Yeah but it's pretty ****ing stupid for someone like Rahman to claim that Sanders hit like a truck when he couldn't put him away, then claim that Lewis didn't hit all that hard, when it's obvious to all that saw it that Lewis did hit him, VERY hard:shock: I couldn't believe it when Briggs said Lewis couldn't hit, he was up and down like a whores drawers in the Lewis fight, stupid fat pineapple headed berk :twisted:
# Born and bred in London, England, I feel your pain though :deal Never mind, you've still got Razor Ruddock and Ben Johnson to be proud of
I fancy Haye on points. You ever tried punching bull in the head? He might end up breaking his hands if he goes all out for a KO, IMO.
He was born and raised in London and fought as an Englishman his entire pro career....there's no argument.
http://vault.sportsillustrated.cnn.com/vault/article/magazine/MAG1137845/1/index.htm With the Lewis and Bowe camps edging toward agreement on a unification fight late next year, Lewis was under pressure to dispatch Bruno, a 4-1 underdog, quickly and violently. Lewis's credentials as a champion were shaky at best in Britain, and nearly nonexistent in the rest of the world. Born in London 28 years ago, Lewis won the 1988 Olympic super heavyweight gold medal while representing Canada, and though he returned to England to fight as a pro, many Brits continue to regard him as a Canadian at heart and a Briton for convenience. And so it was that Bruno entered the ring to meet Lewis with THE REAL BRIT Stitched across the rear of his boxing trunks. The music he had chosen to herald his entrance was Land of Hope and Glory, a patriotic English tune that excludes the Scots, the Irish and the Welsh. Lewis was more considerate of his surroundings: He entered to reggae music as both the British Union Jack and the Welsh Red Dragon flag whipped about him in a stiff breeze.