10 Memorable Performances...PT 1...

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  • ICEMAN JOHN SCULLY
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    #1

    10 Memorable Performances...PT 1...

    In the years that I have been watching boxing I have gotten to see some great stuff. Sometimes in person and sometimes on TV. What one fan thinks is great or memorable isn't always what another fan does. But, for me, these were great moments in boxing. I have chosen these ten moments in particular that really have stood out to me. Some of them are known to every boxing fan in the world and some are known to just the few hundred people that were in attendance.

    1- Curry-McCrory, 1985: Donald Curry was a master boxer. Awesome technique and counter punching. A brilliant boxing mind. Two things from his career stand out to me whenever I think of him. One was from his 1985 WBA /WBC welterweight unification fight with Milton McCrory. Both guys were unbeaten and claiming a share of the world title. McCrory was from the Kronk Gym in Detroit and had won the WBC title with a stirring twelve round decision over the very tough Colin Jones of Wales. I liked McCrory's good, snappy jab and overall boxing skills.

    The first round saw Curry patiently stalked Milton while slipping McCrory's very good left jabs. Timing him. Plotting. Planning. In the second round he pulled off one of the greatest counter punches I have ever seen. Watch the tape sometime and realize that the counter left hook he hit McCrory with was not a fluky thing or a lucky punch. That was planned. Donald waited for McCrory to throw the left jab and he slipped to the left what seemed like just a couple inches and let go a lightning bolt of a left hook. If you wonder why he was called the "Cobra" watch this fight and you will see EXACTLY why. McCrory fell hard to the canvas and the fight was all but over. The ref gave Milton the mandatory eight-count and let the fight continue for another two or three seconds until Donald walked across the ring and let go a wicked right hand that ended the fight. The fight to me ended with that awesome left hook counter that dropped Milton the first time. You may never ever see a counter punch as devastating as that one.

    2- Curry also showed me one more exhibition of brilliance in his 1990 fight with Brett Lally on ESPN. Curry dropped Lally in the second round with a nice right hand and went to the neutral corner while they gave the shook up Lally the standing eight-count. When they resumed the fight Donald showed me why he is one of the best technical fighters I have ever seen. He does things without thinking, as a reflex that other fighter wish they would have the ability to do. When the ref waved the fight back on Donald bolted out of his corner straight at Lally looking like he was going for an all out assault. At the very last second, just before he got to Lally, Donald stepped quickly to the right out of Lally's line of sight and let go two wicked punches that Lally never even saw coming. Brilliant stuff. Check it out on video sometime.

    3- In late 1982 Alexis Arguello and Aaron Pryor met up at the "Orange Bowl" in Miami to fight for the 140 pound world championship. It was a big fight because Arguello was attempting to win his fourth world title and back then it really meant something to be a four-time world champion. It was a great fight that had both guys showing tremendous skill and will. Later in the fight, when well conditioned and smart professionals do their best work, Aaron Pryor began to show the acquired skills that most people didn't really believe he had. Watch the fight. When Arguello began to tire from the pace of the fight along with that severe Miami heat. Aaron began reaching out with his own left hand and literally pushing Arguello's left hand down towards his waist before coming over the top to land big right hands on Alexis' unprotected left cheek. Those were not freak shots. Those were beautiful, slick moves that set up brilliantly placed shots by Aaron.

    4. Hearns-Duran. 1984. Everybody knows what happened. Blow out. Second round KO. Old news. But the way that Tommy finished Duran with that laser beam right hand. That wasn't just a right hand. Look at the tape sometime. Tommy had great range and he was using that to set up those right hands for the whole brief time the fight lasted. Watch it. He was looking at Roberto, measuring him and gauging his range while hiding the right hand. Tilting his left shoulder just a bit to the right to hide Duran's view of Tommy's right hand. When he would stick his long left hand it further obstructed Duran's view of Tommy's right side and I am sure that Duran never even saw that last direct, streamline right hand leave the chamber of the rocket launcher it came out of.

    5. The first fight between Mickey Ward and Arturo Gatti and the 1985 Hagler-Hearns rumble. You saw them. No commentary needed.

    5-10 COMING SOON
  • Silencers
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    #2
    Nice read.

    One of the best left hooks I've ever seen thrown was in Curry-McCrory, Curry really had the potential to be one of the greats, he could pretty much do anything in the ring, I don't think he ever really recovered from draining himself to make 147.

