Irish Boxing

Discussion in 'World Boxing Forum' started by ardy, Dec 19, 2007.


  1. Paddy

    Paddy ESB Founders Club Full Member

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    Apr 26, 2008
    agree with you 100% on this

    I reckon McCloskey with Lee and a few of the hylands/Dolphil fighters

    should be enough to shift it out

    but if i thought it was that easy I'd put the show on myself!
     
  2. adamburke83

    adamburke83 ***.THEHYLANDBROTHERS.com Full Member

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    Jun 26, 2009

    Middleweight......
    Was in the gym with him yesterday and he is really putting the work in for the show..... Looking very fit for a 49 year old who aint boxed in 30 years.
     
  3. Paddy

    Paddy ESB Founders Club Full Member

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    Apr 26, 2008

    I cant miss this!
    :deal
     
  4. adamburke83

    adamburke83 ***.THEHYLANDBROTHERS.com Full Member

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    Jun 26, 2009
    McCloskey and Lee aint very big ticket sellers in Dublin, you need a good all irish clash, Lee vs Duddy or Macklin or down them lines.....

    The o2 hold about 10,000 - 12,000 thats over 4 times what the stadium can hold,
    It will be very, Very hard to sell that out in the present climate, Even Dunne struggled to sell it out against the Thai. (he pulled it off, but struggled)
     
  5. adamburke83

    adamburke83 ***.THEHYLANDBROTHERS.com Full Member

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    Jun 26, 2009
    I might head back over this evening and take a few photos and post them up here......
     
  6. Paddy

    Paddy ESB Founders Club Full Member

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    Apr 26, 2008
    Looks like the Duddy fight might be in Texas I dont like that one bit

    Duddy will have to taken Chavez to hell and back, he will have to pressure and pulverise him and make Chavez say two words that are so taboo to mexican warriors- NO MAS

    I have no doubt the corruption in texas would give Chavez a controversial SD or even a UD

    lets not forget Duddy had a SD there last time...
     
  7. Paddy

    Paddy ESB Founders Club Full Member

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    Apr 26, 2008
    Tell him "Whacker" was asking for him
     
  8. moorser

    moorser Boxing Junkie Full Member

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    Jan 8, 2009
    **** it ill be gald just to see a half decent performance from him
    he hasnt been impressin atall lately
     
  9. adamburke83

    adamburke83 ***.THEHYLANDBROTHERS.com Full Member

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    Jun 26, 2009

    "Whacker" :lol::lol:

    Will do, I take it he will know who Whacker is????
     
  10. Jonny The Hips

    Jonny The Hips Boxing Addict Full Member

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    Jul 22, 2009

    Peters mentioned Kiko for Pajo after the last show?

    And yeah they said straight after that fight they had 10k on Kiko to win in the first round and 15k on him to win!!!!
     
  11. leighton

    leighton Well-Known Member Full Member

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    Jun 21, 2009
    The Ambassador in Dublin know the way it has had so many different events in it down the years I am surpirsed nobody has staged a boxing event in it. I would love to see a fight in there not too sure if it would hold more than the National Staduim or not but the atmosphere would be good in it.
     
  12. BamBam

    BamBam The Brick Fist Mafia Full Member

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    Jun 7, 2008
    Nice pics Steve. Have to say I'm loving the white gloves. Bit like a footballer wearing white boots. Very flash and all that :good

    Looks like he was throwing hard by McGuigans expressions anyway!

    Come here Carlos, I have to go up to Windsor Park for the 2nd leg of the Setanta Cup in a couple of weeks. Any chance I can bring you with me to scare off all the blod thirsty bluemen? ;)


    Any chance this Canadian bill will be televised or accessible to uus folk over here at all?
     
  13. moorser

    moorser Boxing Junkie Full Member

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    Jan 8, 2009
    From Coolock to a golden night in New York

    LOCKERROOM: BEING YOUNG. Pushing through those damn doors without knowing what’s on the other side. All going down the long slide like free bloody birds, as Philip Larkin says. Being young. Being gifted. Being a Dub.

    Tom Hardwick went snowboarding on Saturday. Left the Bronx early. Over the stateline to Jersey and on toward Philly for a day of crack and laughter. It’s been a long winter. He owed himself.

    It’s just a year since he hit New York. Nine months in Sydney wound down, and, instead of heading home to Coolock, Tom decided to give the Big Apple a chance to impress him. He did the Irish thing, old-style, because there is something old-fashioned about Tom Hardwick anyway. He got a place up near Yonkers and went working on the construction.

    And sport. He wanted sport back. As a kid he and his best mate, Warren, lived through sport. When the time came Warren went up the Malahide Road to O’Tooles and Tom went down the road to St Vincent’s. Warren played some soccer. Tom boxed a little in school. Being young.

    Tom’s football career had slowed when he tore the rotator cuff in his shoulder, and when he was slowly rehabilitating he went back and did a little boxing again, slowly, painstakingly building himself back. In Yonkers one day he wandered through the doors of the YMCA gym in Getty Square with half a mind on just getting really fit again and half on maybe putting on a pair of gloves.

    He met a bald black guy the size of a mountain. Jim Howard is 75 but once he was a contender. A New York City Golden Gloves champion back in the day before the day. He was coached by Cus D’Amato, a decent heavyweight at a time that meant something.

