Bruce Seldon

Discussion in 'World Boxing Forum' started by Thread Stealer, May 18, 2008.


  1. Thread Stealer

    Thread Stealer Loyal Member Full Member

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    http://www.pressofatlanticcity.com/186/story/160664.html

    Bruce Seldon went from boxing champ to jobless, then homeless. It's time for a comeback, he says.

    By DAVID WEINBERG Staff Writer, 609-272-7186


    ATLANTIC CITY - Bruce Seldon couldn't win.
    The 41-year-old was locked in the toughest fight of his 20-year boxing career since an embarrassing, first-round loss to Mike Tyson in 1996 ended his brief reign as WBA heavyweight champion. Now, during a recent training session at the Atlantic City PAL, he was firing punches until sweat dribbled down his arms and seeped into his gloves. Still, nothing was getting through his opponent's defense. Sharp jabs and powerful hooks all fell short of the mark.

    When the bell sounded to end the round, Seldon reached for a towel and a water bottle, then fixed his gaze on a yellowed newspaper clipping that was taped to the wall. The headlined blared "He's The Champion!" and showed Seldon celebrating his victory over Tony Tucker in Las Vegas on April 8, 1995.

    A smile briefly appeared, but faded just as quickly.

    "Man, that was a long time ago," Seldon said. "I think that was the last time I was truly happy."

    ***
    Bruce Seldon's life began to unravel after he lost his title to Tyson in 1996.

    Two years later, he pleaded guilty to two counts of endangering the welfare of a child - the charges involved a girl who was 15 at the time - and was sentenced to 364 days under house arrest.

    He wound up serving a much longer, self-imposed sentence.

    Unfounded accusations that he had taken a dive hit him harder than Tyson's fists. Humiliated and hurt from the loss and arrest, he retreated into the basement of his home in Moorestown and stayed there for almost eight years. On the rare occasions that he ventured into Atlantic City, he did so as quietly as possible.

    "Considering all the ups and downs I've gone through, I feel grateful just to still be here and for what little bit of sanity I still have," Seldon said.

    "Someone who was in my frame of mind back then might have killed themselves.

    "There are people who still don't want to forgive me, but they are the ones who are suffering, not me. I put my trust in God and I learned to be forgiving. I learned that we all make mistakes in life. It's how you bounce back, climb back up and avoid making those mistakes ever again that matters most."

    Co-managers Jim Kurtz and Joe Thompson finally convinced him to return to boxing in 2004, but he had mixed results. A pair of tuneup fights led to an opportunity to get back into the title picture, but his controversial loss to Gerald Nobles in Las Vegas - Seldon was winning the fight before he took a knee and allowed himself to be counted out in the ninth round - ended his quest.

    He tried another comeback last year, but two more wins against undistinguished foes have gone virtually unnoticed. He has not fought since beating journeyman Jay Sweetman at the Days Inn in Winchester, Va. on March 10, 2007.

    Seldon's career - and his life - appeared to be going nowhere.

    "I felt like I lost everything," he said. "My friends, my family, my support, everything went. I had a lot of friends when I was on top, but the second I fell, they all disappeared.

    "I sold my house so that I could make a fresh start. I moved into an apartment in Westville (Gloucester County), but I got evicted because I couldn't hold a job and pay the rent. I wound up having to sleep in the street before I got into a rooming house. I had a lot of sleepless, eatless nights. I realized I had to make some drastic changes."

    He started by taking a job driving a forklift for a Millville company that makes kitchen appliances. Next, he moved into a tiny efficiency apartment near the warehouse. He said he is also taking better care of his money. He lost the bulk of his $3-million payday for the Tyson fight via loans to friends and a few unwise investments until his bank account sank from a couple million dollars to about $100,000.

    Finally, he decided to get back to basics with his boxing career. After training in Vineland under former light-heavyweight contender Richie Kates, he switched to Atlantic City and veteran trainer Bill Johnson. Although Johnson was in Seldon's corner for his recent fights as a cutman, he has not been Seldon's primary cornerman since 1992.

    "Bruce still has to wake up a lot of stuff that's been dormant for a while, but he's coming along surprisingly well," Johnson said. "He's in great shape, his reflexes are intact and he hasn't lost any hand speed.

