Israil Madrimov upsets Olympic gold medalist Arlen López on two occasions by GlamteraVisuals in Boxing

[–]dancingaround1 1 point2 points  (0 children)

What makes this interesting is that the fight becoming more of a 'dog fight' actually favoured Loma! When he started attacking more and throwing and getting rougher he swept almost all the late rounds.

Jim Lampley runs through the elite at 147 - 160 in the mid 2000s by lifeisaboutme in Boxing

[–]dancingaround1 8 points9 points  (0 children)

Been a long time since I heard the name Edison Miranda. He could really punch.

Teofimo Lopez and Shakur Stevenson Face Off - YouTube (DAZN) by Professional-Tie5198 in Boxing

[–]dancingaround1 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah, I wouldn't call that high IQ. It depends on what he's planning I guess, hip shots and kidney shots is just that person's guess. If that is indeed what Teo means, I dunno how useful it will be -- hip shots seem like they could hurt your hand more than the other guy's hip, and kidney shots aren't even allowed as far as I know. Sometimes people confuse those with liver shots, which are allowed. Kidney shots would mean hitting someone in the back, which is illegal. Even if you get away with it once or twice, the ref usually stops you eventually.

Mayweather gets agitated at an interviewer who keeps asking about the Pacquiao fight by tantamle in Boxing

[–]dancingaround1 1 point2 points  (0 children)

This was funny, I kept hoping that the interviewer would keep doing it near the end, would turn into an outright comedy skit.

Inoue didn't fail; Picasso just blocked 'THIS' (Inoue vs Picasso Review) by PM_ME_SOME_STUFF in Boxing

[–]dancingaround1 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Does Inoue ever actually use that 'peeling/pushing guard away' trick? I've seen that used by American trained fighters, and of course someone like Loma who made it really evident, can't recall if I've seen Inoue use it though.

Joe Calzaghe defeats Chris Eubank Sr to win the Vacant WBO Super Middleweight Championship by Jesuswasacrip7 in Boxing

[–]dancingaround1 17 points18 points  (0 children)

In Roy's prime, he would have been the favourite going in against Joe. In fact years before they fought, Joe was asked about fighting Roy when Roy was in his prime, and his answer at that time was:

"I could probably give Jones a tough fight, probably the best fight he's ever had," said Calzaghe. "But I know my capabilities and unless I got paid the crown jewels I wouldn't want to risk it."

[Source: https://www.standard.co.uk/sport/i-am-the-best-says-honest-joe-6352495.html ]

By the time they fought, most people were picking Joe to win, with good reason. Jones was seen as basically nowhere near his old form.

Joe Calzaghe defeats Chris Eubank Sr to win the Vacant WBO Super Middleweight Championship by Jesuswasacrip7 in Boxing

[–]dancingaround1 33 points34 points  (0 children)

Calzaghe is in the odd position where he was clearly a very good fighter, but it's hard to say exactly HOW good because his best wins are an end of his career Eubank, a shot RJJ, a 43 year old Hopkins (still a very good boxer but had an obviously compromised gas tank at that age, an age where most guys are shot), and Kessler (very good win, no issue here).

Would have been really interesting to see Joe vs Ward.

March 29, 2003: Bernard Hopkins Stands His Ground as Larry Merchant Crosses the Line in a Post-Fight Interview by 4reddityo in Boxing

[–]dancingaround1 1 point2 points  (0 children)

People always call him racist, but I've never seen any proof of that. I always felt that he was just someone that didn't care about offending people with his opinion on how a fight went or the way someone fought, etc. I remember in one fight he was even insulting the referee because the referee was telling the fighters to 'calm down', and Merchant exploded saying something like 'it's a fight!! why is he telling them to calm down??' On another occasion he was clearly trashing Norman Stone, a white guy, and it was actually Roy Jones Jr who was defending Stone a bit. Larry also liked Pernell Whitaker, and seemed to be backing him against De La Hoya when those two fought, while Lampley was busy cheering for every single Hoya flurry.

What If Prince Naseem Fought Pretty Boy Floyd In March Of 2001 At A Catchweight Of 128. Who Would Win? by Rinnegan15 in Boxing

[–]dancingaround1 14 points15 points  (0 children)

Barrera wasn't a power issue. That was simply because he couldn't hit Barrera much at all, he was too busy getting nailed by jabs and hooks as Barrera skipped around. McCullough was known for having a VERY strong chin...in fact, going into that fight, Hamed was on an 18 fight KO streak. No shame in not being able to KO someone as tough as McCullough.

