30 years ago today: Michael McKenzie "The Bodysnatcher" McCallum vs. Michael "The Force" Watson

Discussion in 'Classic Boxing Forum' started by IntentionalButt, Apr 14, 2020.


  1. IntentionalButt

    IntentionalButt Guy wants to name his çock 'macho' that's ok by me

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    For athletes named Michael in 1990, the bar was set pretty high. :sisi1 Neither of these guys was quite to boxing what #23 was to hoops, to say the least, but at least one may hold a claim to "most technically skilled (although not to say greatest) of his generation". When you appraise that generation, whose names read like a veritable ATG pantheon, that may seem bombastic praise. In the case of Jamaica's pugilistic GOAT (eat ya hearts out, Bell, Whyte, Berbick, Walters, Brown, Johnson & both Grants ...and no, also-rans, no cry; rest easy knowing that you never stood a chance of catching up to him. :deal:) it really isn't. In his day, McCallum was ridiculously underrated - sometimes dismissed as merely "that lucky punch versus Curry guy", by the same ignorant casuals fans that still today make up almost totum corpus of the multitudes :shakehead: - and even today, while he is something of a fight-nerdy hipster's darling, is sometimes overlooked in favor of his more luminous (although not to say more ring-intelligent) contemporaries.

    For the plucky young Islingtonian, this had to have been a disorienting experience, bordering on vertigo. In his previous bout he already had taken a huge leap up in class - and made good, weathering the storm and surviving the best shots of explosive unbeaten countryman and budding star Nigel "The Dark Destroyer" Benn and scoring a rollicking upset (the sputtering future champ was ultimately JTFO, no less). Now was the gut-check moment - okay, you let the pony-tailed one man wrecking crew blow his wad and then capitalized upon exposing his (as of yet) questionable gas tank, but how will you fare against world-level opposition that is stylistically nothing like Benn?

    Well ...he did alright, it turns out - but class told, as it usually does. While not among history's absolute finest middleweight title contests, this is a damn good (and competitive) one featuring a peak-rounding mid-thirties great versus a prime 25-year-old "very good".



