" BAD " BENNIE BRISCOE

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  • neverlast
    Contender
    Silver Champion - 100-500 posts
    • May 2004
    • 118
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    #1

    " BAD " BENNIE BRISCOE

    " BAD " BENNIE BRISCOE



    There are certain boxers from my past that in retrospect would be
    champions today. One such boxer was tough enough to be nicknamed " Bad ". He
    was Bennie Briscoe from Philadelphia and brother you better bet he was just
    that, " Bad ". He was probably the most feared middleweight of his era and
    it was a tough time just be a middleweight in Philly. If you were bad there,
    you were bad everywhere.

    Briscoe turned pro in 1962 and would win his first fifteen contests.
    Among his victims were Charley Scott and Percy Manning. In a return with
    Manning in 1965, Bennie would suffer his first setback. That year he would
    also lose to Tito Marshall and Stanley " Kitten " Hayward. In 1966 Bennie
    would halt the highly respected George Benton.

    Bennie was now among the middleweight elite. The year 1967 would see
    him lose two decisions to the great Luis Rodriguez. Sandwiched in between
    those losses was a draw in Argentina with a fella named Carlos Monzon. In
    1968 he would lose to future light heavyweight titleholder Vincente Rondon.
    He would knock out Rondon in a 1969 rematch.

    In 1970 Bennie began to make his march to a shot at the world's
    middleweight title. He won eleven straight fights until he was upset by Luis
    Vinales in 1972. He would stop Vinales in a return match. Finally in
    November he would meet the reigning middleweight champion of the world,
    Carlos Monzon. Again they would be fighting in Argentina. This time Carlos
    clearly deserved the decision the retained his title but he was rocked to
    his heels by Bennie in the ninth round of that fight. Monzon would always
    have a great respect for Briscoe.

    Bennie would regroup in 1973. He destroyed Art Hernandez in three
    rounds. He also stopped Billy " Dynamite " Douglas of Columbus, Ohio.
    Billy's son Buster would shock the world in 1990 when he took apart Mike
    Tyson. bennie closed the year by losing a decision to Rodrigo Valdez. These
    two would create some history together.

    Bennie put himself right back into the thick of the title picture in
    1974 when he took out the streaking Tony Mundine of Australia. Later he
    would again meet Valdez for the WBC version of the title that had been taken
    away from Monzon. In a stunning display of punching power the vastly under
    rated Valdez sent Bennie down and out in round seven. Bennie came back but
    finished the year dropping a points call to all time great Emile Griffith.

    Briscoe would then go undefeated in his next thirteen bouts. He won
    nine and drew in four. In this span he would beat Eddie Gregory ( a.k.a.
    Eddie Mustafa Muhammad ). He would draw with the dangerous Eugene " Cyclone
    " Hart. In a return go Bennie blasted out Hart in one round. Bennie also
    drew in a return with Griffith.

    In 1977 after Carlos Monzon had officially retired, Bennie was again
    matched with Rodrigo Valdez for vacant title. Again Rodrigo had Bennie's
    number and won a very close decision.

    Starting with a decision loss to future champion Vito Antuofermo,
    Bennie would lose nine of his last seventeen fights. Later that year bennie
    would drop a verdict to another future champion named Marvin Hagler. At this
    stage of his career any middleweight who dreamed of becoming the champion
    had to go through Bennie first.

    By the early 1980's Bennie was becoming a stepping stone for young,
    talented fighters like Vinnie Curto. After a 1982 loss to Jimmy Sykes at the
    famous Blue Horizon in Philadelphia, hometown boy Bennie Briscoe decided to
    hang up the gloves. He left a legacy of 96 fights against many of the
    toughest welterweights and middleweights of his day. He won 66 fights and an
    amazing 53 of those by knockout. He was stopped only once in his career. His
    record reads like a who's who of boxing in that era.

    If ever a fighter who was never crowned a " world champion " deserved
    to be elected in to the Hall Of Fame, it is none other then Bennie Briscoe.
  • Exciterx30
    El Intocable Bass Machine
    Platinum Champion - 1,000-5,000 posts
    • Jan 2004
    • 3867
    • 179
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    #2
    I have a fight of this guy. A fight against Rodrigo Valdez.

    Comment

    • brownpimp88
      Mike Tyson the Third
      Platinum Champion - 1,000-5,000 posts
      • Dec 2006
      • 1552
      • 36
      • 1
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      #3
      If you put guys like briscoe, hamsho, mugabi and roldan in any other era and they would be world champ for sure. It's kinda hard being champ when hagler and monzon are holding all the belts. Monzon and hagler are the best at 160, i have mad respect for both.

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