    "But the biggest thing is Bruce hasn't lost his legs, despite being 41. As a fighter's legs go, so goes the fighter. And Bruce still runs like a big middleweight."

    The fighter and trainer have been leaning on each other for support.

    Johnson is still coping with the death of his youngest son, former lightweight champion Leavander Johnson of Atlantic City, from brain injuries suffered in a fight against Jesus Chavez nearly three years ago. Seldon recently lost his father, Nathaniel, to cancer.

    It remains to be seen if Bill Johnson is getting through to Seldon, but the relationship appears to be strong. Johnson lacks the ego of some of the sport's better-known trainers, but has a way of getting his point across to fighters.

    Seldon, who has trimmed his weight to 219 pounds from a high of 263, seems eager to please his mentor. He is expected to put those lessons to use in one or two bouts this month, possibly in Atlantic City.

    "I don't have a bad word to say about Richie because I respect him tremendously as a person and a trainer," Seldon said. "But at this point in my life and career, there's only one man who can put me in the frame of mind I need to be in and that's Bill Johnson.

    "B.J. and I go way back, back to the very, very beginning. I have a chemistry with him that I don't have with anyone else. There's no trainer out there that is better for me than him."

    ***

    After staring at the newspaper clipping for a few minutes, Seldon's gaze ventured over to the ring, where some youngsters were swapping punches in a spirited sparring session.

    "The best part about working with B.J. again is that I'm back home in Atlantic City," Seldon said. "Man, I love my city, even though it hasn't always loved me.

    "Being around all the kids and the other fighters, I just seem to get so much more out of working out here. I know they've seen that picture, but they never saw me until recently. Maybe seeing me in person will help give them some hope."

    The bell sounded again and Seldon resumed his fight. He started throwing more punches, fervently trying to find an opening in his opponents' defense.

    He also tried to protect himself, moving his head and rolling his shoulders to ward off the blows.

    Three minutes later, the round ended.

    Seldon turned away from the mirror and trudged toward the showers, uncertain if he had won or lost.

    "I'm just now getting to the point where I'm comfortable in my life," Seldon said. "I'm still not happy, but at least I feel comfortable. It's been a while since I even felt that good."
     
  2. Moralman

    Moralman Member Full Member

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    May 11, 2007
    Dear Thread Stealer
    kind regards
    Bruce Seldon is an embarrassment to the sport of Boxing.
    Here is the infamous match up where he took the dive.

    [yt]_ZmwN_1KobE[/yt]

    In regards to his come back, I suppose that it is only right that he finds some way to get some money.
    What it is with Boxers and money?
    They always spend too much money or end up giving it away to parasitic friends.
    I am now of the opinion that Boxers should be trained in how to discern people as well as punches.
    yours thankfully
    John
     
  3. Serpent Saint

    Serpent Saint Member Full Member

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    May 16, 2008
    Tyson/Seldon 2, in a fight to the death. The winner gets to be killed.
     
  4. Ted Stickles

    Ted Stickles Boxing Addict Full Member

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    Thats a major dive or a majorly terrified dude
     
  5. Moralman

    Moralman Member Full Member

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    May 11, 2007
    Dear Ted Stickles
    kind regards
    I think that it was both.
    I think that Seldon was so terrified that he simply took a dive.
    I used tp think that it was a set up by King, but then again, Seldon was always going to get knocked out, it was just a matter of when.
    The fact that Seldon didn't want to fight like a man was sinful.
    yours thankfully
    John
     
  6. venbox

    venbox Active Member Full Member

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    I have never seen another instance of a referee ruling a slip (because he didnt see any punch landing) and then having to change it to a knockdown and apply a count because the slipping fighter refuses to get up inmediatly. This guy was a disgrace to the sport.
     
  7. Moralman

    Moralman Member Full Member

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    May 11, 2007
    Dear venbox
    kind regards
    Richard Steele is one of the most crooked referees in the history of Boxing, completely in the pocket of that con man King.
    There is nothing more to say.
    yours thankfully
    John
     
  8. columbo man

    columbo man Active Member Full Member

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    Jan 18, 2008
    after reading that i was sorry to hear that seldon fell on bad times.
    he was a decent boxer without being anything special but the tyson fight was a poor way for him to bail out. hope he can make a go of things with this latest comeback!!!!
     