    1. Round 1
      10-9 McCallum, incredibly close. The jab duel was about even and if anything edged in accuracy, volume, and stiffness by Watson - but the body shots swung it the champ's way. Even that wasn't all 1-way traffic. MW torqued in a few mmighty torso hooks on MC as well. Just not as many or as thudding...
    2. Round 2
      10-9 McCallum, 20-18 McCallum. Variegated combos of individually textbook-correct punches from McCallum, bringing lunch-pail discipline, hurting Watson slightly at times, but the kid is showing his spunk, not getting rattled and generally recovering almost instantly, and still working the jab well.
    3. Round 3
      10-9 Watson, close, 29-28 McCallum. The challenger's 1-2 actually begins outshining those consistent body shots, although it would appear they're not sufficiently eye-catching to convince the commentators. A good deal of McCallum's headhunting is being slipped & bent underneath, bouncing off Watson's nape, if anything.
    4. Round 4
      10-9 Watson, 38-38. Electing to be first, including with those schoolmarm's willow-switches downstairs. McCallum's are still of the greater quality, but Watson is getting his to stick first and then proceeding to yo-yo his upper body at medium-close range and spear jabs & crosses at the Jamaican's big coconut. Jabs on the Adam's apple and overhand rights nicking the left temple score for Watson as he presses in and deftly dodges McCallum's backfoot jabs. Bodysnatcher warned again for straying low, correctly (nothing flagrant, just an incidental southward drift). The momentary distraction allows Watson to line up and dial in a flush 1-2 planted square on the kisser. Best combo yet by either.
    5. Round 5
      10-9 McCallum, 48-47 McCallum. The grizzled veteran has realized cruise-control won't cut it, and starts taking a more proactive role with lateral movement, twitch-feints, and multiplanar combinations. McCallum performing simultaneous cardiothoracic and neuro surgery. Watson hurt throughout but showing his nation's characteristic stiff upper lip...
    6. Round 6
      10-9 McCallum, 58-56 McCallum. In that same groove from the fifth, McCallum is siding in helical fashion and picking Watson apart with pinpoint (yet by no means cream-puff) shots. Watson is faring a little better in this one, however, lungs seemingly refilled during the stool break, a little quicker to pursue the receding form of the champion with counters, and even getting through with a few neat rights. McCallum breaking Watson's heart every time he seems to be surging - alternating focus between uppercuts on the stomach and (once the guard lowers) retreating jabs on the chin, highly accurate in both cases.
    7. Round 7
      10-9 Watson, 67-66 McCallum. If the fifth was "poor" and the sixth an improved "fair", Watson managed quite a hike back up to "good" here. McCallum is still relaxed (bordering on hypotensive) in the face of increased pressure and quality from Watson. As before, the Brit finds success giving McCallum a taste of his own medicine, laying it on thick downstairs with straight torpedoes in succession. McCallum is hurt at one point with his legs splayed and balance perhaps slightly affected by a wet spot on the canvas, Watson rushing in and tapping either side of the head with hooks before a timely clinch throws a damper on things. Superb jabbing by Watson, not losing his cool unduly after that excitable moment, showing his poise and maturity for his age.
    8. Round 8
      10-9 McCallum, 77-75 McCallum. And just like that, Heartbreak Hill revisited. McCallum's pendulous body combos are back in full force, reducing "The Force" to scattered 1-2s in guerrilla warfare style, tucking his elbows to his waistband and gloves pinched over his face and waiting for a spot. McCallum is able to duck everything and come up walloping hooks across Watson's chin.
    9. Round 9
      10-9 McCallum, 87-84 McCallum. Looking very tired now, Watson is pushing his punches and missing far more than he's receiving. McCallum doing a paint job at range with the jab, conserving energy but still bossing it. McCallum is caught upside the head while leaned over to his side by a plunging right, but it lacks the steam to generate any change in momentum. Watson makes an interesting (and probably desperate) choice, turning southpaw and redoubling his aggression - winning over the crowd, but not paying any real tactical dividends.
    10. Round 10
      10-9 Watson, 96-94 McCallum. Scraping every iota of willpower he can from the core of his being, Watson manages to rise to McCallum's level and match his work rate punch for punch in the first minute. Blowing hard, the lad bites down on his gum shield and forces himself to nose ahead, becoming the busier man, and even putting some emphasis on his right hands (although many land as rabbit punches). VERY solid left hook as they waltz in the pocket by Watson. McCallum ducks & weaves under fire responsibly, but his offense betrays his own fatigue, now gotten very sloppy by his standards. They close out strong, belting each other as Watson falls against the ropes for support just to stay upright.


    The old bean, of course, had (in true 'high ring IQ' fashion) been squirreling away some acorns for the championship rounds. He busted out some final reserves of energy and dusted off his thus-far unused double left hook up top - and soon had Watson on the run and miserably, visibly pained. Rattling off rapid body-head combos as though it were the 1st and not 11th, it was only a matter of time before McCallum got his prey situated for the coup de grâce - a pair of vicious right hands that put Watson to sleep before his back hit the ropes, let alone the canvas.

    Fortunes rise and fall at this level, in this game - especially in wars of attrition. Where those chips fell had worked out for young Michael versus Benn, and very much didn't here versus the cagier and more abstemious McCallum.

    Here's some aggregated fan scoring:
    https://www.eyeonthering.com/boxing/mike-mccallum-vs-michael-watson

    On various people's scorecards Watson got rounds 3rd, 4th, 7th, and 10th - with the middle two (fourth and seventh) unanimous. One person scored the 1st even, 10-10. So the most generous you could be for the Brit here would be still just narrowly defeated with a score of 96-95 McCallum had it gone to cards after ten. Either way, class would insist on telling.
     
