Disrespectful, Soft A$$, Boxing 'Fans'
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''you tell him, turnedout.''
http://boxrec.com/en/boxer/4741
youre a bums bum
1/3 of my posts are qutoed
yours ?!?!?!?Comment
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''you tell him, turnedout.''
http://boxrec.com/en/boxer/4741
youre a bums bum
1/3 of my posts are qutoed
yours ?!?!?!?
and yet I bet he'd fck you up but keep talking...the best punch you have is online and even then it's weak as fk. Elroy the b*tch. Let us know when you are ready to show you can do better..oh wait that's right. Quoted? LMFAO that's what you are bragging about, like I could post ****** **** all day and get quoted to. The fact you think being quoted is a benchmark of value is hilarious. GTFOH with that ****...squeeze between K and M and hold your L.Last edited by turnedup; 06-13-2018, 11:17 PM.Comment
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"Bum of the Month Club"
In the 29 months from January 1939 through May 1941, Louis defended his title thirteen times, a frequency unmatched by any heavyweight champion since the end of the bare-knuckle era. The pace of his title defenses, combined with his convincing wins, earned Louis' opponents from this era the collective nickname "Bum of the Month Club".[24] Notables of this lambasted pantheon include:
world light heavyweight champion John Henry Lewis who, attempting to move up a weight class, was knocked out in the first round by Louis on January 25, 1939.[52]
"Two Ton" Tony Galento, who was able to knock Louis to the canvas with a left hook in the third round of their bout on June 28, 1939, before letting his guard down and being knocked out in the fourth.[52]
Chilean Arturo Godoy, whom Louis fought twice in 1940, on February 9 and June 20. Louis won the first bout by a split-decision, and the rematch by a knockout in the eighth round.[52]
Al McCoy, putative New England heavyweight champion, whose fight against Louis is probably best known for being the first heavyweight title bout held in Boston, Massachusetts, (at the Boston Garden on December 16, 1940). The popular local challenger dodged his way around Louis before being unable to respond to the sixth-round bell.[52]
Clarence "Red" Burman, who pressed Louis for nearly five rounds at Madison Square Garden on January 31, 1941, before succumbing to a series of body blows.[52]
Gus Dorazio, of whom Louis remarked, "At least he tried", after being leveled by a short right hand in the second round at Philadelphia's Convention Hall on February 17.[52]
Abe Simon, who endured thirteen rounds of punishment before 18,908 at Olympia Stadium in Detroit on March 21 before referee Sam Hennessy declared a TKO.
Tony Musto, who, at 5'7½" and 198 pounds, was known as "Baby Tank." Despite a unique crouching style, Musto was slowly worn down over eight and a half rounds in St. Louis on April 8, and the fight was called a TKO because of a severe cut over Musto's eye.[52][53]
Buddy Baer (brother of former champion Max), who was leading the May 23, 1941, bout in Washington, D.C., until an eventual barrage by Louis, capped by a hit at the sixth round bell. Referee Arthur Donovan disqualified Baer before the beginning of the seventh round as a result of stalling by Baer's manager.[52]
Despite its derogatory nickname, most of the group were top-ten heavyweights. Of the 12 fighters Louis faced during this period, five were rated by The Ring as top-10 heavyweights in the year they fought Louis: Galento (overall #2 heavyweight in 1939), Bob Pastor (#3, 1939), Godoy (#3, 1940), Simon (#6, 1941) and Baer (#8, 1941); four others (Musto, Dorazio, Burman and Johnny Paychek) were ranked in the top 10 in a different year.[54]

the idea of there being BUMS IN BOXING is new, doe
!!!!!!!!!!!
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I don't think "bum" is an unfair term to use all the time, there are guys even at high levels who deserve the label, honestly, usually because they're overhyped or have a lousy attitude to fighting. Even though Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. could kill me in a boxing ring, the fact that he keeps getting fights he doesn't deserve and is so unprofessional means that to me, he warrants the title of "bum."
Of course, I do think that the term gets way overused on here. Not long ago here some people who were trying to discredit Lomachenko were trying to convince everyone that Jorge Linares is a bum, and it just blew my mind how someone could possibly say that sincerely while knowing a single thing about boxing.Comment
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absolutely ^^^^^I don't think "bum" is an unfair term to use all the time, there are guys even at high levels who deserve the label, honestly, usually because they're overhyped or have a lousy attitude to fighting. Even though Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. could kill me in a boxing ring, the fact that he keeps getting fights he doesn't deserve and is so unprofessional means that to me, he warrants the title of "bum."
Of course, I do think that the term gets way overused on here. Not long ago here some people who were trying to discredit Lomachenko were trying to convince everyone that Jorge Linares is a bum, and it just blew my mind how someone could possibly say that sincerely while knowing a single thing about boxing.

the b/u...
and its not a matter if a professional boxer can or cannot beat a laymans ass. its what they do within the sport theyre being paid in.
if a guy is only winning vs D level guys but always losing big time vs c+ guys.....THAT GUY IS A BUM !Comment


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