Ted The Bull's Ten Favorite Fights

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  • Ted The Bull
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    #1

    Ted The Bull's Ten Favorite Fights

    From The Bull's WEB SITE:

    Over the years, I have seen literally thousands of fights and to name my top ten will do injustice to many others and I apologize for that up front. Still, I’ll give it a go and list them in order of preference. Rightly or wrongly, I used the following criteria: I had to see them live or when they were first televised (no tapes, youtubes, and/or videos), ebb and flow, sudden change in flow, controlled violence, courage, imposition of will, superiority of technical skills, pure savagery and personal satisfaction. Here they are.


    1. Bobby Chacon vs. Rafael “Bazooka “ Limon: On December 11, 1982, Chacon was dropped in the 4th and 10th, Limon in the 15th round (1982 Fight of the Year - Ring Magazine). It contained all of the criteria listed above and then some. Bobby came back from the brink to win in dramatic fashion. Had to see it to believe it.


    2 Bobby Chacon vs. Cornelius Boza-Edwards on May 15, 1983: Same as number one. Ebb and flow, savagery, courage, violence, technical skills…everything was included. 1983 Ring Magazine Fight of the Year. Chacon rose from a knockdown in round one and recovered from a dangerous cut to drop Boza Edwards in round twelve and avenge an earlier defeat. Reemption at a high cost.


    3.Yvon "The Fighting Fisherman" Durelle vs. Archie Moore: on December 10, 1958 in Montreal. On the canvas 3 times in round one and once more later in the mid rounds, Moore somehow regrouped and slowly came back. He knew every trick in the boxing book and used every one of them to come back and batter the game Durelle for an 11th-round stoppage. The fight defined courage and will. Only Robinson vs. Basilio kept this from being Ring Magazine Fight of the Year…but that was just plain wrong. Hell, this should have been fight of the Decade.


    4. Monroe Brooks vs. Bruce Curry: on April 7, 1978. Old school battle featuring controlled violence until both threw simultaneous hooks in the ninth round with Curry's landing first. This was Gatti-Ward before Gatti-Ward. Violence with a purpose. The exchange of punishing shots was incredible.

    5. Alvaro "Yaqui" Lopez vs. Matthew Saad Mohammed: on July 13, 1980 in New Jersey. The first half was dominated by Lopez and in round eight (named "Round of the Year"), he pinned Saad in a corner landing 20 wicked consecutive blows. Muhammad somehow got out of that round and stopped the arm weary Lopez in the 14th round. (1980 Fight of the Year - Ring Magazine)


    6. Jaime Garza vs. Juan “Kid” Meza: on November 13, 1983. Sudden fury in Kingston, NY. First Meza down, then Garza down and out. The ko was named 1984’s Knockout of the Year by KO Magazine. The old adage "never hook with a hooker" did not apply, for both fighters were deadly with this punch.

    7. Elvir "The Kosovo Kid" Muriqi vs. "Slamming" Sam Ahmad: On July 23, 2002 in New Rochelle, NY. A pier six, ebb and flow brawl. A total of 6 knockdowns called and 2 not called but should have been..


    8. 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.


    9. Micky Ward vs. Reggie Green: this cult classic was fought on October 1, 1999 and was arguably better than the first Gatti-Ward. I was there and can vouch for the ebb and flow action and dramatic ending in the 10th when Ward finally caught up with the courageous Green. Two lions in the ring. Breakthrough fight for Ward that segued him to glory.


    10. Three-way tie between:


    Thomas Hearns- Marvin Hagler: On April 15, 1985, these two engaged in unmitigated and non-stop warfare for three rounds before Hagler ended matters with a brutal right. The 1985 Ring Magazine Fight of the Year.


    Diego Corrales vs. Jose Luis Castillo: 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 on May, 2005. Ring Magazine Fight of the Year.


    Kid" Akeem Anifowoshe vs. Robert "Pikin" Quiroga: on June 15, 1991, they battled for 12 ferocious rounds for the IBF Super Flyweight Title in an ebb and flow savagery that not only was named the “Ring Magazine” Fight of the Year for 1991 but was one of the best fights ever in the super flyweight division. The 12 brutal rounds landed both fighters in the hospital, and was as close to the edge as two fighters can get. May have contributed to the “Kid’s” death years later.