  2. 88Chris05

    88Chris05 Active Member Full Member

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    Nice write up.

    McCallum wasn't as dominant as a Middleweight as he'd been at 154 lb, albeit the sterner competition he was facing at Middle played a part in that. He was well beaten by Kalambay first time out, and the rematch could have gone either way; Graham gave him plenty of problems before he stopped working and let Mike back in the second half of the fight; the Collins fight was a clear win and an enjoyable (if scrappy) fight, but definitely not McCallum at his best; and while McCallum boxed very well in a high-quality fight, he was lucky in my eyes to get a share of the spoils against Toney in their first fight.

    But McCallum was in something very close to top form for the Watson fight. I had it 97-93 going into the eleventh - maybe a shade wider than the majority. Around the eighth round, McCallum really started stepping it up and showing the gulf in class, but immense credit to Watson for bravely still trying to carry the fight to him and force the pace even in rounds 8, 9 and 10 when he was taking some serious punishment. Some of McCallum's counter hooks to the body were sickening, as was the finishing salvo. But Watson had his moments in the middle rounds, especially with the right. Just a little outclassed and, ultimately, out-toughed as well.

    I love McCallum as a fighter, and could watch him all day, for similar reasons to Juan Manuel Marquez: he has that everyman quality about him. At first glance, or in the early rounds, there isn't necessarily anything about him which stands out. Decent speed, but not blinding. Can punch, but there are bigger sluggers out there (particularly at 160 upwards). Has a good grasp of defence, but still hittable. Athletic enough but not someone you'd automatically associate with agility. I could go on, but you get my drift, I'm sure.

    But he was just so solid in all areas, a proper all-rounder, with genuine boxing intelligence. His coolness under pressure, toughness and patience allowed him to string all those competent areas together and produce a fighter which was more than the sum of his parts. Just amazing how McCallum could make light of certain disadvantages and slowly dissect his opponent, improving as the fight went on. Always learning from his opponent as the fight progressed.

    What a technician.
     
  3. George Crowcroft

    George Crowcroft Obsessed with Boxing Full Member

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    I like this fight, as a fan of McCallum. I don't like this fight, as a fan of Watson. Overall I give this fight a 5/10.

    Nice right up IB. :thumbsup:
     
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  4. Jamal Perkins

    Jamal Perkins Well-Known Member Full Member

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    Nice to see this hidden "gem" of a fight given worthy attention.

    I was shocked at how poorly Watson did I had it far wider.In fact I think Watson took a terrible beating,I was very suprised he came back a much better fighter in his two fights with Eubanks and he stuck with the come forward style..usually this kind of prolonged slow beating ruins a fighter.

    I felt Watson had been better as a technical counterpuncher vs Don Lee and Nigel Benn...but McCallum wa a bigger league in 1990....i have no doubt that had things been different Watson would have been a formidable Super Middle champion during 1991-1995....he was improving rapidly after the McCallum war.

    Still his legacy is far greater...a incredible man...who boxers the world over owe a debt...Michaels bravery..ensured boxing health treatment and surgery improved ten fold....and lives were saved
     
    Last edited: Apr 15, 2020
  5. mark ant

    mark ant Canelo was never athletic Full Member

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    Watson was way out of his depth:
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  6. IntentionalButt

    IntentionalButt Guy wants to name his çock 'macho' that's ok by me

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    ...oh, I'm sorry; I didn't realize you were going to watch a highlight vid a quarter the length of the fight in entirety and drop the pithy hammer after I've gone and pointlessly watched and evaluated the whole thing.

    Did you also perchance bespy a Quora post or two about it? (because if so, daaaaaamn am I ever outta my depth)

    The overarching point of my OP was: while Watson was way over his head against Mike McCallum on paper, he held himself to a high standard in spite of that and his performance in defeat here (and especially his gutsiness, and rallying to rather clearly win that frame 10 before succumbing, but after McCallum had begun to break him down in rounds eight & nine) is to be admired.

