The Heavyweight Championship of the Soviet Union 1917 - 1991
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It depends what you're trying to find out.Comment
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Some interesting (if choppy) reading on Soviet champion Nicolai Fyodrorovich Korolyov.
29.06.05 - By Gennadi "Komar" Komarnitzsky and Izyaslav “Slava” Koza: While perusing through the archives of Russian history, it is relatively often that one
Before the free world lamented the implausibility of matching Muhammad Ali against Teofilo Stevenson (as many knowledgeable people in the history board here will remember), the world wondered what would happen if Joe Louis were matched with Russian legend Korolyov.Comment
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I generally avoid all video media of boxing save for the fights. In fact, I avoid most modern video media period. Rod brought us some of the most incredulous science fiction to the small screen where he and Hitch**** were regulars. Them was the days...
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Some interesting (if choppy) reading on Soviet champion Nicolai Fyodrorovich Korolyov.
29.06.05 - By Gennadi "Komar" Komarnitzsky and Izyaslav “Slava” Koza: While perusing through the archives of Russian history, it is relatively often that one
Before the free world lamented the implausibility of matching Muhammad Ali against Teofilo Stevenson (as many knowledgeable people in the history board here will remember), the world wondered what would happen if Joe Louis were matched with Russian legend Korolyov.
Then insert Castro for good measure.Comment
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This thread is too Geeked and it reminds me of trying to Kickstart my old 75' Maico. But I'll give it one more kick before I leave it behind. So a Joe Louis vs. Nicolai Fyodrorovich Korolyov fight at 15 rounds would have been historically important IMO. Behind the Iron Curtain lurking were tough people living hard lives. This was and remains the ideal breeding grounds for good fighters who make the big sacrifices in order to learn how to fight hands on. To this very day, Many will swear that Nicolai Korolyov was the best heavyweight that country (or countries, in today's world map language) ever produced. The fall of communism let loose a range of new cultures that had been rolled up into the Soviet program out into the professional ranks. These would lead to Gennadiy Golovkin, Sergey Kovalev, Mairis Briedis, Vasyl Lomachenco, Artur Grigorian, Oleksandr Usyk, Vasilly Jirov, Grigory Drozd, Ruslan Chagaev, Yuri Arbachakov, Murat Gasssiev, Roman Karmazin, Denis Lebedev, Alexander Povetkin, Dmitril Bivol, and of course, the Klitschko Brothers, just to scratch the surface. We might then imagine that the Legendary Russian might just have offered more than just another "bum of the month" to Louis in the pre-war years!!!!!!Comment
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This thread is too Geeked and it reminds me of trying to Kickstart my old 75' Maico. But I'll give it one more kick before I leave it behind. So a Joe Louis vs. Nicolai Fyodrorovich Korolyov fight at 15 rounds would have been historically important IMO. Behind the Iron Curtain lurking were tough people living hard lives. This was and remains the ideal breeding grounds for good fighters who make the big sacrifices in order to learn how to fight hands on. To this very day, Many will swear that Nicolai Korolyov was the best heavyweight that country (or countries, in today's world map language) ever produced. The fall of communism let loose a range of new cultures that had been rolled up into the Soviet program out into the professional ranks. These would lead to Gennadiy Golovkin, Sergey Kovalev, Mairis Briedis, Vasyl Lomachenco, Artur Grigorian, Oleksandr Usyk, Vasilly Jirov, Grigory Drozd, Ruslan Chagaev, Yuri Arbachakov, Murat Gasssiev, Roman Karmazin, Denis Lebedev, Alexander Povetkin, Dmitril Bivol, and of course, the Klitschko Brothers, just to scratch the surface. We might then imagine that the Legendary Russian might just have offered more than just another "bum of the month" to Louis in the pre-war years!!!!!!Comment
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