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nfc90210

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  1. And Tony...

     

    Once again credit for this goes to Alan Conceicao.

     

    Jun 7 2006, 03:28 AM

     

    TONY AYALA JR.

     

    t1ayalaall01.jpg

     

    Ayala, like Ibeabuchi, was the surest of sure things. In 1982, the young junior middleweight terror was on his way to big fights and huge money against the Haglers', Hearns', Durans', and Sugar Ray Leonards' of his day. Not only was it his destiny, but he was destined to do it young; in his early 20s. Hell, he was only 19 when he was put in jail.

     

    But just like Ike, his rush for victory in the ring was a drive bordering on insanity mixed with sexual addiction. Inevitably, it destroyed him and his career. Unlike Ike, he actually got out of his cell and had a chance to fufill his dream. It would be many years too late, and as it turned out, too soon to let Ayala back in to society.

     

    --------------------------

     

    SAN ANTONIO

     

    The man who would become El Torito was born on February 13th, 1968, in one of America's top boxing towns; San Antonio, TX. The culture of San Antonio is built for the fight game. With a huge mexican population (most of the top 10 FM and AM stations are spanish language) and a fine tradition of fighters (legend Jesse James Leija was born and resides there today), there's little surprise that many of the hispanic youth were being fed to boxing gyms.

     

    One of the fathers tossing his children into the fight game was Tony Ayala Sr. All four of Ayala's sons would become fighters, and it was his namesake who was by far and away the most talented.

     

    BOY WONDER

     

    Tony Ayala Jr. began training to be a boxer at the age of 5. He was an amateur standout and a terror in sparring. Phil Berger, former New York Times Boxing writer, once wrote about Ayala's drubbing of Pipino Cuevas, then welterweight champion, in a training session. Cuevas was a murderous puncher with a serious reputation and a 4 year reign at the top. Ayala destroyed him in front of a packed gym, leaving Cuevas incredulous. Cuevas was 20. Ayala Jr. was 14. Ayala never lost an amateur bout.

     

    TROUBLE BREWING

     

    Ayala Jr. was born to be a fighter. Of this there was no question. Unfortunately, he never developed an "off" button for his rage. Ayala would later claim that it was the result of sexual assault done to him as a child. He had been subjected to drugs from an early age, and has acknowledged use of heroir before fights. Signs of trouble must have been evident before, but at the age of 15, they first came to light.

     

    Ayala, not even out of his teens, would pick up his first sexual assault conviction. Convicted of rape at a drive in theater, he recieved probation after paying $40,000 to the victim in a settlement of sorts. The warning signs around him perhaps didn't go off; maybe it was simply an attempt to grab money. And there was no reason to stop his career. Tony turned pro at 17 and began a path of destruction under the guidance of the Duvas. He showed incredible poise, fantastic defense, and hammering power that reminded the best trainers of the day of the greats. Ayala was vicious as well; he spit on Robbie Epps after knocking him out a single round in one of his more famous incidents.

     

    Ayala was on fire; Champion Davey Moore was about to grant Ayala a title shot that Tony was a sure fire favorite for. Destiny was close. Just not close enough.

     

    PROMISE DESTROYED

     

    On New Year's Day 1983, Tony Ayala Jr. broke into the home of a school teacher living next door to him in New Jersey and brutally raped her. Ayala's ravenous sexual appetite would be his undoing seemingly once and for all. He was sentenced as a repeat offender to a 35 year sentence in prison, never to be seen again by the boxing public. At least, that's what had been thought.

     

    In a shocking turn of events, his psychologist in prison, a man by the name of Brian Raditz, was able to supposedly rehabilitate Ayala in just a matter of years, and campaigned hard for his return to society. His status in medicine at stake, he actually convinced the state of New Jersey that Tony Ayala Jr. was okay and safe to rejoin us in the public, as well as contribute to society in the only way he knew how; fighting.

     

    CORRUPTIONS

     

    Ayala Jr was released in prison on April 20th (aint that a fun date?) in 1999. In a shocking turn of events, shortly afterwards, Brian Raditz, his prison psychologist, quit his job with the New Jersey correctional system and signed Tony Ayala Jr. to a $1 million dollar promotional deal under his newly created firm. The plan was no clear, and the danger to society fully realized; A rapist was back on the prowl, with large sums of money, and had been enabled to do what he wanted by a corrupt official meant to protect us from folks exactly like Ayala.

