According to Howard Cosell’s commentary, Foreman and Frazier wore different sized gloves in their second meeting. Apparently this was somehow negotiated beforehand. Frazier wore 8-ounce gloves (which is what heavyweights wore in those days — not sure when they changed it so the upper weights use 10s, middleweights can be either 8s or 10s and below middleweights is 8s. Foreman, per Cosell, was wearing 8 1/2-ounce gloves. Half an ounce isn’t a whole lot, but still, it’s so strange as to be unfathomable that anyone would agree to wear larger gloves than the opponent. No explanation as to why or how this came about. Does anyone have any insight?
I’ve never heard of such a thing. Maybe making gloves for a fighter that big pushed it up in weight I don’t know… doubt it.
I don't know but I thought they did this in lots of fights. The gloves are essentially there to protect the hands, so you can wear well-padded gloves for extra protection, or the "puncher's" gloves that are basically just a thin layer of hand-covering. This came up recently in the last Fury-Wilder fight when Wilder chose thin gloves and broke his hand. At least that was how I understood things. Some fights you agree, and some you come as you are.
Morales wore heavier gloves than Pacquiao for their rematch. Again, the reason was to protect his hands.
It's complete speculation, but I've often worn gloves far bigger than whoever I was sparring with out of the interest of protecting my hand. I know a fight is extremely different, and a professional heavyweight match against Joe Frazier is even more so, but it could be as simple as he hurt something in his hand.
I'd never heard of this, but apparently it's because Foreman refused to wear Everlast gloves, opting for a pair made by G&S, which were slightly heavier. It wasn't against the rules, which merely said that gloves had to be at least 8 ounces. https://ibb.co/0VyCMGD
I doubt that it's true. The story I remember from their rivalry is Morales putting it in the contract - before their first fight - that Pacquiao had to wear the same gloves as him, but it was just about the brand. The gloves still need to weigh the same, I believe. There was also some talk for one of Floyd's fights at 154 about an agreement to fight with 8 ounce, rather than regular 10 ounce gloves - but again, it was about the same rules for both fighters and I don't know if it even happend.
We could be talking about two different things here. The ‘puncher’s gloves’ are Cleto Reyes brand or a design based on them (which other companies copied) and that has to do with the distribution of the padding. They’re eight or 10 ounces but they have less padding in the knuckle area. I’m seeing some accounts here of fights where people are saying the fighters chose two different sizes but I’d have to know what they weighed — nowadays above middleweight there are no jurisdictions where fighters have the option to wear eight-ounce gloves … has to be 10s. I’ve never heard of anyone below middleweight wearing 10s. I’m not aware of anyone fighting a true pro fight (not an exhibition or pubic sparring) in anything larger than 10-ounce gloves so I’d have to see a link telling us how much they weighed if so. At middleweight, theoretically one side could choose eights and the others 10s and both be OK with the choices. And I’ve never, ever heard of any glove manufactured at 8 1/2 ounces.
Great find here. So Cosell was right. George had ginormous hands so maybe the Everlasts were too constricting or he didn’t like the fit of them.
Well a commission shouldn't be able to force you to fight with gloves that are too tight and cutting off circulation. At best, it's an annoying distraction and makes your hands sore. At worst, you suffer an injury.
I just looked into the Pac-Morales situation again & it would appear that this is correct - the dispute wasn't over the weight of the gloves, but over the distribution of padding from one brand to another.
Well they have to be of some make and manufacture that passes all standards of the commission and they have to weigh what they’re supposed to weigh. One could presumably have custom-fit gloves but generally nowadays it’s either contracted (you wear this brand, I wear that) or they bring multiple makes and models (so to speak) and each camp goes through and collects a fight pair and a backup pair (for high-level championship fights at least … at the club level, generally the commission assigns you the pair of gloves you’re wearing and delivers them to the locker room). I can’t remember which of Big George’s comeback fights on HBO it was, but they showed him getting gloved and it took two people pulling and tugging on it to get it over his hand. It was almost comical. Probably stretched the glove (and padding) to its limits — basically it was like taking a plastic surgeon’s glove and stretching it over a canned ham or a frozen turkey, haha. Not a lot of padding between his knuckles and the target.
At a club show in Oklahoma there was a 300 pound heavyweight and he had huge hands; once they were wrapped the gloves were not going on. There was a lot of discussion about what to do. You know above the laces, that semi circular opening in the palm of the hand? They snipped that in a couple of places with scissors and managed to shoe horn his hands into those gloves.