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I think you meant "Mais bien sûr."Mai bien sur.
I think you meant "Mais bien sûr."Mai bien sur.
I think you meant "Mais bien sûr."
He was one of the most entertaining fighters of the seventies and eighties. He, Leonard, Hearns, and Duran were the fighters who really got me into combat sports when I was a youngster. His fights with Hamsho and Antufermo were pretty darn good as well as that Hearns fight. That was my heyday for boxing.Don’t know if there are any boxing fans here, but one the greats, “Marvelous” Marvin Hagler died today at aged 66. Hagler was one of the all-time great middleweight champions, and the opening round of his 1985 title bout with Thomas Hearns is widely regarded as the greatest single round in boxing history.
RIP to one of the legends.
He was one of the most entertaining fighters of the seventies and eighties. He, Leonard, Hearns, and Duran were the fighters who really got me into combat sports when I was a youngster. His fights with Hamsho and Antufermo were pretty darn good as well as that Hearns fight. That was my heyday for boxing.
So sad. He was such a tough fighter, I would have thought he would have lived forever.
The good ole days before UFC when boxing was my passion.
Hagler was so disgusted after losing a decision to Sugar Ray Leonard -- stolen, he claimed, by the judges -- that he never fought again.
Growing up in the '70s felt like the decade of the heavyweights: Ali, Frazier, Forman, Norton, Lyle, Shavers, etc.
And the '80s, as you note, was the decade of the middleweights.
Sadly, it all seemed over in the '90s and my interest in boxing fading after that.
That 3 round Hagler-Hearns fight was one of the best fights ever.
He lost that fight, but only because Leonard perfectly executed his fight plan. He knew he could never go toe-to-toe with Hagler, so he outpunched him and played to the judges, beating him on points.
I had forgotten about Alexis Arguello and Aaron Pryor. Both were great fighters with more than their share of tragedy.This one REALLY hurts. I personally have always felt that the 80's early 90's was the "Silver Age" of professional boxing. Hagler, Hearns, Leonard, Duran, Pryor, Arquello etc and the rise of Tyson. Of all those fighters, some of whom I saw fight "live" Hagler was my fave. "Destruct and Destroy" was his motto. No entourage, no hangers on. He just fought and more often than not, won. I first fell in love with him watching him duck beer bottles after he absolutely destroyed Alan Minter in England. I was at his induction into the Boxing Hall of Fame in Canastota, NY (that's a tragedy for another day). He's one of only 2 fighters I've ever truly loved. A bunch of us went to the R.P.I. Field House to watch Hagler/Hearns on PPV. We had about 3 lawyers a couple of engineers and 2 of us Environmental types. By the end of that first "round of Fury", Dick King, a very stoic and quiet man who was General Counsel for my Agency was standing on the top of his folding chair saying over and over at the top of his lungs....
"DID YOU SEE THAT?"
"DID YOU SEE THAT?"
At that moment I knew I'd seen perhaps the greatest round of fighting (NOT boxing) I'd probably ever see in my lifetime.
Thanks Marvelous.... you never quit, you never embarrassed yourself or your sport... You'll be missed.
Worf
Same here. I really got into watching and following it when the WEC started televising their bouts. So many possible ways to finish a fight; the fighters have to be ready for so many disciplines. For me, it has left boxing way behind.The good ole days before UFC when boxing was my passion.
Hagler was so disgusted after losing a decision to Sugar Ray Leonard -- stolen, he claimed, by the judges -- that he never fought again.