Ted The Bull's Ten Favorite Fights and Five Favorite Rounds
Author: Theodore Sares
Date Posted: February 08, 2007
Over the years, I have seen literally thousands of fights and to
name my top ten will do injustice to many others and I apologize
for that up front. Still, I’ll give it a go and list them in order
of preference. Rightly or wrongly, I used the following criteria:
I had to see them live or when they were first televised (no tapes,
YOUTUBES, and/or videos), ebb and flow, sudden change in flow, controlled
violence, courage, imposition of will, superiority of technical
skills, pure savagery and personal satisfaction. Here they are.
1. Bobby Chacon vs. Rafael “Bazooka “ Limon: On December 11, 1982,
Chacon was dropped in the 4th and 10th, Limon in the 15th round
(1982 Fight of the Year - Ring Magazine). It contained all of the
criteria listed above and then some. Bobby came back from the brink
to win in dramatic fashion. Had to see it to believe it.
2 Bobby Chacon vs. Cornelius Boza-Edwards on May 15, 1983: Same
as number one. Ebb and flow, savagery, courage, violence, technical
skills…everything was included. 1983 Ring Magazine Fight of the
Year. Chacon rose from a knockdown in round one and recovered from
a dangerous cut to drop Boza Edwards in round twelve and avenge
an earlier defeat. Redemption at a high cost.
3.Yvon "The Fighting Fisherman" Durelle vs. Archie Moore: on December
10, 1958 in Montreal. On the canvas 3 times in round one and once
more later in the mid rounds, Moore somehow regrouped and slowly
came back. He knew every trick in the boxing book and used every
one of them to come back and batter the game Durelle for an 11th-round
stoppage. The fight defined courage and will. Only Robinson vs.
Basilio kept this from being Ring Magazine Fight of the Year…but
that was just plain wrong. Hell, this should have been fight of
the Decade.
4. Monroe Brooks vs. Bruce Curry: on April 7, 1978. Old school
battle featuring controlled violence until both threw simultaneous
hooks in the ninth round with Curry's landing first. This was Gatti-Ward
before Gatti-Ward. Violence with a purpose. The exchange of punishing
shots was incredible.
5. Alvaro "Yaqui" Lopez vs. Matthew Saad Mohammed: on July 13,
1980 in New Jersey. The first half was dominated by Lopez and in
round eight (named "Round of the Year"), he pinned Saad in a corner
landing 20 wicked consecutive blows. Muhammad somehow got out of
that round and stopped the arm weary Lopez in the 14th round. (1980
Fight of the Year - Ring Magazine)
6. Jaime Garza vs. Juan “Kid” Meza: on November 13, 1983. Sudden
fury in Kingston, NY. First Meza down, then Garza down and out.
The ko was named 1984’s Knockout of the Year by KO Magazine. The
old adage "never hook with a hooker" did not apply, for both fighters
were deadly with this punch.
7. Elvir "The Kosovo Kid" Muriqi vs. "Slamming" Sam Ahmad: On July
23, 2002 in New Rochelle, NY. A pier six, ebb and flow brawl. A
total of 6 knockdowns called and 2 not called but should have been..
8. Tommy Hearns Vs. Iran Barkley: on June 6, 1988 a winging right
hand from Hell suddenly ended what had been a bloody one-sided beat
down of "The Blade." The second punch that accelerated Tommy's descent
was malefic.
9. Micky Ward vs. Reggie Green: this cult classic was fought on
October 1, 1999 and was arguably better than the first Gatti-Ward.
I was there and can vouch for the ebb and flow action and dramatic
ending in the 10th when Ward finally caught up with the courageous
Green. Two lions in the ring. Breakthrough fight for Ward that segued
him to glory.
10. Three-way tie between:
Thomas Hearns- Marvin Hagler: On April 15, 1985, these two engaged
in unmitigated and non-stop warfare for three rounds before Hagler
ended matters with a brutal right. The 1985 Ring Magazine Fight
of the Year.
Diego Corrales vs. Jose Luis Castillo: With his left eye almost
totally closed and already down twice in the 10th, Corrales miraculously
climbed off the deck and battered Jose Luis Castillo into submission
along the ropes to score one of the most dramatic TKO's in boxing
history on May, 2005. Ring Magazine Fight of the Year.
Kid" Akeem Anifowoshe vs. Robert "Pikin" Quiroga: on June 15, 1991,
they battled for 12 ferocious rounds for the IBF Super Flyweight
Title in an ebb and flow savagery that not only was named the “Ring
Magazine” Fight of the Year for 1991 but was one of the best fights
ever in the super flyweight division. The 12 brutal rounds landed
both fighters in the hospital, and was as close to the edge as two
fighters can get. May have contributed to the “Kid’s” death years
later.