    It's a shame the Pryor-Arguello fight will always have a question mark over it because of Panama Lewis and his bottle, great, great fight though.

    I personally believe the best punch Hearns ever threw was a right hand that knocked James "Black Gold" Shuler out cold but the Duran fight was his most defining performance.
    Last edited by Silencers; 06-28-2008, 11:08 AM.

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    • Boofdatruth
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      #3
      Originally posted by ICEMAN JOHN SCULLY
      In the years that I have been watching boxing I have gotten to see some great stuff. Sometimes in person and sometimes on TV. What one fan thinks is great or memorable isn't always what another fan does. But, for me, these were great moments in boxing. I have chosen these ten moments in particular that really have stood out to me. Some of them are known to every boxing fan in the world and some are known to just the few hundred people that were in attendance.

      1- Curry-McCrory, 1985: Donald Curry was a master boxer. Awesome technique and counter punching. A brilliant boxing mind. Two things from his career stand out to me whenever I think of him. One was from his 1985 WBA /WBC welterweight unification fight with Milton McCrory. Both guys were unbeaten and claiming a share of the world title. McCrory was from the Kronk Gym in Detroit and had won the WBC title with a stirring twelve round decision over the very tough Colin Jones of Wales. I liked McCrory's good, snappy jab and overall boxing skills.

      The first round saw Curry patiently stalked Milton while slipping McCrory's very good left jabs. Timing him. Plotting. Planning. In the second round he pulled off one of the greatest counter punches I have ever seen. Watch the tape sometime and realize that the counter left hook he hit McCrory with was not a fluky thing or a lucky punch. That was planned. Donald waited for McCrory to throw the left jab and he slipped to the left what seemed like just a couple inches and let go a lightning bolt of a left hook. If you wonder why he was called the "Cobra" watch this fight and you will see EXACTLY why. McCrory fell hard to the canvas and the fight was all but over. The ref gave Milton the mandatory eight-count and let the fight continue for another two or three seconds until Donald walked across the ring and let go a wicked right hand that ended the fight. The fight to me ended with that awesome left hook counter that dropped Milton the first time. You may never ever see a counter punch as devastating as that one.

      2- Curry also showed me one more exhibition of brilliance in his 1990 fight with Brett Lally on ESPN. Curry dropped Lally in the second round with a nice right hand and went to the neutral corner while they gave the shook up Lally the standing eight-count. When they resumed the fight Donald showed me why he is one of the best technical fighters I have ever seen. He does things without thinking, as a reflex that other fighter wish they would have the ability to do. When the ref waved the fight back on Donald bolted out of his corner straight at Lally looking like he was going for an all out assault. At the very last second, just before he got to Lally, Donald stepped quickly to the right out of Lally's line of sight and let go two wicked punches that Lally never even saw coming. Brilliant stuff. Check it out on video sometime.

      3- In late 1982 Alexis Arguello and Aaron Pryor met up at the "Orange Bowl" in Miami to fight for the 140 pound world championship. It was a big fight because Arguello was attempting to win his fourth world title and back then it really meant something to be a four-time world champion. It was a great fight that had both guys showing tremendous skill and will. Later in the fight, when well conditioned and smart professionals do their best work, Aaron Pryor began to show the acquired skills that most people didn't really believe he had. Watch the fight. When Arguello began to tire from the pace of the fight along with that severe Miami heat. Aaron began reaching out with his own left hand and literally pushing Arguello's left hand down towards his waist before coming over the top to land big right hands on Alexis' unprotected left cheek. Those were not freak shots. Those were beautiful, slick moves that set up brilliantly placed shots by Aaron.

      4. Hearns-Duran. 1984. Everybody knows what happened. Blow out. Second round KO. Old news. But the way that Tommy finished Duran with that laser beam right hand. That wasn't just a right hand. Look at the tape sometime. Tommy had great range and he was using that to set up those right hands for the whole brief time the fight lasted. Watch it. He was looking at Roberto, measuring him and gauging his range while hiding the right hand. Tilting his left shoulder just a bit to the right to hide Duran's view of Tommy's right hand. When he would stick his long left hand it further obstructed Duran's view of Tommy's right side and I am sure that Duran never even saw that last direct, streamline right hand leave the chamber of the rocket launcher it came out of.