     

    Ayala lost 50 lbs and was back in the ring later in 1999. He had no problem finding TV partners (ESPN would bring him back a couple times, and his first return bout was on PPV) to show his fights on the air, using the legend that he had built up while in prison as a bargaining tool and promotional piece. Sturdy journeymen like Tony Menefee soon fell, and Ayala was on his way back up, with even talk of a De La Hoya bout looming in the distance.

     

    Perhaps for the good of mankind, Yori Boy Campos made a worthwhile contribution to society and ended Ayala's run with a 9th round KO. Just a couple months later, Ayala would be arrested again; this time shot after breaking into a house belonging to a woman he knew from a gym he frequented. Ayala's sexual deviancy wasn't done yet. And neither, it turned out, was his career.

     

    CURTAIN CALL

     

    Ayala returned to the ring again in 2001, and would fight on another two years. His final step up came against Contender fighter Anthony Bonsante, and he was KOed in a fairly uncompetitive bout in the 11th round. Ayala again would run in trouble with the law, as he was arrested and charged with having sex with a 13 year old girl. The girl would recant her story later, but by early 2004, it wouldn't matter. Ayala was headed to jail again, this time for 10 years for violations of his probabtion. Ayala is there now, back where he belongs.

  2. Edit: Yeah, I know that I spelt notorious wrong in the thread title.

     

    Just over four years ago Alan Conceicao who did/does post on Death Valley Driver Video Review Message board wrote two good pieces on notorious boxing fuck-ups Ike Ibeabuchi and Tony Ayala Jr. They were posted in DVDVR Random Boxing Thoughts thread. I stumbled across them again today. They are pretty good and deserve to be resurrected.

     

    So, Ike...

     

    Jun 6 2006, 06:22 AM

     

    IKE IBEABUCHI

     

    ibeabuchiike.jpg

     

    Ike Ibeabuchi last stepped into a boxing ring in 1999, just 7 years ago. In the time since that appearance, much has been said about the Nigerian based boxer. The general public has, in large part, forgotten him. Hell, they barely had a chance to know him to begin with. However, that should not diminish what he accomplished in the time period that he had in the sport.

     

    No, Ike was special. Ike was the last truly amazing looking prospect the heavyweight division has ever seen. His early career never truly displayed what was possible from "The President". Watching him defeat people like Calvin Jones on undercards of bigger bouts didn't surprise the world, though terribly notify it of who this man was. The television exposure was minor. The hype was nonexistent. No one really knew this man. That all changed the night he walked into Sacramento's Arco Arena on June 7th, 1997.

     

    TUA/IBEABUCHI

     

    History almost forgets that Ike Ibeabuchi was the huge underdog coming into the fight with David Tua. Tua had KOed John Ruiz in 19 seconds, Oleg Maskaev in 11 rounds, David Izon in an incredible 12, and Darroll Wilson in one. He was touted not just as any sort of ordinary heavyweight, but a Samoan Tyson, capable of KOing anyone at any point in a fight, no matter how far down on points. His power was staggering; the short left hook that landed on the button of Wilson put him on the canvas for probably 10 minutes. The Ruiz fight nearly killed The Quiet Man, forced him to totally revamp his style to the jab and grab of today, and was the most vicious KO seen this side of Codrington/Green. The Izon bout was the biggest of Tua's career to this point, as Izon had defeated Tua in the Olympics (even dropping him with a body shot) on his way to a bronze medal at the 1992 games. Instead, Izon fought valiantly (as always) and absorbed an incredible amount of punishment (as always) before finally succumbing to Tua's assault in the final round of a scintillating bout that, at the time, ranked as the third highest number of punches in a heavyweight bout.

     

    Almost universally, Ike Ibeabuchi/David Tua is considered to be the greatest heavyweight bout of this era (1996-2006) in the heavyweight division. Considering the epic war Tua went through with David Izon 6 months before, its a pretty impressive mark. There very little questioning as to why. In 12 rounds, Tua and Ibeabuchi totalled nearly 200 punches more than Ali and Frazier in 14 rounds. Ibeabuchi averaged almost 90 punches a round for ALL 12 rounds, marks that almost no heavyweight in history could touch. Ike beat Tua in a fashion no one even considered, much less attempted afterwards; Rather than attempt to simply outbox Tua, Ike dared to face him head on, throwing as many power shots as Tua did, and generally nearly twice as many.