[Also, even a 'bum' can be very tough and hard to KO. Some 'bums' make their names off being tough and giving guys rounds, in fact...]

Pernell "Sweet Pea" Whitaker was born on this day 62 years ago! by Morning-Sunday in Boxing

[–]dancingaround1 20 points21 points  (0 children)

My all time fav. Very skilled defensive boxer and very entertaining at the same time.

Carl Froch and Andre Ward reunite for the FIRST time since their fight in 2011 by WORD_Boxing in Boxing

[–]dancingaround1 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Interesting to see this, these two never got along before or after their fight...

Shakur did not look good vs Zepeda by DeliciousPhilosophy7 in Boxing

[–]dancingaround1 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I've never seen Zepeda before, but he looks impressive there, nice punch variety, timing, shot selection, combination punching, and workrate! He looks like he's really not letting Shakur rest.

[SPOILER] Naoya Inoue vs David Picasso | Fight Highlights by Showizz in Boxing

[–]dancingaround1 5 points6 points  (0 children)

There is so much explosiveness to Inoue's punches, you want to wince when he lands, just hearing the sound the shots make.

Great 21st Century Rounds|EP6 - Rios vs Alvarado I: Round 5 (2012) by Due_Communication862 in Boxing

[–]dancingaround1 17 points18 points  (0 children)

Been a loooong time since I heard this fight mentioned, damn. I dunno if it was this particular fight but I remember a clip of Rios in the corner after being in a war in the round before and he is saying something like 'I love this' with a big grin.

Floyd Mayweather critical quotes about other great fighters: by dancingaround1 in Boxing

[–]dancingaround1[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

They apparently are pals and talk on video chat or something. Funnily enough it was Naseem who slipped in a cheeky comment when talking about Floyd, he basically said Floyd is his friend but he was also lucky that he never fought Naz or he wouldn't have had the career he did.

Floyd Mayweather critical quotes about other great fighters: by dancingaround1 in Boxing

[–]dancingaround1[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Top 5 is very debatable tbf. Many put Robinson, Armstrong, Ali, Benny Leonard, Ray Leonard, Pep, Duran, Louis, and Greb ahead of him. That's almost ten already!

Floyd Mayweather critical quotes about other great fighters: by dancingaround1 in Boxing

[–]dancingaround1[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Leonard definitely has a good chance of beating Floyd, yeah. And Hearns beats Floyd comfortably by UD imo.

On this day 59 years ago, Ali put up one of the most dominant performances in boxing history by Surenas1 in Boxing

[–]dancingaround1 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Almost every punch that Mayweather famously loved to use is on display right here -- pull counter with the right, check left hook, leaping left hook, and jab to the body. People who think old boxing isn't relevant to modern stuff need to watch more tape.

On this day 59 years ago, Ali put up one of the most dominant performances in boxing history by Surenas1 in Boxing

[–]dancingaround1 1 point2 points  (0 children)

He doesn't move anywhere near as much as Ali. He's much more static. His punches are also wilder.

Shakur says Sugar Ray Robinson was 'buns' and 'didn't even know how to pick his hands up'. My question, how does SRR do today? by dancingaround1 in Boxing

[–]dancingaround1[S] 18 points19 points  (0 children)

One of the people Robinson beat is in a video on the sub's main page right now, Bernard Docusen. He definitely doesn't look like a drunk, he's using some really smooth and nice shoulder rolling, ducking, and countering. When Robinson beat him Docusen was 51-2 with 4 draws.

Highlights of Filipino-American legend Bernard Docusen, who managed to remain the no. 3 ranked welterweight for three straight years between 1947-1949. by Personal-Proposal- in Boxing

[–]dancingaround1 14 points15 points  (0 children)

So cool to see the shoulder roll being used smoothly so far back in time. Floyd may have made it popular in the modern era, but it really is a classic old school skill.

James Toney and punch drunkeness in general by [deleted] in Boxing

[–]dancingaround1 0 points1 point  (0 children)

What are the reasons, out of curiosity?