    Honorable Mention:


    2002: Ward vs. Gatti


    2002: Gonzalez vs. Letterlough


    1983: Duran vs. Moore


    1981: LoCicero vs. Lee


    1976: Foreman vs. Lyle


    1976: Williams vs. Shavers


    1947: Graziano vs. Zale
  • Holly McCall
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    #2
    Great read and great list!

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    • Holly McCall
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      #3
      Wha's amazing is that you saw all these fights. How old are you?

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      • Ted The Bull
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        #4
        too old......

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        • Kball15
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          #5
          thats a fantastic list. I liked a lot of the old fights as well, but i wasnt alive to witness them as they happened... unfortunetly.

          You gotta get some foreman-lyle in there! ive never seen a list of great fights without it. lol

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          • Kball15
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            #6
            o wait. u have it in the honorable mentions there. nvm

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            • Ted The Bull
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              #7
              Damm right I have it. Thanks Kball15

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              • Hydro
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                #8
                Nice read.

                Here would be my favorites:

                1. Diego Corrales-Jose Luis Castillo I: Wow. Just brutal action on the inside. But not wild swinging and slugging, it was a terrific display of in-fighting. Excellent combinations, positioning, body punching, etc...With Corrales's eye looking terrible and Castillo cut, Corrales closed round 7 by rocking Castillo with a short left hook. Round 8 was better. Terrific brutal action. If not for the 10th round of this fight, round 8 might have been the round of the year. Round 9 was more action. Round 10 had it all. 2 knockdowns, controversy, and a dramatic come-from-behind stoppage.

                2. Felix Trinidad-Fernando Vargas: A junior middleweight unificiation bout between a Mexican-American champion and Puerto Rican champion to go with the long rich history of the ethnic rivalry. Trinidad struck first, dropping Vargas 2x in round 1. Vargas struck back with a knockdown in round 4, and Trinidad responded by giving Vargas a brutal low blow. Vargas dominated round 5 with his use of boxing, footwork, and angles, but Trinidad cornered him in round 6 and hurt hit late with a right hand. Trinidad continued to stalk Vargas with success and Vargas would respond with good work of his own, even hurting Trinidad to the body in round 8. Round 9 was brutal toe-to-toe action, with Vargas leaving the round the worse for wear. Finally, Trinidad dropped Vargas 3x in the 12th until Jay Nady finally stopped it.

                3. Muhammad Ali-Joe Frazier III: While they were both better fighters in 1971, their third fight in 1975 was probably the most brutal and closely contested. Ali started well in the first 2 rounds, then Frazier came on in round 3 with a nice body attack and a brilliant display of head movement. I lost count of how many Ali shots he slipped in round 3 when Ali flurried. Too many to count. Ali came on better in the next 2 rounds, but by round 6, Frazier was able to land at will to Ali's body, and also some nice left hooks upstairs. The brutal body attack continued, as Ali would later say it was "close to death". But by round 12, Ali had somehow been able to dig in his reservoir and was able to land countless right hands and short left hooks to Frazier's face. It continued in round 13 and even worse in round 14. According to the Muhammad Ali reader by Thomas Hauser, an exhausted Ali said "cut em off" to Angelo Dundee after round 14, despite his domination in the last couple of rounds. Dundee ignored him. In the other corner, the noble Eddie Futch elected to stop the fight, giving Ali a TKO win. Neither fighter was ever the same. Apparently Frazier never forgave Futch for stopping the fight.

                Other favorites:

                Arturo Gatti-Ivan Robinson I: everyone talks about Gatti's first fight with Mickey Ward. This was probably better.

                Michael Carbajal-Humberto Gonzalez I: "Little Hands of Stone" rises from 2 KDs to stop Gonzalez in round 7 with a picture-perfect left hook.

                Michael Moorer-Bert Cooper: Rid**** Bowe's title-winning victory over Evander Holyfield, with its classic 10th round, might have not been the best heavyweight fight of 1992. Rising contender Moorer took on the veteran Bert Cooper, fresh off a very entertaining fight with Evander Holyfield in which he dropped the HW champion in his hometown of Atlanta. Cooper struck first, dropping Moorer less than a minute into the 1st round. Moorer responded with a beautiful right hook and left hand that dropped Cooper. In round 3, Cooper dropped Moorer with a barrage on the ropes. But Moorer was able to weather the storm and stop Cooper with a beautiful combination, finished off with a right uppercut-straight left that snapped Cooper's head up, and then back.