     

    He took on a person who was perhaps the hardest puncher in the division in a phone booth. To call it anything short of madness would be a huge understatement. In fact, Ike was rocked in the 10th round from a series of Tua blows. Unlike Fres Oquendo, Oleg Maskaev, Hasim Rahman, and so many others, however, Ike was returning fire by the time the bell hit. The display of courage won him a razor thin decision that put him on the map with HBO and boxing fans everywhere. While there were and have been questions about the decision, there's no doubt about what it says officially. When I recently rewatched the bout, I had Ike by a point in a fight I wouldn't have cared about if it had gone either way. In any case, it was a coming out for Ike and, in some sense, the end of Tua. Tua would see wild fluctations in his weight from then on and often looked lost in the ring. Ike was a different story.

     

    AFTERMATH AND THE LEGEND

     

    Some say it was happening before the Tua fight. Some say it was the beating that he took in it that would lead to the behaviour. One thing is for certain; after the Tua fight, Ike's tendencies went from bizarre to dangerous and outright illegal.

     

    Ibeabuchi preached being a christian, but displayed a love of strippers and hookers as he began to cash in on his success. This in and of itself is not horribly surprising from any public figure. What is surprising is the changes in mental status. Ike began to report hearing things prior to the Tua bout. He claimed he saw demons. They lived in his basement, on airplanes, and virtually everywhere he went. Ike grew increasingly paranoid, and following the Tua bout, his career advancement was basically put on hold while his trainer Curtis Cokes tried to keep him satiated. It would prove to be futile.

     

    BACK TO THE BEGINNING

     

    To understand what happened to Ike, perhaps looking at his childhood and development would be best. Ike was a product of the Nigerian Amateur Boxing System, a horribly corrupt amateur boxing factory where kids are taken from homes when they show promise in order to win national glory. Ike was not the first at heavyweight, nor has he been the last. Henry Akinwande, Davi Izon, Samuel Peter, Duncan Dokiwari, and David Defiagbon all went through it along with Ike. Their story is all the same; total poverty, general lack of education, a western boxing coach seeing potential, and then typically exploitation. Ike was processed from the time he was a teenager to be a fighter with no other life prospects. Hell of a way to grow up.

     

    THE DEMONS SPEAK, AND IKE LISTENS

     

    In the turmoil of the post-Tua world, Ike was now nearing mandatory status for a fight with Lennox Lewis. He had a contract with HBO. He was also certifiably insane. He was a paranoid schitzophrenic sex addict. All of this would collide in 1998 when he heeded the call of the demons. Following an altercation with his girlfriend (a stripper), Ike abducted her son, stole her car, and lead the police on a high speed chase outside Phoenix, Arizona. It ended horrifically; Ike crashed the car, flipping it upside down and smacking square into an overpass. There's even been reports that Ike attacked the child after the car came to rest. What's known for certain is that the child is permanently handicapped, and Ike only recieved two months in jail for his misdeeds. Quietly swept away and kept under the nose of the boxing fandom, it would probably not have made much noise....if it wasn't for Ike's encore.

     

    IKE IBEABUCHI/CHRIS BYRD

     

    Chris Byrd would fall again to Wladimir Klitschko several years later, but nothing quite tops the crushing defeat at the hands of Ike Ibeabuchi. Byrd was at the peak of his abilities when he fought with Ibeabuchi, and some considered him impossible to KO. They were completely wrong.

     

    Ike came in swarming in the fight, taking the fight directly to Byrd and totally outthrowing and outlanding him in the first 4 rounds. Round 3 ended with Ike tagging Byrd clean and beginning to rain shots against the ropes just as the bell rang. In fact, watching it again, the view of Ike's face as he turns to his corner is one that best exemplifies Ike. His mouth is open, his eyes glaring with nothing but vile hatred. The end of the fight featured fireworks that are unmatched in the time since. Ike landed a half uppercut/hook to Byrd as Byrd lay on the ropes that forced Chris' head up violently. The spray coming off him looked like he had been shot, a la JFK, and less hit with a punch. Drooling, Byrd would arise only to be dropped again, with the referee calling for the bell as the 5th was just to end.

