Tiger into a corner and began throwing his own bombs. Roy could not withstand the ferocious onslaught and the Referee now gave him a standing eight, incredibly the second in the round! Ernie stood poised, albeit exhausted, and ready to go. As the referee ordered Roy to begin fighting, he took a step forward, hesitated, and then collapsed in the corner a beaten man. Ernie sagged over the ropes too tired to celebrate. The fight was over. That was some 10th round!
4. Ninth round of the first Ward-Gatti fight in 2002. Ring Magazine Round and Fight of the Year. Incredible ebb and flow blended with uncommon violence and sagave head shots. First Gatti unloads, then it's Ward turn. It's the kind of exchange that had everyone up sreaming until they were hoarse.
5. In Ring Magazine and KO Magazine's 1980 Fight of the Year, Matthew Saad Muhammad met "Yaqui" Lopez in an incredible war. On the brink of a stoppage loss several times during the fight, Saad rallied to take Lopez out in the fourteenth round. The first half of the fight was dominated by Yaqui and in Round Eight (named Round of the Year) he pinned Saad in a corner and landed 20 consecutive blows. Somehow Saad got through it and dictaed control the rest of the way until he scored the 14th-round knockout. However it was the eighth round in which he lived up to his moniker "Matthew Miracle." .
Honerable Mention:
Tommy Hearns Vs. Iran Barkley : on June 6, 1988 a winging right hand from Hell suddenly ended what had been a bloody one-sided beat down of "The Blade." The second punch that accelerated Tommy's descent was malefic. The suddendenees with which this ocurred in round three stunned the crowd into silene.
The fifth and last round of the 1981 Bill “Caveman” Lee - John LoCicero fight in the suffocating heat at the Twenty Grand Showroom in Detroit would give this short battle cult-like status. LoCicero got decked early in the round, got up and pummeled “The Caveman” with between 20 and 25 unanswered and savage shots until he got arm weary. Lee then regrouped and took over pummeling LoCicero until he was knocked out in the same round. First LoCicero almost out, then Lee almost out, then LoCicero down and out! Like Meza-Garza but longer and both warriors arm weary..
Did u write that? it flows beautifully. I really great read!
You write one of those for the top ten rounds of THIS decade? if not, can you?
See above, Hydro!
Good read.
I have the Shavers-Williams fight somewhere but I haven't seen it in years.
I've only seen highlights of the LaMotta comeback, not the whole fight or even the whole 15th round.
Matthew S. Muhammad was such an entertaining fighter. He was taking just hammering to the body by Lopez on the ropes before turning it around.
WHAT ABOUT A LIST OF...
TOP 10 GREATEST ROUNDS of the last DECADE?!?!?!
(no order)
1.Gatti-ward round 9
2.Marales-barrera 5
3.Corrales-Castillo 10
4.Ward-Burton round 9 (or any round really)
5.Gatti-Ruelas round 5?
6.pacman-morales I round ? (round where LAMPLEY goes "this is boxing at its best)
7.... running out of rounds.... has to be AFTER 1997...
Gatti-Robinson I (the best Gatti fight) round 6 or 10
WHAT ABOUT A LIST OF...
TOP 10 GREATEST ROUNDS of the last DECADE?!?!?!
(no order)
1.Gatti-ward round 9
2.Marales-barrera 5
3.Corrales-Castillo 10
4.Ward-Burton round 9 (or any round really)
5.Gatti-Ruelas round 5?
6.pacman-morales I round ? (round where LAMPLEY goes "this is boxing at its best)
7.... running out of rounds.... has to be AFTER 1997...