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                • Hydro
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                  #9
                  Originally posted by Ted The Bull
                  Kid" Akeem Anifowoshe vs. Robert "Pikin" Quiroga: on June 15, 1991, they battled for 12 ferocious rounds for the IBF Super Flyweight Title in an ebb and flow savagery that not only was named the “Ring Magazine” Fight of the Year for 1991 but was one of the best fights ever in the super flyweight division. The 12 brutal rounds landed both fighters in the hospital, and was as close to the edge as two fighters can get. May have contributed to the “Kid’s” death years later.
                  I love this fight, but I hate it too. Watching Anifowoshe (who won IMO) collapse like that was disturbing. They fought with 6 ounce gloves.

                  Damn shame what happened to Quiroga too.

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                  • American_Ninja
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                    #10
                    Originally posted by Hydro
                    Nice read.

                    Here would be my favorites:

                    1. Diego Corrales-Jose Luis Castillo I: Wow. Just brutal action on the inside. But not wild swinging and slugging, it was a terrific display of in-fighting. Excellent combinations, positioning, body punching, etc...With Corrales's eye looking terrible and Castillo cut, Corrales closed round 7 by rocking Castillo with a short left hook. Round 8 was better. Terrific brutal action. If not for the 10th round of this fight, round 8 might have been the round of the year. Round 9 was more action. Round 10 had it all. 2 knockdowns, controversy, and a dramatic come-from-behind stoppage.

                    2. Felix Trinidad-Fernando Vargas: A junior middleweight unificiation bout between a Mexican-American champion and Puerto Rican champion to go with the long rich history of the ethnic rivalry. Trinidad struck first, dropping Vargas 2x in round 1. Vargas struck back with a knockdown in round 4, and Trinidad responded by giving Vargas a brutal low blow. Vargas dominated round 5 with his use of boxing, footwork, and angles, but Trinidad cornered him in round 6 and hurt hit late with a right hand. Trinidad continued to stalk Vargas with success and Vargas would respond with good work of his own, even hurting Trinidad to the body in round 8. Round 9 was brutal toe-to-toe action, with Vargas leaving the round the worse for wear. Finally, Trinidad dropped Vargas 3x in the 12th until Jay Nady finally stopped it.

                    3. Muhammad Ali-Joe Frazier III: While they were both better fighters in 1971, their third fight in 1975 was probably the most brutal and closely contested. Ali started well in the first 2 rounds, then Frazier came on in round 3 with a nice body attack and a brilliant display of head movement. I lost count of how many Ali shots he slipped in round 3 when Ali flurried. Too many to count. Ali came on better in the next 2 rounds, but by round 6, Frazier was able to land at will to Ali's body, and also some nice left hooks upstairs. The brutal body attack continued, as Ali would later say it was "close to death". But by round 12, Ali had somehow been able to dig in his reservoir and was able to land countless right hands and short left hooks to Frazier's face. It continued in round 13 and even worse in round 14. According to the Muhammad Ali reader by Thomas Hauser, an exhausted Ali said "cut em off" to Angelo Dundee after round 14, despite his domination in the last couple of rounds. Dundee ignored him. In the other corner, the noble Eddie Futch elected to stop the fight, giving Ali a TKO win. Neither fighter was ever the same. Apparently Frazier never forgave Futch for stopping the fight.

                    Other favorites:

                    Arturo Gatti-Ivan Robinson I: everyone talks about Gatti's first fight with Mickey Ward. This was probably better.

                    Michael Carbajal-Humberto Gonzalez I: "Little Hands of Stone" rises from 2 KDs to stop Gonzalez in round 7 with a picture-perfect left hook.

                    Michael Moorer-Bert Cooper: Rid**** Bowe's title-winning victory over Evander Holyfield, with its classic 10th round, might have not been the best heavyweight fight of 1992. Rising contender Moorer took on the veteran Bert Cooper, fresh off a very entertaining fight with Evander Holyfield in which he dropped the HW champion in his hometown of Atlanta. Cooper struck first, dropping Moorer less than a minute into the 1st round. Moorer responded with a beautiful right hook and left hand that dropped Cooper. In round 3, Cooper dropped Moorer with a barrage on the ropes. But Moorer was able to weather the storm and stop Cooper with a beautiful combination, finished off with a right uppercut-straight left that snapped Cooper's head up, and then back.
                    All great fights. Ali - Frazier III was awesome.
                    Hearns - Duran was brutal.

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