     

    The combination of his talents was obvious; he was a 6'3'' 235lb chiseled, iron jawed, swarming power puncher from hell. Ike had everything anyone could possibly want in a fighter. He was Julio Cesar Chavez and Mike Tyson put in Shannon Briggs' body. The destiny was now clear. It was on to Lennox Lewis, Michael Grant be damned.

     

    MIRAGE

     

    Its fitting that the Ike Ibeabuchi's career ended at the venerable Vegas hotel/casino. A couple months after the Byrd fight, as Ike had done so many times before, Ike called for a escort to come to his room. The commonality of such practice is known to anyone who's been to Vegas; you're passed cards featuring the nude bodies of women and phone numbers to call them from virtually a seemingly endless line of mexican immigrants lining Las Vegas Blvd. And for Ike, this was no unfamiliar process either. It should have been. It wasn't.

     

    Again, the demons spoke. The escort wanted her money up front. The demons inside Ike didn't want to pay. Ike would kidnap the woman and brutally rape her for hours in his hotel room, keeping her as a hostage of sorts. Eventually when he released her, it would not be long for the cops to come. This time, unlike what happened in Phoenix, there would be no slap on the wrist.

     

    71979

     

    Ike Ibeabuchi is now serving his sentence. After a fight of 4 years to determine whether or not Ike was even mentally competent to stand trial (he was finally found so), he was convicted in a short trial to 3-20 year sentence, dependant on parole. His next hearing is in 2007. His career is over. Even if released, Ike will be almost 35, his prime years gone. The sport of boxing needed Ike during those years desperately.

     

    However, the world and society did not. Ike is a abhorrent human being who has shown little remorse for his crimes. Ike should not only serve the full 20 years, he should promptly be deported upon release. While its possible that inmate #71979 at Lovelock Correctional Center could be a great champion in 18 months even now, its not worth it to put people's lives at risk for a sport. Serious attempts were made in 2004 to get him out. In fact, Ike Ibeabuchi would be courted by Sig Rogich, a Reagan and Bush (both of 'em) adviser who did his damndest to get him out and into a promotional contract. The courts, thank god, didn't buy it.

     

    WHAT COULD HAVE BEEN

     

    Ike's mental instability makes Mike Tyson look like the pope. Assuming that he never had mental illness, he had the talent and skills to mow down anyone in the division, from Rahman to Kirk Johnson to Holyfield and even Lennox Lewis. Lewis never did like midsized heavyweights with a chin and decent jab, and Ike's Mercer impersonation could have been nearly fatal. Then again, perhaps the lack of demons would have made Ike lazier and more like his current brethern of wasted talent in the division today. Who knows. In the end, it doesn't really matter. What's done is done. Where Ike's place in history falls won't really matter, because a champion he'll never be.

     

    And so it ends for Ike. He is a footnote in history. The dominant heavyweight of our time that should have been.

  3. Posting this on the off chance that someone may know the answer.

     

    I'm thinking of jumping on the Battlestar bandwagon. The show by passed me during its original run. I did watch the mini-series years ago but that's it. That was a long time ago now, and while I remember enjoying it I would be hard pressed to remember much about it.

     

    Anyway, I noticed that Amazon.co.uk have Battlestar Galactica: The Complete Series available on DVD for

  4. Is this weekend's Vitali Klitschko Vs Albert Sosnowski fight being shown on UK TV?

     

    To answer my own question...

     

    It's on Primetime PPV, and I just ordered it. I can't recall the exact cost. It was around the

  5. This bypassed me. Erik Morales is making a comeback. He hasn't fought since losing a decision to David Diaz in August 2007. He's fighting March 27 in Mexico. His opponent is Jose Alfaro (23-5).

     

    http://www.eastsideboxing.com/news.php?p=22937&more=1

     

    Erik Morales' Comeback Officially Announced Today

     

    by James Slater - It was a few weeks ago when word first surfaced telling us how all-time great and former three-weight world champion Erik Morales would return to action this year, after having had approx three years out of the ring - yet it was only today, at a press conference in Mexico, that the return of "El Terrible" was made official..