      5. The first fight between Mickey Ward and Arturo Gatti and the 1985 Hagler-Hearns rumble. You saw them. No commentary needed.

      5-10 COMING SOON
      Yeah, the shocker was-duran hearns. I was shocked seeing that finish. People, myself included at one time feel that styles make fights. Boxing is more than that. Those who say that never saw duran-hearns. Everyone expected tommy to use his height and reach, but never expected him to be that aggressive. Maybe they did lol. To see duran come back and give hagler the fight he did, and hearns being ko'd in 3 by hagler, and to see duran beat barkley the other night knowing hearns lost 2 times to barkley showed how great duran was even when he lost. The other fight you mentioned was a classic for these reasons. People who never saw pryor-arguello have to see this fight. The skill pryor showed in that fight was some of the best stuff I ever saw in a ring, and I'm a Ali fan to the fullest. Pryor did it all that night. Controlled fury with classic boxing skills. That fight is one that I keep in the dvd/vcr recorder constantly.

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      • Porter's Dad
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        #4
        Great post.

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        • ICEMAN JOHN SCULLY
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          #5
          Tommy's LEFT HOOKS to the body before he hit James Shuler with that last right hand were AWESOME as well. To me Tommy had some of the best, most vicious looking, perfectly executed left hooks to the body in history.The fact that Iran Barkley took about 10 of them in their first fight without at least going down to a knee is amazing initself!

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          • ICEMAN JOHN SCULLY
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            #6
            Bump again

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            • ICEMAN JOHN SCULLY
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              #7
              Duran-Hearns was a shocker because...NOBODY took it to Duran like that, not even Joppy if you really think about it. If you told people back then Duran would be OUT, nobody would believe it, especially after he had went 15 tough rounds with Marvin one year earlier

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              • BennyST
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                #8
                Great post mate.

                All the above fights were very special, whether they lasted two rounds or fourteen. Curry was amazing fighter for a time. Until the shock beating by Honeyghan and then McCallum. I don't think Honeyghan ever put on such a great performance again as that night either.

                Duran vs Hearns still stuns me to this day. As you said, no one took it to Duran like that, before or after. No one was able to. Amazing!

                Look forward to 5-10.

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                • MANGLER
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                  #9
                  Good topic. Not necessarily all in order, but here are 10 of mine. I got more, but I'd be thinkin forever tryin to decide what goes where.

                  Chico v JLC I was the ****.

                  Gatti v Ward I was the **** too.

                  Buster v Tyson wasn't a great fight at all, but significant cuz of the ludicrous nature of the upset.

                  Calzaghe v Lacy was a great performance too. One of the most 1 sided ass whoopins ever, if not the most.

                  Hagler v Hearns was historic ****. Only 3 rds worth, but me and my pops still watch the tape now and then, and I always enjoyed him describin watchin it when it happened.

                  Jones v Griffin 2 was great. Historically, I know this fight don't mean ****. But Roy is 1 of my all time favorites, and when they stole his 0 Soto style, I was pissed the **** off. Watchin him get revenge was ill.

                  MAB v EM I touched off a great rivalry and was the best of the series.

                  Hopkins v Tarver is hilarious. Not a great or even very exciting fight, but memorable to me. I hated Tarver for talkin like he was the **** cuz he scored a lucky punch against RJJ. He needed to get got wit that 'Legend Killer' bull**** he was spittin. I thought B-Hop got a raw deal both times wit Taylor, and I wanted to see him come back. The fact that it was his final fight (supposedly, at the time), made me more pumped up and made the ass whoopin more enjoyable. Tarver was a laughingstock, just like he said.

                  Tyson v Bruno II was cool. Anotha one that don't count for much in the bigger picture, but seein Mike come back from the pen and regain the title was a great moment at the time. He's anotha one of my all time favorites.

                  Izzy v Raf III is recently the best fight I seen in a while. Both guys will be remembered forever cuz of this rivalry, even without their other accomplishments.
                  Last edited by MANGLER; 07-03-2008, 01:13 PM.

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                  • ICEMAN JOHN SCULLY
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                    #10
                    Jones-Griffin 2...that was held here in CT.... less than a week before the fight his manager's son told me that Roy told him a few days earlier that "you can bet your house the fight won't go more than two rounds." True story.

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