  9. Moralman

    Moralman Member Full Member

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    May 11, 2007
    Dear Friends
    kind regards
    Here is Riddick Bowe's first round destruction of Bruce Seldon in 1991.

    [YT]XPFjztGLZ6Y[/YT]

    At least Seldon tried to fight in this match and was genuinely stopped.
    I have no doubt that Tyson would have taken Seldon out early anyway in that match.
    yours thankfully
    John
     
  10. amhlilhaus

    amhlilhaus Well-Known Member Full Member

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    Mar 24, 2005
    seldon's title loss was the most disgraceful defeat by a heavyweight champion or titleist.

    no one, and I mean no one comes close.
     
  11. Hax0rJimDuggan

    Hax0rJimDuggan It's me bitches! Full Member

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    Mar 17, 2007
    Michael Spinks?
     
  12. Cachibatches

    Cachibatches Boxing Junkie banned

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    Nov 12, 2006
    And what did he do to the fifteen year old girl?

    Why do they always talk about god/fogiveness after they have done something really awful?

    **** him.
     
  13. RDJ

    RDJ Boxing Junkie banned

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    Sep 27, 2005
    Cocaine.
     
  14. Thread Stealer

    Thread Stealer Loyal Member Full Member

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    Michael Spinks was first dropped by left uppercut to the jaw and a real hard body shot to the ribcage, then finished by a right hand that made the back of his head SLAM against the canvas and his eyes were glassy as Eric Crumble's chin.

    Bruce Seldon went down from a gust of stiff wind.
     
  15. Thread Stealer

    Thread Stealer Loyal Member Full Member

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    Jun 30, 2005
    http://www.reviewjournal.com/lvrj_home/1997/Nov-27-Thu-1997/sports/6501012.html

    Associated Press
    GLOUCESTER TOWNSHIP, N.J. -- Former WBA heavyweight champion Bruce Seldon was arrested Wednesday and charged with sexual assault of a minor.
    Police said a 15-year-old girl said Seldon picked her up while she was walking in Atlantic City nine days ago. She said he took her to his house here, where he raped her three times.
    Police searched Seldon's home and found evidence of the sexual assault, they said.
    The 30-year-old Seldon was charged with three counts of sexual assault, endangering the welfare of a minor, distribution of a controlled dangerous substance, possession of marijuana and illegal weapons possession.

    http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/more/boxing/news/1998/06/26/seldon_hearing/

    Seldon sentenced to year in jail

    Former boxing champ guilty of child endangerment

    CAMDEN, New Jersey (AP) -- Former WBA heavyweight champion Bruce Seldon was sentenced Friday to five years probation plus 364 days in the county jail for smoking pot with a 15-year-old girl and taking part in "sexual activity" with her last year.

    The jail sentence was stayed until Wednesday to allow Seldon's attorney to apply for house arrest or a work release program for his client in place of the jail term.

    Seldon pleaded guilty in May in Superior Court here to two counts of endangering the welfare of a child. In exchange for his plea, prosecutors agreed to dismiss a more serious charge of sexual assault as well as drug and weapons offenses.

    The fighter faced a maximum five-year prison sentence on each of the endangerment counts. Superior Court Judge Stephen W. Thompson said Seldon will have to register his whereabouts with police under Megan's Law, as a convicted sex offender.

    Seldon had remained free on $50,000 pending sentencing.

    Seldon, 31, admitted picking the girl up in Atlantic City on November 17 and taking her to his house in Gloucester Township. There, the girl smoked a marijuana joint and he took sexually provocative photographs of her, he said at his plea.

    Following the sentencing, Seldon was contrite. "I'm terribly sorry for everything that happened. I'm not a bad person. I didn't mean for any of this to happen," he said.

    The prosecutor agreed with the defense lawyer there were no indications that force was used. The sexual assault charges were filed after the girl went to police headquarters several days after the incident and said Seldon had raped her.

    Seldon, the WBA's eighth-ranked heavyweight, has not fought since losing his title to Mike Tyson on September 7, 1996, in Las Vegas. Seldon lasted just 109 seconds.