     

    FightNews.com reports how the press conf took place earlier today, and photos from the event show a somewhat slimmed-down (compared to how he looked last year, certainly) Morales posing for photos with his March 27th opponent Jose Alfaro. The fight will take place at 142-pounds (Morales never having previously boxed higher than the lightweight limit, with his August 2007 points loss to then WBC 135-pound king David Diaz being the 33-year-old Mexican warrior's only fight that high) and the promotion is being billed as "Hope of Fire."

     

    Fans, though many would have preferred it if the legendary fighter had been able to make his retirement stick, will now be interested to see how much Morales has left. And 26-year-old Alfaro of Nicaragua, a former WBA lightweight titlist, is no "safe" return foe for Morales by any means. Not only is "Quiebra Jicara" the younger man, he is also the natural 135-pounder as well as being a solid puncher. But, knowing Morales, doing things the easy way is just not the Mexican's style! But will the comeback end as quickly as it starts?

     

    After all the wars - truly unforgettable wars - he's been involved in in compiling his amazing 48-6(34) pro career, Morales can't have too much left, surely! Alfaro certainly believes his upcoming rival has seen better days and is ready to be beaten. Hopefully, we won't wind up seeing a sad sight on March 27th. But what will happen if Morales wins? How many further fights does "El Terrible" plan to have?

     

    Certainly, a vast number of questions will be answered come fight night. For what it's worth, though it's hard to make any accurate prediction seeing as how we simply DON'T know what Morales has left in the tank, I have a feeling the younger, perhaps stronger man, will get the win. Could we even see the once great warrior from Tijuana KO'd for what would be only the third time in his 17 year career?

     

    Alfaro, 23-5(20) may be coming in off an October 10th-round TKO loss at the hands of Antonio DeMarco, but it could be he who walks away with a stoppage win in this fight!

     

    Article posted on 26.02.2010

  6. Is there any word on an opponent?

     

    Man, the last time I saw Hatton he looked like someone who had never done an athletic thing in his life. It takes a special effort to get that out of shape that quickly.

  7. Almost twenty-years ago Paul Banke wins his world title...

     

    Daniel Zaragoza © Vs Paul Banke 2 (April 23, 1990) (Great Western Forum, Inglewood, California, United States)

     

    Part 1:

     

     

    Part 2:

     

     

    Part 3:

     

     

    Part 4:

     

     

    Part 5:

     

     

    Part 6:

     

  8. And...

     

    In his second to last fight Muhammed Ali challenges Larry Holmes for the WBC heavyweight title. Ali had annouced his retirement in 1979 and had given up his WBA heavyweight title. This was his comeback.

     

    Muhammed Ali Vs Larry Holmes © (October 2, 1980) (Caesars Palace, Las Vegas, Nevada, United States)(WBC heavyweight title)

     

    Part 1:

     

     

    Part 2

     

     

    Part 3

     

     

    Part 4

     

     

    Part 5

     

  9. All right, last night I got wasted. Like a retard I turned my TV and Skybox off at the plug; the UFC didn't record.

     

    Anyway, I know ESPN show a replay at 10 pm. According to my Sky Planner it's only two hours instead of three. Do they edit out a load of stuff?

     

    I'm toying with the idea of watching the fights online. If ESPN are going to show all everything though I can wait and watch the show then.

  10. The Martin Rogan/Sam Sexton rematch that was on Sky last night was a fun little scrap. You can say what you want about Rogan but he does have entertaining fights. That said, as good a story as his recent success has been I think the fairytale might be over. It might be the end of the line.

  11. This is fucking retarded.

     

    http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport1/hi/boxing/8339636.stm

     

    Arreola receives ban for swearing

     

    Defeated WBC world heavyweight title contender Chris Arreola has been banned for six months for swearing after his loss to Vitali Klitschko in September.

     

    The 28-year-old, who failed to come out for the 11th round of the WBC title bout, has been suspended for swearing in an emotional post-fight interview.

     

    The ban will be back-dated to the date of the fight, which means the American can box again at the end of March.

     

    The WBC approved the sanction at their annual convention in South Korea.

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