Tunde/Yarde take note (Sr on sparring and more)

Discussion in 'British Boxing Forum' started by Bulldog24, Jan 13, 2021.



  1. Bulldog24

    Bulldog24 Boxing Junkie Full Member

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    England’s former world champion Chris Eubank Sr will never be forgotten around the world for his one-off showmanship in the ring. A true pioneer in the sport, Chris’ views are always fascinating and enlightening.


    How did you begin boxing?

    I was working as a janitor at a gym in New York and started sparring.


    What made Chris Eubank so different?

    I succeeded because I gave myself up to loneliness. No nightclubs, no parties, no girls. That's how I became a 19-time world champion by just turned 28, an all-time world record.


    Where did that drive to succeed come from?

    My brothers were boxers and bullied me, beat me and dismissed me all my childhood. So I needed their acceptance. They couldn't fulfil their dreams, so I did it.


    What would you say was your best attribute as a fighter?

    Persistence was my best asset. (Nigel) Benn and (Michael) Watson were stronger than me, Benn was the best puncher out there and Watson covered up better than any I’ve seen. But nobody practiced foot movement as much as I or sparred more, so it allowed me to make up for what I lacked in natural ability.


    Who were your favourite fighters to watch?

    Dennis Cruz and Pernell Whitaker. Both poetry in motion with their dipping, slipping and moving. Dennis Cruz was a gym fighter in New York.


    Were you a dedicated trainer?

    Seven days a week without fail, no substances. You know, I watched movies after my career like Rocky movies and Kickboxer, and it was like watching myself.

    That had been me in the mid-80s: drinking raw eggs, the gyms in Rocky and then the martial art teaching once I had mastered the basics of boxing. The training scenes, which I hadn't seen, were like seeing me coming up.


    What was the purpose of practicing martial arts?

    The idea with the martial arts was to integrate stances and angles. If you can make the opposing boxer think, you have time to punch him while he is thinking. Plus the flexibility allowed me to reach you from out of range, so you couldn't judge distance.


    Would you say your out of ring conduct was influenced by you wanting respect?

    My dress sense, dignity and yearning for respect all stems back to me asking a girl in a public house in 78 or 79 if I could talk to her sister. She looked me up and down with a complete disdain on her face.


    What was your secret?

    The reason I was able to keep winning a world championship four or five times a year for four or five years straight is because I treated the gym like a church - I went there to worship. I didn’t go there to talk or laugh.


    What was your toughest fight?

    My hardest fight was Watson II. If ever there was supernatural in the boxing ring, it was that night. Watson defied the laws of physics in keeping up the pace of a lightweight while possessing the strength of a heavyweight.

    At the end of the penultimate round, I have absolutely nothing left. I’ve been beaten into a state of controlled madness. Yet I produce a punch so powerful, with nothing left, that it lifts Michael off his feet and causes severe brain injury when it lands.

    The supernatural was still at work in preserving Michael’s life, because the medical experts say he should’ve died. The mans unmeasured determination and positivity in the face of adversity has been a great inspiration in my life in any testing times, trials or tribulations.


    Barry Hearn claimed recently that you didn’t go in to stop an opponent when hurt because you feared what happened to Michael Watson happening to you, do you agree?

    Incorrect. I was willing to give my life as a boxer, that’s why I was the fighter I was. I lost my finishing instinct. If I couldn’t take them cleanly with one punch, I wouldn’t move forward without hesitation or with full focus when they arose.

    It doesn’t matter who creates the killing time, meaning either man nearly has the other man out. If you can move forward with resolve and conviction and are of sound mind then you will take the fight; irregardless of who creates this time. It’s the one who recognises it.


    Why did you make a comeback following the double loss to Steve Collins?

    To get that lasting respect you have to show that you can take a beating and leave that impression. I didn’t need to come out of retirement financially; having retired in 95, I didn’t need to take the Calzaghe fight on 11 days notice; giving him the hardest fight of his career, or move up and face a 220-pound puncher in Thompson; having him beat a few times and staying on my feet.

