Hart compares Pacquiao to Henry Armstrong

Discussion in 'World Boxing Forum' started by stonerose, Dec 4, 2008.


  1. stonerose

    stonerose Guest

    Good article this. Colin Hart always gives a good read..........


    FIGHT fans who believe in reincarnation will assume Henry Armstrong has returned to earth in the shape of Manny Pacquiao.


    Armstrong was a freak of nature in the 1930s. Known as Homicide Hank, he is the only man to hold three world titles at the same time. A record we can safely say will never be broken.

    Hank, the son of a Mississippi sharecropper, was champion at featherweight, lightweight and welterweight. Though it belongs to the realm of fantasy he also fought a draw for the middleweight crown.

    But what is even more astonishing he leaped straight from the featherweight division to win the welterweight belt.

    That meant an almighty weight differential of 1½st.

    There are similarities between him and Pacquiao. The fearsome Filipino has won world titles at flyweight, super- bantamweight and super-featherweight.

    And, just recently, Manny became WBC lightweight champion to guarantee his place among the Hall of Fame immortals.

    Now he is about to attempt the impossible. He is taking on America’s Golden Boy Oscar De La Hoya at the 10st 7lb welterweight limit in Las Vegas on Saturday.

    By the time they climb through the ropes De La Hoya, four inches taller with a six-inch longer reach, will outweigh Pacquiao by at least 20lb.

    If it wasn’t for Pacquiao’s brilliance we would be screaming that this clash is a disgraceful mismatch.

    The public don’t seem to think so. The 16,000-plus tickets at the MGM Garden Arena were sold in 37 minutes, generating £11.5million.

    That’s a bigger gate receipt than any heavyweight fight in Vegas and topped only by Oscar’s losing battle with Floyd Mayweather Jnr 19 months ago.

    Adding to the gross will be £16.5m worth of closed-circuit seats available in casinos on The Strip.

    Plus tens of millions from pay-per-view, foreign TV rights and sponsorship. Who says boxing is on its last legs?

    De La Hoya, 35, is the most saleable fighter ever. The six-time world champion, has raked in £450m through pay-per-view alone. No wonder Ricky Hatton is so anxious to meet him and mine a chunk of that gold.

    Some British critics, with more than a touch of chauvinism, touted Joe Calzaghe as the No 1 pound-for-pound fighter after he beat a worn-out Roy Jones Jnr. With deference to Calzaghe, I regard Pacquiao, 29, as the candidate worthy of being on such a lofty pedestal.





    Freddie Roach, Pacquiao’s trainer, says Miniature Manny has the speed, footwork and stamina to fight a full three minutes every round.

    Despite that, even against a fading De La Hoya, victory could be considered preposterous. Yet they must have said that about Homicide Hank.

    Pacquiao has Armstrong’s mindset. An example of Hank’s character was highlighted when he got badly cut challenging Lou Ambers for the lightweight title.

    Armstrong begged the referee: “Don’t stop it Mr Cavanagh I’m leading on points.” The official told him: “The ring is full of blood — and it’s your blood.”

    Came the reply: “Then I’ll stop bleeding Mr Cavanagh.”

    Needless to say Armstrong’s arm was raised at the end of the 15 rounds.

    If I was De La Hoya I’d be sleeping fitfully in my bed tomorrow night.
     
  2. san rafael

    san rafael 0.00% lemming Full Member

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    Not likely.
     
  3. Hadrian

    Hadrian Member Full Member

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    armstrong was taken apart by a young srr. armstrong was definately weaker as he got bigger and his best years were in the 130s.. armstrong fought when a guy fighting at 147 cme into the ring near that...dlh will be at least mid-150s in the ring. manny has struggled against the likes of morales at 130....this fight is a joke.
     
  4. Sweet Pea

    Sweet Pea Obsessed with Boxing banned

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    Too many words to say absolutely nothing.
     
  5. stonerose

    stonerose Guest

    what are thoughts on the article sweetpea?
     
  6. The Phenom

    The Phenom Pretty Handsome Full Member

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    Hart thought De La Hoya beat Mayweather:lol:
     
  7. charlievint

    charlievint Obsessed with Boxing Full Member

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    Many did. I thought Floyd edged it but it was a close fight and could have gone either way. I feel they got it right.,....but many others felt DLH should have gotten the nod.
     
  8. PH|LLA

    PH|LLA VIP Member Full Member

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    noone thinks Pac is the next coming of Armstrong.
     
  9. DINAMITA

    DINAMITA Guest

    Thanks for posting Stonerose, a very good read. I think that if Pac beats Oscar, it is a pretty historic win, better than Jones-Ruiz and one of the very best since the 1980s. It will catapult Pacquiao up in my personal rankings, a former world flyweight champion beating a quality light-middleweight would be a quite stunning achievement - unprecedented in the modern age.

    Pity it won't happen though.
     
  10. MrMagic

    MrMagic Loyal Member Full Member

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    If DLH comes in 20lbs over the 147lbs limit, Pac will own him.
    It's not likely.

    Pac will weigh 147 fight night, DLH something like 155.
     
  11. MURK20

    MURK20 Boxing Addict Full Member

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    Those who thought DLH won hate Mayweather. Although close, PBF was the obvious winner. IMO
     
  12. MURK20

    MURK20 Boxing Addict Full Member

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    Agree 100%. It will be a monumental acheivement. But DLH is a First Ballot HOFamer. He's no Ruiz. Sorry Manny.
     
  13. King Dan

    King Dan Golovkin Full Member

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    Rukelie has the greatest avatar EVER.

    Thank you.
     
  14. King Dan

    King Dan Golovkin Full Member

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    Have some faith brotha.
     
  15. charlievint

    charlievint Obsessed with Boxing Full Member

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    lol....nah, due to the closeness of the fight is why many were torn on who won vs who lost....I'm sure some thought the DLH won strictly b/c they hate floyd...but the shoe also fits on the other foot....there are some nut huggin floyd fans that say he completey dominated or out classed DLH which is LAUGHABLE...again, I thought Floyd edged it and won in my book but I'm not blind....that was a very close fight.