    Tom went down to the Y just to get fit, but Howard saw something and encouraged him. Told him he should compete, a line of advice which came, in a way, straight down from old Cus D’Amato. They talked about the Golden Gloves, a magical tournament stretching back 80 years through the stogie-fumed heyday of New York City sports. Jim had won the gorgeous little medal, a pair of solid-gold gloves studded with a single diamond.

    Tom had fewer than 10 fights. He was eligible for the novice class in the heavyweight division.

    Meanwhile, back home in January, his old friend Warren, not long out of the Army, went, on behalf of a friend, to ask that the music from incessant parties be turned down. They came after him and ran a blade through him and left Warren dead at 24.

    That’s Dublin. In New York, Tom broke training for a few days. Hit the drink. Decided then that he’d get back to work. He’d fight the Golden Gloves for his friend.

    Set the alarm for half-four. Get out the house for quarter-to-five. Go for a run around Woodlawn cemetery. Damon Runyon is buried in there. Runyon would have loved this story. Four miles. Back home at twenty-to-six. Shower and a bowl of porridge. In work for seven. Finish at half-three in Brooklyn. Get back in around four o’clock, quarter-past, and be in the gym from five to seven or half-seven.

    Sounds bad? Throw in the T-shirt up over his face and head, with just Tom’s eyes showing as he avoids frostbite. The socks over the gloves in his hands. The days he doesn’t go out are the days when the snow is so bad you can’t see your hand in front of you.

    It takes four bouts to get to a final. Couple of weeks earlier he got a bad cut on his nose sparring. In the run-up he wasn’t able to spar. Zachary Bunce, a cop. Big, black, toned dude who looked more like a super heavyweight. The bout was in Bunce’s gym out in Suffolk. Forty seconds in, he catches Tom with a left hook. Put him down. Tom bounced up like a ball. Took the standing eight. Went back out even more determined. Got caught with a straight right out of nowhere. Legs buckled. Fell against the ropes. Held himself up. Another standing eight. This wasn’t the plan.

    Went back to the corner after the first round, he wasn’t even breathing heavy. Not a sweat broken. He talked to himself. Landed a straight right. Started working the big guy’s body. The first good punch he landed to Bunce’s body the cop let out this big long moan. Paydirt. That was February.

    A week or so later. Ten days maybe. He’s fuzzy on it. Mount Vernon, not far from Yonkers. A small, heavy-set guy. Kinda stumpy but solid, Tom says. It was the last fight of the night. Weigh-in was at six. Had nothing to eat since three.

    Ended up sitting in the changing room till half-eleven. Five-and-a-half hours sitting around. Battles going through his mind. Starving. By the time he went out to fight he had no desire to fight. He was weak and hungry.

    He fell into a brawl. Let himself get in close till he copped on to use his longer reach in the third round instead of getting tied up on the inside. Good lesson. He enjoyed figuring it out on his feet. Where’s my advantage? Where’s his? How do we fight to mine.

    Gerry Cooney was there. Paulie Malignaggi, who fights Amir Khan in the Garden in a few weeks.

    Two more between him and the final. A Dominican. Beat him easily. Noted that night a large, incredibly toned guy being almost dragged by the feet out of the ring in another bout. Looked up and saw the guy who would be his semi-final opponent. Stay out of the way of those haymakers, Tom said to himself.

    The Golden Gloves final. Madison Square Garden. Note the Irish out. Many of them wearing the T-shirts that Tom got made up with a picture of his friend Warren on them.

    Not long after Warren had died Tom was looking for a way to get his dreams going again. He went down Manhattan to Madison Square Garden. As a kid he’d loved Ali, still does, and the Garden’s magic still has the scent of the Greatest on it.

    He walked around, looking at the names on the walls, breathing in the history. This was the place.

    The ring has no room for sentiment though. This is the Garden now. A Thursday night in late March. In the other corner, Earl Newman Jnr out of the fabled Gleason’s Gym. Same stable and trainer as John Duddy. Fast feet. Long left jab and good left hook. Just 18-years-old and a couple of inches taller than Tom Hardwick. No sentiment.

    Tom tried something. Straight rights without leading with his left. Just no warning. Boom boom. They split the first two rounds.

    It came down to fitness and guts and determination in the third. All the mornings around Woodlawn in the cold. All the days put down with his old friend back in Dublin. It was never a fair fight.

    So Tom Hardwick, novice Golden Gloves heavyweight champion, went snowboarding on Saturday. Tomorrow night he gets down to training with the New York Gaelic football team. They host Galway in about six weeks.

    The phone rings a lot these days. People wanting a piece of him. He knows each time that he won’t be picking it up and hearing Warren O’Connor on the other end of the line. He knows you live for now and do everything you can do, because nothing is endless. Especially youth.

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

    I knew warren i used to play football with him with craobh chirain not O'Tooles as it says there and he was a lovely bloke

    he actually fought in a white collar event a few months back before he died and his fight was fight of the night

    R.I.P
     
  14. moorser

    moorser Boxing Junkie Full Member

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    Jan 8, 2009
    lads if you want to watch katie taylors last fight which she lost go to this link and type in katie taylor boxing into the search and find the fight which says katie taylor v russian part 1,2,3

    katie clearly won the fight and how the judges only scored one point is beyond belief

    http://www.dailymotion.com/ie
     
  15. Jonny The Hips

    Jonny The Hips Boxing Addict Full Member

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    Jul 22, 2009
    did anyone hear that Coley Barrett was on the Audley Harrison undercard????