Chris Eubank Sr: I didn’t lose my pen!

Discussion in 'Classic Boxing Forum' started by Bulldog24, Mar 1, 2022.


  1. Bulldog24

    Bulldog24 Boxing Junkie Full Member

    11,335
    4,213
    Aug 2, 2013
    The great Chris Eubank Snr, British superstar of the Nineties, talks deeply regarding history, dues being paid and controversial officiating/judging.



    On if he wished he fought in Madison Square Garden or Vegas in his prime:

    The pre-renovated MSG - the historic MSG - nobody fought in the great building more than I in such a short period, or attended as many fights.

    I was there in the Forum all the time and I mean it when I say that it’s not a church to me but it is Holy Ground.

    Spiritually, I would’ve felt at home defending my world championship there. But it never occurred.

    Spiritually it didn’t appeal to me to fight in Las Vegas, a city of sin, because I considered myself a saint of sorts; I had a God-fearing mother.

    Don King dangled that carrot, and I was the one who was strong enough to not be lured.


    On coming up the hard way:

    You have to pay your dues. York Hall, the Royal Albert Hall; I fought in these venues maybe 8-9 times on the way up as a professional. Sometimes on very short notice for a very small purse; sometimes less than four-figures.

    You’re in the back of a car, travelling to a small venue, trying to prepare mentally because you need some money.

    You cannot expect to win the world championship while already living comfortably. It requires hunger, tunnel drive, eye of the tiger; yeah?


    On mastering the craft taking time:

    There’s not just the right hand, you then have the left hook, the right uppercut, the left uppercut, the right hook to the body, the left uppercut to the body; many particular blows that require years and years of practice to actually learn.

    Armed and dangerous, right? My first 4-5 fights were four-round decision wins. I’m not fully armed yet. I’m still learning, correcting and streamlining my arsenal and that’s just repetition and time.

    You can’t be fast-tracked. You have to be doing it in sparring.


    On never dodging opposition:

    There was no step-aside money in my time. You had to actually get in there and fight. The best fought the best, the fights the public demanded were made. And no wincing in there.

    Both myself and Michael Watson had no hesitation signing the rematch one or two weeks after we fought the first time, we didn’t lose our pens when it was put to us.

    We knew it would be a gladiatorial battle of sorts, two closely matched specimens, 5’10 or 5’11 yet possessing the musculature of a large light-heavy or small cruiser, even more so this new weight class above middleweight - namely super-middle - being put to us; you know?

    25-26 years old, both physically peaking in 1991. To fight the same man 2-3 months on, the situation was there could be no situation where there’s less ring rust or less needing for finding of distance, timing the other man and what have you.

    We knew it could end violently. The crowd and media beforehand stirred us into this dynamite pace set at the first bell. Listen to the words that’d been exchanged, the contempt from both sides. We got in there, we didn’t wince and we left it all in there.


    On his first pro defeat:

    I never believed Steve Collins was even in my league, let alone could defeat me.

    If you are the champion and you knock your opponent down twice and say it’s about 50/50 the rest of the fight, you can’t lose a decision. It’s impossible.

    But it is what it is. The real story is that I defended my championship against an Irishman in Ireland on St Patrick’s weekend.


    On close decisions in his famed career:

    I know I won that first (Carl) Thompson fight and Carl knows it, too. That’s just between me and him. I can have no complaints because I was perhaps lucky to get the draw against (Nigel) Benn and the decision over (Dan) Schommer.

    The referee took a point from Benn for a low blow, and the judges appreciated my aggression against Schommer.

    It’s all horses for courses.
     
    Turnip mk3 likes this.
  2. Journeyman92

    Journeyman92 Mauling Mormon’s Full Member

    19,104
    21,144
    Sep 22, 2021
    I’m not sure if you’ve ever outright answered this but are you associated with Chris?
     
    Saintpat likes this.
  3. Saintpat

    Saintpat Obsessed with Boxing Full Member

    23,408
    26,672
    Jun 26, 2009
    I know when the name Roy Jones Jr came up, Chris swallowed that pen he was chewing on.
     
  4. Journeyman92

    Journeyman92 Mauling Mormon’s Full Member

    19,104
    21,144
    Sep 22, 2021
    Weird. He admits he ducked guys in other interviews outright (Jones/Toney) and in some he edges towards it being an even fight and here it seems he ignores what he established entirely.
     
    Boxingfan2 and HolDat like this.
  5. HolDat

    HolDat Well-Known Member Full Member

    2,593
    2,745
    Sep 25, 2020
    Probably because he'd have to admit he wasn't as good as those two.
     
    Journeyman92 likes this.
  6. Bulldog24

    Bulldog24 Boxing Junkie Full Member

    11,335
    4,213
    Aug 2, 2013
    He admits they’d of been 50/50, so he’d of had to go to war to try to win. Against Jones it would be ‘unlikely’.
     
    Journeyman92 likes this.
  7. Noel857

    Noel857 I Am Duran Full Member

    9,927
    12,922
    Mar 24, 2019
    He wouldn`t entertain a fight with Herol Graham
     
    Journeyman92 likes this.
  8. Bulldog24

    Bulldog24 Boxing Junkie Full Member

    11,335
    4,213
    Aug 2, 2013
    Yeah **** that.
     
  9. Bulldog24

    Bulldog24 Boxing Junkie Full Member

    11,335
    4,213
    Aug 2, 2013
    Even Hagler wouldn’t entertain a fight with Herol Graham
     
    Turnip mk3 likes this.
  10. Tonto62

    Tonto62 Boxing Addict banned Full Member

    5,040
    4,974
    Mar 26, 2011
    The EGO has landed!
     
  11. Journeyman92

    Journeyman92 Mauling Mormon’s Full Member

    19,104
    21,144
    Sep 22, 2021
    At least he created a life worth validating it. It isn't an ego unfound.
     
    VeryMoistWalrus and sasto like this.
  12. Journeyman92

    Journeyman92 Mauling Mormon’s Full Member

    19,104
    21,144
    Sep 22, 2021
    What?
     
  13. Journeyman92

    Journeyman92 Mauling Mormon’s Full Member

    19,104
    21,144
    Sep 22, 2021
    They sparred often. Herol taught him a lot in the ring and always won out. Eubank dropped him and was taught a lesson for his troubles.
     
    Turnip mk3 likes this.
  14. Tonto62

    Tonto62 Boxing Addict banned Full Member

    5,040
    4,974
    Mar 26, 2011
    I have always admired his courage ,if not his style.
     
    Turnip mk3 and Journeyman92 like this.
  15. Journeyman92

    Journeyman92 Mauling Mormon’s Full Member

    19,104
    21,144
    Sep 22, 2021
    He may not be a perfect man. He isn't a good farther, saintly man or even most likely entirely sane I'd venture to say his greatest integrity and truth was within the confines of the ring, he held off when he could, fought honest he took his lickings, sat rugged and punched back with a mouthful of blood he had a damn big heart and a head like a tank turret.
     
    Turnip mk3 and Noel857 like this.