    A word on that pith you're gunning for with such gusto: halfway there, buddy! You've got the brevity side down, now just must needs work on the "something worth saying" bit. :thumbsup:
     
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  7. mark ant

    mark ant Canelo was never athletic Full Member

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    I watched this film study 2 years ago and think it sums up the gap between his performance v Watson and Eubanks displays v the same man, I feel McCallum was far better than anybody Watson ever fought and would have beaten any British middleweight in history, I hope that doesn`t **** certain people off, I`m not aiming that comment at you.
     
  8. IntentionalButt

    IntentionalButt Guy wants to name his çock 'macho' that's ok by me

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    We're in agreement on that - McCallum is great and underappreciated. Your initial comment read as somewhat dismissive towards Watson - a good fighter in his own right.
     
  9. LoadedGlove

    LoadedGlove Boxing Addict Full Member

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    This fight was probably the making of Watson as a Boxer. He gained confidence from performing so well against an excellent Champion near the top of his game. After the McCallum fight Michael held his feet and punched his weight a lot more. So tragic that he never got to fully express those abilities on a bigger stage and for longer.
     
  10. Serge

    Serge Ginger Dracula Staff Member

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    McCallum was Brit Level

    'Mike McCallum fought his way out of obscurity in Jamaica to the top of the boxing world. However, for much of his career, the highly skilled boxer-puncher was deemed too much risk versus not enough reward and was one of the most avoided fighters of his era.

    McCallum was born in Kingston, Jamaica, on December 7, 1956. He was an only child and enjoyed life on the island before finding boxing at 15 years old.

    “I went to church every Sunday with my mom and dad,” McCallum told The Ring about his early years. “I went to school and I came home, played around with the other kids.

    got into a few fights, and one time I went to a boxing club in the neighborhood that was well-known in Jamaica. I started throwing punches. I didn’t know anything about boxing. One guy said, ‘Mike, do you see that? You’re natural.’”

    McCallum went on to become a decorated amateur. He represented his country at the 1974 World Championships and 1976 Olympics and won gold at the Commonwealth Games in 1978. He hoped to go the 1980 Olympics, but those aspirations were cut short due to appendicitis. He posted an impressive 240-10 amateur record before turning professional in early 1981.

    The legendary duo of George Benton and Eddie Futch helped fine-tune McCallum from there. “They were both geniuses,” he said.

    McCallum marched to 21 straight wins before meeting Sean Mannion for the vacant WBA junior middleweight title on the undercard of Marvin Hagler-Mustafa Hamsho in the fall of 1984. McCallum boxed superbly and won a unanimous decision. He would defend the title six times against the likes of David Braxton (TKO 8), Julian Jackson (TKO 2) and Donald Curry (KO 5).

    “The Bodysnatcher” hoped he could lure one of the Fab Four (Hagler, Sugar Ray Leonard, Thomas Hearns and Roberto Duran) into facing him, but to no avail.

    “I don’t think; I know,” he said when asked if he felt he was avoided. “I made a big mistake. I went to train with Emanuel Steward, Thomas Hearns, Milton McCrory and all them guys. I fought Braxton, McCrory and sparred Thomas Hearns. They knew how good I was and didn’t want to fight me or spar me (afterward).”

    McCallum abdicated his throne and stepped up to middleweight, heading straight to Italy to face Sumbu Kalambay for the WBA crown in March 1988. Although McCallum was the pre-fight betting favorite, he was unable to get a handle on Kalambay, a stick-and-move specialist, and lost for the first time.

    Undeterred, McCallum got back to winning while waiting for his next opportunity. It came when Kalambay was stripped for facing Michael Nunn over mandatory challenger Herol Graham, who instead faced McCallum for the vacant title. McCallum won a hard-fought split decision to become a two-weight titleholder. He then bested Steve Collins (UD 12) and knocked out Michael Watson before exacting revenge on Kalambay via split decision.

