The great Salvador Sanchez
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This is the biggest travesty in the sport of boxing...ever. He wasn't a drug addict, he wasn't a womanizer or drinker. He lived for the sport and trained his ass off to achieve what he did in his short career.
His premature death took something away from all of us. The pleasure of seeing a true icon and legend of the sport achieve things we can only imagine.
Think about the fights he would have had at that weight class....wow.Comment
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thanks, I try to get semi-hard to find stuff up on there, but the problem is deciding which ones are safe. My accounts have been banned 2 times already on youtube, all thanks to Frank Warren and Don King.
Im quite proud of my highlight videos. hahahaComment
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People keep saying "he would've been a great fighter"
He was in fact a great fighter...Certainly one of the best even with a shortened career.Comment
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He died at 23 and Gomez was comming off beating Carlos Zarate.
He had the potential to make the top 10 ATG list, he was so young and had already accomplished so much.
You have to remember people had Gomez P4P #1 at the time, Lopez was a battle tested and Salvador at 21 pretty much dominated him to win the title. Unless he lost his prime at 23 like Tyson, the sky was the limit.Comment
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I couldn't agree with you more. So many potential great fights that could have happened. I believe there was talk of a fight with Alexis Arguello, what a fight that would have been.This is the biggest travesty in the sport of boxing...ever. He wasn't a drug addict, he wasn't a womanizer or drinker. He lived for the sport and trained his ass off to achieve what he did in his short career.
His premature death took something away from all of us. The pleasure of seeing a true icon and legend of the sport achieve things we can only imagine.
Think about the fights he would have had at that weight class....wow.
If a fighter ever left too much on the table, Sanchez did.Comment
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Are you the same jabsRstiff from the old HBO forums of years ago? You share the same name and your above post is the typical solid post he would write. I agree 100%. Sanchez, great as he was, struggled mightily with an unheralded Nelson, who had never fought 15 rounds and had 12-13 fights. Nelson was ahead on my card at the time of the stoppage, and most ringsiders as well--and one judge. I thought Nelson's inexperience in the championship rounds and having never gone that deep into a fight hurt him. Sanchez came on strong but Nelson fatigued as well. I'm of the opinion Azumah decisions him in the rematch.If you look at Sanchez's last 3 fights (Cowdell, Garcia, & Nelson), he didn't look so fantastic. It could have been the weight, lack of a big-name foe, or the fact that he could have been burnt out. So, I am not certain we didn't already see the best he had to offer.
I believe a seasoned, more matured Azumah Nelson would have defeated him. He gave Sanchez hell, despite being a young, 15-fight substitute.
All that said- a great, great fighter. Beautiful style, & satmina like few others in historyComment
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He was the most talented mexican fighter everMan, Sanchez had it all speed, power, defence, footwork and a great chin. And to think, we didn't even get to see his prime. His fight with Azumah Nelson is something I will never forget.
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I got to see his fight with Juan LaPorte live. I was about 15 rows up from the floor, so I had a real good view and close enough to hear the punches. I still have the ticket stubs somewhere, he'll always be my favorite boxer. He was one of the most brutal body punshers I've ever seen, he didn't have the 1 punch K.O. power, which made it more brutal because he literally broke down his opponents. I still remember like yesterday, when the news came out that he was gone. Very sad day.Comment
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