Eubank praises Brit MWs, Tyson, Joe Louis, Himself...

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  • coghaugen
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    #1

    Eubank praises Brit MWs, Tyson, Joe Louis, Himself...

    Chris ‘English’ Eubank Sr. talks being a thoroughbred and how he mastered boxing!
    June 26, 2020 By Dee Boulton 0 Comments



    By Dee Boulton

    Christopher Livingstone Eubank Senior, genetic freak extraordinaire, impresses as per usual this time with his theories regarding how he made it in boxing, his early relationship with a certain Mike Tyson, how he mastered boxing, and much more.

    ‘It works like this,’ said the former WBO middleweight and super-middle champ. ‘If you don’t have one hundred amateur fights or ten years as an amateur, international and so on, or aren’t naturally gifted with punching power and spatial awareness, then you can only make it to the top in boxing by being a thoroughbred; of which I was thanks to my slave-bred ancestry.

    ‘Think of the Chinese weightlifters. From the age of ten in China they all weight-lift for hours daily, filling all the halls, and the process is simply weening out the weak. Those with the genetics not to fall by the wayside remain, and pick up the medals for China.





    ‘The biggest talent pool for boxing was New York City in the eighties. They forced you to spar seven days a week, to ween out the weak. After three and a half years straight there, I was the last man standing. If it wasn’t for my manager Adonis Torres passing in 1987, I would’ve continued my career there as the golden boy. But as the saying goes: If you can make it in New York, you can make it anywhere.

    ‘I came to the United Kingdom and there was this furnace of extreme talent at middleweight, hungry second generation Windrush. It was very scary. Michael Watson, Nigel Benn, Herol Graham, Rod Douglas, Johnny Melfah, Errol Christie – I couldn’t believe what I was seeing. I had conviction and resolve however, a burning flame in the pit of my solar plexus; relentless training seven days a week, (and) streamlining the whole repertoire.

    READ: ‘Cage of Horrors’ MMA show Friday night at Foxwoods

    Chris “English” Eubank Senior
    ‘It was about who was going to step up and be the man they said they were. I was resolute enough and had enough constitution and ability to be the last man standing, of which I was; making the United Kingdom the Mecca during the three and a half years Tyson was incarcerated.

    ‘When I visited Mike after the rematch with Benn, at the correctional facility, he told me there was no other fight he’d of been interested in being ringside for in boxing; but he wished he could of been ringside for that fight.’



    Senior on meeting Tyson:

    ‘I remember Mike when he was 16, but first befriended him properly when I attended the grand opening of Versace on Madison Avenue the day before either my fight with Cronin or Contreras, one or the other, with baby Christopher; I had my contacts in New York.

    ‘I walked past Stallone to shake Mike’s hand and he held Junior. I had this quite stern attitude at 23, feeling actors represented a fakery and feeling Tyson was the realest deal. But regret not getting to meet Sly then too.’

    Post-Watson:



    ‘Why did I continue to fight after Watson II? I had a wife and children and expensive mortgages, and didn’t know another way of life or job of work.

    ‘Plus, I had a talent. If you have a talent, what good is it if you don’t show it? They say nobody really moved like me; going both ways with what people might say was the grace of a ballet dancer, using pace control and able to posture or strut on the big stage when the pressure was cooking; cucumberic composure come crunch time.’

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    Senior on Watson Fight:

    ‘The pressure going into Watson II was unbelievable. It was the peak of Fleet Street and they used their ink to portray me to an entire nation as something of which I was not.

    ‘I was made out to be a villain; a nasty, horrible, arrogant low-life. So if I lost the fight, I felt it would be believed forever that I was just that, and I was simply not. I was in fact the opposite.

    ‘Watson comes out to ‘Momma Say Knock You Out’. The pressure has just gone to another stratosphere, because I know for a fact his mother would never say that and would hope the other boy her son was fighting was okay.

    ‘And my whole thing had always been the resolve I had that I couldn’t be knocked out, I wouldn’t be knocked out. But imagine if he did, it was possible. And he nearly did, of course. It came down to who was going to step in and take the fight, in the end.’

    Senior on OG Greatness:

    ‘When I was world champion, I took 36 hours off after a fight. That was it. Sparring was right up to the day before the fight, unless severely injured. I always fought injured in some manner because it would be impossible not to, being a full-contact sport.

    ‘I fought every seven weeks and trained seven days a week; twenty-eight fights in five and a half years from 1990 to September 1995, 95% of which 12-rounders, when I finally lost fair and square in my 47th bout.

    ‘That’s an average of six fights a year. Not one fight every six months. Not even the great Joe Louis was as active a world champion – effectively I stood on those broad shoulders of Joe Louis to see further than I could. I don’t think today’s champions would get past one fight, they’d likely lose to a top ten contender or mandatory challenger seven weeks after a 12-round world title win; I did it 20 times in a row.

    READ: Fight replay of Gennady Golovkin vs Daniel Geale on HBO
    ‘I was unrelenting in my task to keep breaking records and setting standards; always maintaining gentlemanly conduct, to push that to the youngsters and even the world at large, which was my passion, and still is.’
  • Inspired
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    #2
    A bit of a random thing to focus on, but I used to have Eubank sr in the back of my mind as an example of a guy who could survive off '1 toast a day' whilst training for hours a day with no rest days. So I was intermittent fasting on low carbs for months, actually undereating without really knowing it..thinking i'm eating good. i was doing heavy cardio sessions with weight lifting...and it was all good, total body transformation..and i felt amazing... until the andrenal fatigue just hit me out of nowhere and lasted for months.
    Now i'm a big believer in 'less is more'..at least for me.
    Reading this..where he talks about his 'slave bred ancestry' it kind of makes sense why he's physically capable of doing so much with his body on a lot less. A normal person couldnt do that.

