For some boxing followers the name Alexis Arguello means nothing more than a footnote in the back pages of a boxing almanac, but for those who saw the gallant Nicaraguan boxer with a punch that could stop a subway train, he was the ultimate professional boxer.
After more than a decade of full retirement Arguello remains one of the icons of Latino boxers. A man who not only represented his native Nicaragua, but every poor barrio in South America, Central America and North America.
Arguello epitomizes class.
His fights with Aaron Pryor are two of the greatest ever held and gripped the boxing world with not only their fistic prowess, but their near-death experiences that followed.
People care about Pryor and Arguello even to this day.
So can anyone truly fill Arguello’s shoes?
“I think Jorge Linares is the next Arguello,” said Tony Rivera, a boxing expert of the highest order.
[source]
After more than a decade of full retirement Arguello remains one of the icons of Latino boxers. A man who not only represented his native Nicaragua, but every poor barrio in South America, Central America and North America.
Arguello epitomizes class.
His fights with Aaron Pryor are two of the greatest ever held and gripped the boxing world with not only their fistic prowess, but their near-death experiences that followed.
People care about Pryor and Arguello even to this day.
So can anyone truly fill Arguello’s shoes?
“I think Jorge Linares is the next Arguello,” said Tony Rivera, a boxing expert of the highest order.
[source]
Anyone else think he is the next Arguello?
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