Honorable Mention:
2002: Ward vs. Gatti
2002: Gonzalez vs. Letterlough
1983: Duran vs. Moore
1981: LoCicero vs. Lee
1976: Foreman vs. Lyle
1976: Williams vs. Shavers
1947: Graziano vs. Zale
Ted The Bull's Five Favorite Rounds
1. Round 10 of the Diego Corrales- Jose Luis Castillo battle in
2005: With his left eye almost totally closed and already down twice
in the 10th, Corrales miraculously climbed off the deck and battered
Jose Luis Castillo into submission along the ropes to score one
of the most dramatic TKO's in boxing history. Ring Magazine Fight
of the Year and Round of the Year. “All the nobility, all the savagery,
and all the brutality of boxing was captured in one three-minute
round Saturday night.” – Ron Borges/Boston Globe
2. The 15th round of the 1950 Jake LaMotta-Laurent Dauthuille championship
fight was unparralelled for its ending when LaMotta,. playing possum,
suddenly erupts and takes out Dauthuille with only 13 seconds left.
He was trailing on the scorecards at the time he staged this miraculous
15th-round knockout to retain his Middelweight belt. Scoring at
time of knockout: 72-68, 74-66, 71-69 Dauthuille. It was named the
1950 Fight of the Year and Round of the Year.
3. The ninth round of the Roy "Tiger" Williams- Earnie Shavers
fight on December 11, 1976 saw a big change both ways (but it was
the 10th that was memorable). The Tiger started strong in the ninth
and landed a number of solid shots He seemed in charge but then
tired midway though the round and Ernie came on, bombing away and
Roy had to hold on and regroup. With about a minute to go, it happened.
Roy snapped off one of the hardest left hooks I have ever seen and
staggered Earnie who was now in big trouble. Ernie had no answer
and likely was saved by the bell. He staggered back to his corner
a very tired boxer.
The 10th and last round began and Shavers came out visibly exhausted
while Williams appeared confident and ready to end matters and finally
emerge as a serious heavyweight contender. He quickly moved Earnie
into a corner and applied brutal, non- stop punishment until the
Referee called a standing 8 count. Roy thought the fight had been
stopped, turned around and raised his hands in victory but when
he turned back to see a determined Shavers still standing. The Tiger's
spirit visibly sagged. Still, he came on and hit Shavers with blows
that would surely have knocked out anybody else. Then, all of a
sudden, Shavers started to connect with some medium hard blows to
Roy's body which slowed him down. Suddenly he connected with one
of his deadly uppercuts with Tiger on the ropes and it straightened
him up. He was now hurt and Ernie sensed it. He moved the Tiger
into a corner and began throwing his own bombs. Roy could not withstand
the ferocious onslaught and the Referee now gave him a standing
eight, incredibly the second in the round! Ernie stood poised, albeit
exhausted, and ready to go. As the referee ordered Roy to begin
fighting, he took a step forward, hesitated, and then collapsed
in the corner a beaten man. Ernie sagged over the ropes too tired
to celebrate. The fight was over. That was some 10th round!
4. Ninth round of the first Ward-Gatti fight in 2002. Ring Magazine
Round and Fight of the Year. Incredible ebb and flow blended with
uncommon violence and savage head shots. First Gatti unloads, then
it's Ward turn. It's the kind of exchange that had everyone up screaming
until they were hoarse.
5. In Ring Magazine and KO Magazine's 1980 Fight of the Year, Matthew
Saad Muhammad met "Yaqui" Lopez in an incredible war. On the brink
of a stoppage loss several times during the fight, Saad rallied
to take Lopez out in the fourteenth round. The first half of the
fight was dominated by Yaqui and in Round Eight (named Round of
the Year) he pinned Saad in a corner and landed 20 consecutive blows.
Somehow Saad got through it and dictated control the rest of the
way until he scored the 14th-round knockout. However it was the
eighth round in which he lived up to his moniker "Matthew Miracle."
Honorable Mention:
Tommy Hearns Vs. Iran Barkley : on June 6, 1988 a winging right
hand from Hell suddenly ended what had been a bloody one-sided beat
down of "The Blade." The second punch that accelerated Tommy's descent
was malefic. The suddenness with which this occurred in round three
stunned the crowd into silence.
The fifth and last round of the 1981 Bill “Caveman” Lee - John
LoCicero fight in the suffocating heat at the Twenty Grand Showroom
in Detroit would give this short battle cult-like status. LoCicero
got decked early in the round, got up and pummeled “The Caveman”
with between 20 and 25 unanswered and savage shots until he got
arm weary. Lee then regrouped and took over pummeling LoCicero until
he was knocked out in the same round. First LoCicero almost out,
then Lee almost out, then LoCicero down and out! Like Meza-Garza
but longer and both warriors arm weary..
About The Author
Ted Sares grew up in Chicago during the 50's and has since lived
in many different countries throughout the world. After retiring
from the business world, he became a member of the International
Boxing Research Organization and a boxing writer specializing in
articles that capture the pathos and ambivalence of the sport. Many
of his works have been featured on boxing sites and magazines throughout
the world. He currently is a staff writer for BoxingScene. Previously
he was Senior Staff Writer for FightNightNews and also wrote for
Saddoboxing and Eastsideboxing.
Article Source: JKD Street Combat
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