    Attempting to gain the IBF middleweight title, McCallum fought rising star James Toney twice in the early 1990s, and although both fights were close, the 35-year-old veteran drew and lost a majority decision. McCallum became a three-weight titleholder when he edged Jeff Harding for the WBC light heavyweight belt in the summer of 1994 and made one successful defense before losing his title to Fabrice Tiozzo.

    In his two final bouts, McCallum lost a unanimous decision to a prime Roy Jones Jr. as well as the rubber match against Toney before retiring at the age of 40. He walked away with a record of 49-5-1 (36 KOs). He was inducted into the International Boxing Hall of Fame in 2003.

    McCallum, now 62, lives in Las Vegas, where he is a key figure in the training camp of rising lightweight star Devin Haney. Here’s what he had to say about six of his most memorable nights in the ring:

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    SEAN MANNION
    October 19, 1984, Madison Square Garden, New York • Titles: WBA junior middleweight

    “I keep asking myself why (Leonard, Hagler, Hearns and Duran) didn’t fight me. I have no answer. If they had fought me, it would have been the Fab Five. It was very frustrating. I was mad at everybody. I didn’t want to see nobody. I didn’t want to talk to anybody. Why didn’t they want to fight me? I couldn’t answer the question. Thomas Hearns didn’t want to fight me. Leonard was the one I really wanted to fight, but he was a lighter weight class than me. With Duran, I was the number one contender – he should definitely have fought me, but he gave away the belt (to fight Thomas Hearns for the WBC title). I don’t know why Hagler didn’t want to fight me. I know those fights would be great fights.

    “I was upset I didn’t fight Duran, but now I’ve got to take care of business with Mannion. He didn’t look like much, but he was game. When I hit him with some good shots, he came right back; he tried his best to win, but I had too much stuff going on. I did everything in my power to win the title. Mannion was a good fighter. I tried to knock him out and I couldn’t. I controlled most of the fight and won most of the rounds. I would have been happy if I’d knocked him out, but I just wanted to win the title.

    “You can’t imagine (what it was like to be) the first Jamaican world champion. That means everything to me. That was the best feeling to know that you are the first world champion boxer in Jamaica. We had some great fighters from Jamaica back in the day – Bunny Grant, Percy Hayles, Roy Goss – a lot of good fighters. I celebrated. I went all over Jamaica in a car – everybody was coming out, everybody wanted to see me. It was something else.”

    Result: McCallum UD 15

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    JULIAN JACKSON
    August 23, 1986, Convention Center, Miami Beach, Florida • Titles: WBA junior middleweight

    “I didn’t know what to think. I knew he was a big puncher, but you don’t feel a punch like that. I wasn’t worried about his power; I was concerned about it – I didn’t want to get hit by it at all. I felt his power. ‘Oh yeah,’ I thought, ‘I have to get him before he gets me.’ So I hit him first. He hit me with a shot, and I felt it: ‘This boy can hit.’ When I hit him with a shot, he went down. I said, ‘You hit me so hard and you can’t take a shot? I’m going to get you now.’ He could give it, but he couldn’t take it. It was all over.”

    Result: McCallum TKO 2

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    DONALD CURRY
    July 18, 1987, Caesars Palace Sports Pavilion, Las Vegas • Titles: WBA junior middleweight

