Can 1982 be viewed as the apex of the sport of boxing?

Discussion in 'Classic Boxing Forum' started by horst, Sep 8, 2010.


  1. la-califa

    la-califa Boxing Addict Full Member

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    Wasn't Chacon- Edwards fight of the year. & I'm going out on a limb- Mancini- Frias rd 1. Round of the year? Awesome.
     
  2. natonic

    natonic Boxing Addict Full Member

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    yeah. Imagine, Pryor - Arguello, Gomez - Pintor weren't fight of the year!! That was an amazing year.
     
  3. horst

    horst Guest

    Yes, but does any single year match what was going on in '82? I would say no myself.
     
  4. horst

    horst Guest

    A valiant attempt, but I'd still say '82 was better. It easily has the edge in terms of great fights, and as Bujia said, you can't include Ali with any real legitimacy. He was a ghost by then. It was another vintage year though, very good call.
     
  5. horst

    horst Guest

    I was sure Chacon-Limon 4 was the official Fight of the Year?
     
  6. la-califa

    la-califa Boxing Addict Full Member

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    Not exactly sure. but Chacon- Edwards & Limon- Edwards were. but not sure of the years.
     
  7. TIGEREDGE

    TIGEREDGE Boxing Addict Full Member

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    it was like a summit/ everest for boxing cos it was all down hill with the start of multiple sanctioning bodies, 12 rounders, network tv losing interest
     
  8. bodhi

    bodhi Obsessed with Boxing Full Member

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    I bet one year between 1932 and 1936 is at least up there. It´s too late and I drank too much already to dig deep there but that was a great time for boxing as well.
     
  9. red cobra

    red cobra Loyal Member Full Member

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    Boxing prostituted itself with the reduction of championship rounds to 12 from 15. This was done for the sake of fitting into television time slots...being a ***** for tv..and boxing always got ****ed without being kissed....than for any percieved reasons of safety...as in the death of Duk Koo Kim...The touchy-feely, do-gooder *******s like Jose Suliaman are responsible for this. Damn those powers that be that sold boxing's birthright for a mess of pottage. The 15 round championship distance was a part of modern boxing's DNA..I know you had some stars in the 80's, but the 70's eclipsed the 80's IMO..and still retained the vestiges of boxing's great past...15 round title limits...tv be damned...Wide World of Sports and CBS Sports Spectacular never had any problems televising complete 15 round title bouts back then on Saturday and Sunday afternoons...ahhh, those weekends of big name title defenses back in the 70's..it ensured that boxing was in the public's eye and attention span. If you had things today as they were in the 70's, you wouldn't have inferior, *******ized entertainment spectacles like UFC and MMA daring to compete with boxing.
     
  10. Manassa

    Manassa - banned

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    1964.

    Ali, Liston, Patterson, Williams, Machen, Folley, Terrell, Chuvalo

    Pastrano, Johnson, Mina, Torres, Olson, Cotton

    Giardello, Tiger, Papp, Benvenuti, Archer, Mazzinghi, Carter

    Griffith, Rodriguez, Stable, Ortega, Gonzalez

    Ortiz, Locche, Hernandez, Charnley, Lane, Urbina

    Saldivar, Laguna, Ramos

    Jofre, Harada, Medel, Pimentel

    Kingpetch, Burruni, Accavallo

    --

    ****, this still doesn't cut it. Back soon.
     
  11. PowerPuncher

    PowerPuncher Loyal Member Full Member

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    Not a good year for Duran
     
  12. Duodenum

    Duodenum Boxing Junkie Full Member

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    I certainly consider 1982 to be boxing's final high water mark. Ali really helped revive the sport with his ascension back to the top in 1974. During 1976, the movie Rocky and the stunning success of the 1976 US Olympic Boxing Squad laid the groundwork for much of the popularity boxing enjoyed in 1982.

    Red Cobra and Titan1, thanks fellas, for sparing me the need to get back on the soapbox about the demise of the championship distance. It's a pleasure and something of a lazy relief to be able to sit back and read as others do the work and carry the load expressing my views on the matter.

    Our good friend and master wordsmith Stoney came up with an interesting case for 1949 early last year. He has yet to pop his head in here, and with three pages of replies already in the bank, time's a-wastin' so I trust he'll forgive me if I preemptively insert this contribution of his into this discussion. (Besides, he's always a quality read, and this might jog some memories):

    http://www.thesweetscience.com/boxing-article/6627/1949-perfect-storm-pugilism
     
  13. The Morlocks

    The Morlocks Boxing Junkie Full Member

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    BY FAR the best year of my life in boxing. 50 years. And if you look in the almanac, the year 1982 is the same daywise on the same days (meaning the days fall on the same dates ex:Nov.12, 1982 was a Friday and the same for this year) as this year. So when Margarito fights Pac. on Nov. 13th, it will be exactly the same day in the same year as Mancini-Kim in 1982.
     
  14. PowerPuncher

    PowerPuncher Loyal Member Full Member

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    What about 98-00

    HW - Lennox/Holyfield/Ibeabuchi/Tua/Tyson

    LHW - Jones Jr, DM

    SMW - Calzaghe

    MW - BHOPs

    LMW - Vargas/Winky

    WW - DLH, Tito, Whitaker, Quartey

    LWW - Tyszu

    LW - Stevie J/Mosley

    SFW - Mayweather

    FW - Hamed

    SBW - MAB/Morales/Jones/Mkkiney/Bungu
     
  15. The Morlocks

    The Morlocks Boxing Junkie Full Member

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    chacon limon dec11 82/ edwards may 83