NEW Eubank: I signed to fight Nunn/Toney and Jones avoided me!

Discussion in 'British Boxing Forum' started by atberry, Jun 4, 2012.


  1. atberry

    atberry Boxing Junkie banned Full Member

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    [url]http://www.nowboxing.com/2012/06/fan-qa-with-chris-eubank-sr/24329/[/url]
    Fan Q&A with Chris Eubank Sr

    Monday, June 4, 2012


    Who was the best fighter you ever fought?
    “By far, Michael Watson in our second fight.”
    Did Joe Calzaghe hit harder than Nigel Benn as Frank ****** claimed you said..?
    “Benn hit me hardest by far, harder than cruiser Carl Thompson even.”
    Is it true that you wanted nothing to do with the Michael Nunn & James Toney?
    “That’s interesting, because I signed to fight both Nunn and James Toney. As part of the contract with Don King for Nunn, where I was the first fighter to get one over on him when me and Nigel drew. And as part of the contract with SKY for James Toney, where I was the first fighter to sign for a TV [url]
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    [/url] direct, but he lost to Roy Jones.”
    Did Roy Jones Jr duck you?
    “I was never mandated. But I asked Roy Jones about 10 or 12 years ago if he’d said back in ’93 that the one fighter he thought would give him problems and had reservations of taking on was me. He told me yes that was true.”
    Did you take on all the toughest challenges in your career in your opinion?
    “As world champion, what you want to avoid is a southpaw who is 6ft or more and unbeaten or been world champion. Rocchigiani and Calzaghe were fights that no other fighter would take. I took them, even though they weren’t even mandated.
    “Not even Roy Jones, rated as the best pound-for-pound fighter in history by some writers, would take that fight even when it was mandated to.”
    Did you train on Xmas Day and New Years Day and was this hard?
    “Yes, and in hindsight it was year-by-year progression to the very best objectively; going into New Year ’91 [url]
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    [/url] for an unbeaten, never-before-dropped world title challenger; New Year ’92 training for never-before-dropped, future world champion; New Year ’93 training for 45-win former world champion; and New Year ’94 training for 35-0 former and future world champion.
    “I never missed a single days training from the age of 16 until after I fought Nigel Benn in 1990 and I trained seven days a week to that point.”
    How would you have fared against Mike McCallum, Reggie Johnson or Sumbu Kalambay?
    “McCallum: I wouldn’t like to say, we are good friends. The other two: difficult styles but I had incredible strength for a middleweight and they didn’t hit anywhere near as hard as Nigel Benn to keep me off.”
    Did you see Joe Calzaghe going unbeaten for a further 11 years after your fight?
    “No because everyone loses. One must take into [url]
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    [/url] that 11 years was 22 fights or so for him, whereas I had the showmanship and made myself marketable enough to fight five or six title fights a year which was three times as difficult to stay unbeaten.
    “He didn’t lose, but he was stuck down the canvas by fighters of pedigree and got up to win in style, every time. Calzaghe was a great fighter.”
    Who would’ve won between Steve Collins or Joe Calzaghe?
    “Calzaghe was a different class to Collins in terms of ability and talent.”
    Who is your favourite fighter of all-time?
    “Jack Johnson, and I would like to play the part in his movie.”
     
  2. sniffmybadger

    sniffmybadger Relationships are not my forte Full Member

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    Great interview, Eubanks being respectful and insightful as always
     
  3. BoxingAnalyst

    BoxingAnalyst Obsessed with Boxing banned

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    Great interview, but why would Jones come over to England.
     
  4. boxingcrazy

    boxingcrazy Boxing Addict Full Member

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    Where did it say Jones would have been coming to England??
     
  5. Choynski

    Choynski New Member Full Member

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    The man is a laughing stock. A fraud. A jester. A punk.

    I also heard he has hygiene issues.
     
  6. TBooze

    TBooze Obsessed with Boxing Full Member

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    The Nunn fight was a goer; the winner of Benn/EubankII was scheduled to clash with Second to Little.
     
  7. Choynski

    Choynski New Member Full Member

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    Yeah, sure it was.

    Eubank is perpetually full of ****. Fact.

    Apparently, even literally on occasions.
     
  8. BoxingAnalyst

    BoxingAnalyst Obsessed with Boxing banned

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    Jones always fought in the states, he was the man at the time, Eubank never fought across the pond, apart from his first few fights.
     
  9. boxingcrazy

    boxingcrazy Boxing Addict Full Member

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    I'm sure Eubank would have went over to box Jones in the States, he went over to Germany to box Rocchigiani in front of a very hostile crowd and they were also a bit racist towards him if I remember correctly.

    I also think that if the pay day was big enough he would have went over too!!! Eubank likes his money!!!
     
  10. HMSTempleGarden

    HMSTempleGarden Boxing Junkie Full Member

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    Jones wasn't a big ticket seller from memory so the fight being in England may have been a goer.
     
  11. TBooze

    TBooze Obsessed with Boxing Full Member

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    DKP and Frank had it set up, it was nothing to do with Eubank. Indeed I think the hope was Benn would win their rematch, as even after the draw, Nunn fought on the Benn/Wharton undercard. The plan being Benn/Nunn would happen in the summer of 94, but Michael goes and loses to Steve Little.
     
  12. Choynski

    Choynski New Member Full Member

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    He preferred his '0'.

    Benn, on the other hand, WOULD have gone over to the States.
     
  13. TBooze

    TBooze Obsessed with Boxing Full Member

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    I do not think you know very much about Eubank. Money was everything to him. He would of fought Lennox if the money was right; '0' or no '0'.

    Jones/Eubank was not going to happen. As mentioned the fight would only be financially viable in the UK at the time, and Jones Jr made it clear he was not prepared to leave the States.

    Which was rather silly, as he would of probably won, fairly easily. And the fight would of been judged a lot more fairly than if it was in Seoul...
     
  14. Choynski

    Choynski New Member Full Member

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    You don't think he would have made more money going after one of the bigger governing bodies' titles? Even when he lost the WBO belt to Collins he only had interest in going after that belt again. Even at 190.
    Actually, he wouldn't, as he'd lose. Never mind.
     
  15. TBooze

    TBooze Obsessed with Boxing Full Member

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    No, fighting Close, Wharton et al, made him more than fighting Frankie Liles or Steve Little. The only fight against a champion from a 'bigger governing body' that would of made him more money, would of been that WBC champ Nigel Benn. And on a trip to Old Trafford, I am pretty sure I saw Chris fighting this Nigel Benn fella...