    “I think (my best weight class was) junior middleweight. It was a great fight. Donald Curry was the kind of guy … you sit and watch and you have your own vision; you talk to yourself: How could I beat him? What would I have to do to beat him? George Benton was a great trainer; he put it all together and told me what to do to win. Curry was a very sharp fighter. He punches sharp and crisp. He’s a very dangerous guy. He thinks a lot. He sets things up nicely. And I said, ‘I’ve got to beat him at his own game.’ He tries to set me up and I’m gonna set him up too. That was one of the best knockouts I ever had – it was a great knockout, a great fighter and a great fight. The last week of the workout, George Benton came to me and said, ‘He’s going to try to set you up with the right hand and jab; you’ve got to look out for them. He’s very quick and very accurate. You’ve got to do it this way and come back on top.’ I went over it one or two times, same combination. He said, ‘Remember, Mike, you’ve got to be alert because he’s very quick and accurate and he’s dangerous.’ So I slipped the jab and slipped his right hand, and I countered with a right uppercut and hook. That’s all it takes. That’s all I needed. I felt it in my hand.”

    Result: McCallum KO 5

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    HEROL GRAHAM
    May 10, 1989, Royal Albert Hall, London • Titles: WBA middleweight

    “England is a rough place to fight, especially when you’re fighting their man. They’re singing songs; they expect their man to win. I knew he was a very awkward fighter, a southpaw and gives all kinds of movement, so I hit him to the body to slow him down. (Graham was) not easy to fight at all. He was very good; he dodged punches good, very slick. Herol Graham was something else. He was hard to hit because he moves very well. He was unorthodox. It was a tough fight for me. I had to catch up with him, but I did catch up with him and I beat him.”

    Result: McCallum SD 12

     
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  11. Serge

    Serge Ginger Dracula Staff Member

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    JAMES TONEY
    December 13, 1991, Convention Hall, Atlantic City, New Jersey • Titles: IBF middleweight

    “The WBA wanted $30,000 plus a $35,000 exemption fee for fighting Toney. My lawyer, Milton Chwasky, was going to go along with that, but then they came back and demanded we give (Steve) Collins another $50,000 to step aside, and we said no. They wanted too much money. I didn’t know exactly what was going on. (Note: McCallum was stripped of the title.) I think I did enough to win the fight. It was a good fight, an old-school fight, very tough. I got off to a good start and he came back, and we went back and forth. The first fight was a close fight. He was young and strong and got better the second fight. He was a good fighter – three good fights. I think I won at least one or two fights. He was a throwback.”

    Result: Draw

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    JEFF HARDING
    July 23, 1994, Civic Center, Bismarck, North Dakota • Titles: WBC light heavyweight

    “That fight was a great fight. I knew Jeff was a very hard fight to win – he keeps coming and he keeps punching. He’s got good stamina, very strong, so I knew it was gonna be a hell of a fight. I’ve got to box him. I can’t fight with him inside, ’cause he throws a lot of punches; he doesn’t stop punching. I can’t outwork him because he doesn’t stop punching. I asked myself, ‘How am I going to win this fight?’ I’ve got to do both: I’ve got to box him sometimes, I’ve got to work inside sometimes. I’ve got to turn him and counterpunch him. So that’s what I did. It meant everything to me – three-weight world champion. I was very happy about that. I worked hard. I trained hard for fights and I tried hard to win fights. I don’t like to lose. I work hard all the time for fights, especially the championship fights. Those ones mean everything to me.”

    Result: McCallum UD 12
     
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  12. Jamal Perkins

    Jamal Perkins Well-Known Member Full Member

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    Herol Graham vs McCallum was a totally different matter...both were on absolute peak form..the exchanges were high quality,intense and skilled....that fight was a draw or couldve gone either way by a point...its a shame a overzealous referee cost Graham a point and consequently the draw.

    Skillswise Graham was a good level above Watson,Benn and Eubanks during 89/90/91....but although he hid it very very exceptionally well most his career......he had a vulnerable chin.....julian jackson took a beating to prove it...and Eubanks was given a hiding for 2 weeks in sparring before he too knocked graham out..
     
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  13. Fergy

    Fergy Walking Dead Full Member

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    Excellent stuff, I remember the fight well. After he beat Benn, quite a few Givin Watson a chance against McCallum. With hindsight of course, McCallum a good few steps above, but Watson did not disgrace himself.
     
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