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    • coghaugen
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      #3
      Originally posted by Inspired
      A bit of a random thing to focus on, but I used to have Eubank sr in the back of my mind as an example of a guy who could survive off '1 toast a day' whilst training for hours a day with no rest days. So I was intermittent fasting on low carbs for months, actually undereating without really knowing it..thinking i'm eating good. i was doing heavy cardio sessions with weight lifting...and it was all good, total body transformation..and i felt amazing... until the andrenal fatigue just hit me out of nowhere and lasted for months.
      Now i'm a big believer in 'less is more'..at least for me.
      Reading this..where he talks about his 'slave bred ancestry' it kind of makes sense why he's physically capable of doing so much with his body on a lot less. A normal person couldnt do that.
      Eubank was a freak. He never did any weight-training! Never even did push-ups! He ate only once a day, and didn't eat at all in fight week until after weighing in, and yet displayed a physique that wouldn't look out of place on a bodybuilder stage.

      No fighter can train all year round like that and not take a week off before a fight or a month off after a fight. The guy was an alien. And nobody who was fighting at 154lb exactly 10yrs before can absorb knockout right hands from a ripped 210+lb KO puncher (Thompson) with left eye completely closed (not seeing the punches coming) and not going over and keep fighting back!!

      Nobody was more alien and non-average than Chris Eubank.

      Even beyond physical, he'd start a round completely ****ing still, or stand between rounds without moving etc! In front of 10-50,000 hostile fans and a Benn or Watson or giant-looking Rocchi etc etc. Mentally the strongest man who ever boxed, as well as physically the toughest/fittest (different to stamina).

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      • RJJ-94-02=GOAT
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        #4
        Is this Eubank’s burner account or something?

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        • coghaugen
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          #5
          Originally posted by RJJ-94-02=GOAT
          Is this Eubank’s burner account or something?
          class!

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          • boliodogs
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            #6
            Eubank was a great fighter but he seems arrogant and conceited and ****** with money. The guy made so many millions in the ring and now has a net worth of 500.000 while other English boxing champions like Hatton, Lewis and Khan are worth about 50 times that much. I hope his son is much smarter with his ring earnings so he has more to show for years of fighting when he retires. He must have been a big spender to have so little left now from all those big paydays.

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            • coghaugen
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              #7
              Originally posted by boliodogs
              Eubank was a great fighter but he seems arrogant and conceited and ****** with money. The guy made so many millions in the ring and now has a net worth of 500.000 while other English boxing champions like Hatton, Lewis and Khan are worth about 50 times that much. I hope his son is much smarter with his ring earnings so he has more to show for years of fighting when he retires. He must have been a big spender to have so little left now from all those big paydays.
              Eubank lost a lot when duped into a business venture that was going to be bigger than the Foreman grill supposedly, called the Eubag punching bag and the Eubox training manuals/dvds, investing and losing millions to Dubai-based businessmen. The products were never manufactured!

              Around the same time his wife divorced him and took half the rest, then not long after at all he was made bankrupt owing millions in unpaid taxes.

              He had also used millions of his own money to build apartments for the homeless, though they became drug dens and vandalised in no time.

              Yet he drives £500,000 cars today so obviously stashed millions away in foreign bank accounts, likely ISA's in Dubai.
              Last edited by coghaugen; 06-27-2020, 10:18 AM.

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              • boliodogs
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                #8
                Originally posted by coghaugen
                Eubank was a freak. He never did any weight-training! Never even did push-ups! He ate only once a day, and didn't eat at all in fight week until after weighing in, and yet displayed a physique that wouldn't look out of place on a bodybuilder stage.

                No fighter can train all year round like that and not take a week off before a fight or a month off after a fight. The guy was an alien. And nobody who was fighting at 154lb exactly 10yrs before can absorb knockout right hands from a ripped 210+lb KO puncher (Thompson) with left eye completely closed (not seeing the punches coming) and not going over and keep fighting back!!

                Nobody was more alien and non-average than Chris Eubank.

                Even beyond physical, he'd start a round completely ****ing still, or stand between rounds without moving etc! In front of 10-50,000 hostile fans and a Benn or Watson or giant-looking Rocchi etc etc. Mentally the strongest man who ever boxed, as well as physically the toughest/fittest (different to stamina).
                Nobody goes a week with no food and fights worth a damn no matter how great his genetics are. Didn't this superman lose a fight or two in spite of his supposed mental and physical superiority? To bad he wasn't mentally tough enough to hang on to the many millions he must have been paid for all those big fights he had.

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                • Smash
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                  #9
                  to be fair to eubank he was a bit of a beast in the ring with all those fights per year and going to ireland both times to fight collins, pity he didnt make the trip to the states tho, that would have been epic, instead he was a bit of a mr wbo

                  when they asked him why he didnt go afaikr he said people come to champs, eh ok chris

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                  • boliodogs
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                    #10
                    Originally posted by coghaugen
                    Eubank lost a lot when duped into a business venture that was going to be bigger than the Foreman grill supposedly, called the Eubag punching bag and the Eubox training manuals/dvds, investing and losing millions to Dubai-based businessmen. The products were never manufactured!

                    Around the same time his wife divorced him and took half the rest, then not long after at all he was made bankrupt owing millions in unpaid taxes.

                    He had also used millions of his own money to build apartments for the homeless, though they became drug dens and vandalised in no time.

                    Yet he drives £500,000 cars today so obviously stashed millions away in foreign bank accounts, likely ISA's in Dubai.
                    I am glad to hear he has lots of money. I like him and his son and wish them well. I think his son is a damn good fighter who has many of his father's physical gifts.

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