    I went to war in my last three fights because I wanted the respect. Have you ever seen the movie One Flew Over The Cuckoo’s Nest where Jack Nicholson’s character tries to pull that heavy, bolted-down sink out of the floor and throw it out the window so he can escape the asylum and go watch the World Series? You want him to succeed so badly, but as hard as he tries, he simply can’t. That was the scene that made him.


    What is your best advise to aspiring fighters?

    To be a good fighter you have to spar. I don’t say forget the bag work or road work, I say do all of that but most important is sparring.

    Let me put it another way: If you did all the skipping (jumping rope), speed ball and pads, and the bag work and running but didn’t spar, you would get nowhere in boxing. You would be tore up.

    However if you only sparred and did nothing else but spar, I believe you could still reach great heights. Put most of your focus into sparring.

    And if you never spar hard, it means you’re not getting hurt. In old Jamaican households the saying to unruly children was this: ‘If you cannot hear, you must FEEL!’ Most single parent households with no father figure result in unruly adults and imprisonment.

    Ok, the point is this: If you’re tapped to the side of the head, you’re less likely to bring your hand up next time to block the left hook than if you were hit with full force.
     
    Last edited: Jan 13, 2021
  2. Rolling Session

    Rolling Session New Member banned Full Member

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    Those disgusting big nostrils :lol: No wonder he became a boxer with that nose:lol:
     
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  3. Devon Dog

    Devon Dog Member Full Member

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    Everybody writes it on the forum :nonono:nonono

    Did you know that Tunde interacts with people more than anybody else in boxing
    So I say tell him yourself :)
    Tunde despite the stick he gets has that Peacock gym heritage and I wonder if he has gone as far as anybody can go with Yarde !

    I am a Yarde fan and I follow them both and Spencer . Everybody criticizes the way Tunde runs that corner but I dont hear any actual trainers pointing out where he is supposed to be going wrong ! So I (I hope I am wrong) think we may have seen the best Yarde we could see
     
  4. PatCash

    PatCash Member Full Member

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    It's more to do with his training methods and lack of real sparring, Yarde shouldn't be getting beaten in a fight where his opponent only uses his left just because he doesn't know how to deal with a solid jab or know when to up the pressure
     
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  5. Rolling Session

    Rolling Session New Member banned Full Member

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    He also blocks people more than anyone in boxing on twitter if you say even the slightest criticism to him.

    He's a joke Mayweather wannabe. He literally copies the exact same things Mayweather says and does like speaking in third person.

    Jist like Ohara Davies and Kevin Mitchell left him, Yarde will leave him , even Raza Hamza just left him lol.. he'll be left with just the one and only Muhammed Bilal Ali he's an awful trainer trying to cheat a living in boxing. He's just really a motivational speaker who's studied and memorized what Mayweather says in interviews.
     
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  6. Bulldog24

    Bulldog24 Boxing Junkie Full Member

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    4m30s onwards
     
  7. Bulldog24

    Bulldog24 Boxing Junkie Full Member

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    Look how terrible Joe Calzaghe performed when he couldn’t spar for over a year (Reid, Thornberry, Starie), by his high high standards.
     
  8. Bulldog24

    Bulldog24 Boxing Junkie Full Member

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    Just moving about

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  9. Bulldog24

    Bulldog24 Boxing Junkie Full Member

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  10. Bulldog24

    Bulldog24 Boxing Junkie Full Member

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  11. Bulldog24

    Bulldog24 Boxing Junkie Full Member

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    Previous guests on the show have included Sir Elton John, Sir Cliff Richard, Kim Cattrall, Sir Rod Stewart, Mary Berry, Sir Richard Branson, Sharon Osbourne, Simon Cowell, Nigel Farage, Mel B, James Corden, Dame Joan Collins, Sir Captain Tom Moore, Gordon Brown when he was Prime Minister, Sir Mo Farah and Lionel Richie.

    The episode with Chris will air on ITV on Thursday, February 18 between 9pm and 10pm.
     
  12. Bulldog24

    Bulldog24 Boxing Junkie Full Member

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    On Thursday, April 18 1991 live on ITV between 9pm and 10pm Chris Eubank fought playboy Gary Stretch at London’s Olympia in front of a Who’s Who of British celebrities and sporting stars.
     
    Last edited: Feb 14, 2021