Pele Reid KO2 Vitali, Ironfist Shamefully Attempted To Cover Up The Evidence

Discussion in 'World Boxing Forum' started by zxcvbnm, Mar 30, 2012.


  1. zxcvbnm

    zxcvbnm #TeamHWFuture Full Member

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    Sadly, it is a well known fact that Vitali has done everything he can to destroy the video footage of this KO. He even had the nerve to deny that Reid's kick landed on his jaw in an attempt to continue the myth surrounding his "iron" chin.

    "When quizzed about it, WBC Heavyweight Champion Klitschko allegedly asked, “Who’s Pele Reid?”, and when he was reminded that Pele was supposed to have KO’d him in a kickboxing match, Klitschko answered, “It was so long ago that I forgot all about him. I lost that fight because of a kick to the thigh, not because of any punch. Lennox is the biggest puncher in the world and he couldn’t knock me out.

    Well it’s time to separate myth from reality and set the record straight. I HAVE SEEN THE FIGHT on video a week or two after it happened, and I also interviewed Pele Reid for a martial arts magazine earlier this year, and he spoke about what happened.

    So here it is...the TRUE account of what happened, from an eye-witness and from the guy who was in the ring with him.

    Firstly, a few facts about the fight. It was in Varna, Bulgaria at the WAKO European Kickboxing Championships, 1992, where each member country is allowed to enter a representative fighter. In the +89kgs Light-Contact division (which at this event was fought on a matted area, rather than in a boxing ring), Pele Reid was the Great British representative, while Klitschko was fighting for CIS (Russia). Both were singled out as top seeds immediately because of their sheer size: we all know Klitschko is listed at 6’7” plus, and Reid himself is a perfectly proportioned and muscular 6’4” and 235lbs or more.

    Reid was initially taken back by the big Ukrainian’s size, and took up the story: “I breezed through the semi-finals, and Klitschko did, too. He happened to walk past me after our matches and I thought, ‘man, this guy’s big!’. Then he looks down at me and smirks like he’s measuring me up. I was like, (sucks teeth) ‘Look at this boy here trying to look at ME!’. He looked at me like he was gonna bust me up and I knew then that I just had to put him down.”

    Reid and Klitschko met in the finals. After a quiet opening round that saw both taking a good look at what the other had, Klitschko began to open up. The Ukrainian lifted his leg to kick, left it out there for too long (the kickboxing equivalent of pawing with the jab), and Reid saw the opening, connecting with a perfect spinning kick that landed right on the tip of Klitschko’s jaw. The Ukrainian went down, and had it been regular Boxing or Kickboxing rules, there was no way there would have been any kind of ten-count. As it was, being a light-contact match, the ref just waved the fight off and Reid was the new European Champion.

    With the help of an amateur video recorded by one of the members of the British team, I witnessed the knockout. The picture was perfect and there was no mistaking what had happened...Pele Reid knocked out Vitali Klitschko, not with a kick to the leg, but with a bonafide spinning kick to the jaw. Don’t believe me? I took this excerpt from the January 1993 issue of Martial Arts Illustrated, where a brief mention is given to the fight by writer Peter Lewis:

    “Our fourth Gold came from Pele Reid when, after some superb fights, he met Klitschko of CIS (Russia) in the finals of the 89 plus category...an opponent even taller than Pele! With little trouble, Pele KO’d the huge Russian in round two with a reverse spinning kick to take the gold.”

    After several more big medal victories around the world, Reid turned to pro-boxing and ran up a 13 fight knockout streak before losing to British Champion (and Mike Tyson-victim) Julius Francis. Suffering a further knock out loss to Orlin Norris, Reid bowed out with a 16-4-2 (15) record and entered the K-1 Kick/Thai-boxing Arena."
     
  2. Champion

    Champion Boxing Addict Full Member

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    This content is protected
     
  3. Scottrf

    Scottrf Boxing Addict Full Member

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    May 1, 2010
    China chinned Quitali exposed.
     
  4. Foreman Hook

    Foreman Hook ☆☆☆ G$ora ☆☆☆ Full Member

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    Jul 30, 2010
    A kick-ko??? I am disapointed, that is not boxing. :-(
     
  5. Champion

    Champion Boxing Addict Full Member

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    Brittards will try anything to discredit the Klitschko success story. It's so amusing.
     
  6. Folketingen

    Folketingen Guest

    Your daily hate post on a Klitschko or white boxers in general?

    Are you intimidated by the success of the Klitschkos? Not all people can be bank-robbers or gang-trash as the guy in your avatar.
     
  7. Squire

    Squire Let's Go Champ Full Member

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    Jun 22, 2009
    I imagine a good kick would put anybody down, and kicking isn't relevant to boxing. It's like watching someone get KO'd with a baseball bat and saying 'Well, that's his boxing career over. He's a KO waiting to happen'
     
  8. zxcvbnm

    zxcvbnm #TeamHWFuture Full Member

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    May 29, 2010
    If only it were a punch :deal
    We all know that Vitali's glass jaw would be exposed if he had the bottle to get in the ring with Stiverne.
     
  9. Vidic

    Vidic Rest in Peace Manny Full Member

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    Nov 23, 2010
    There is something of an urban myth going around in boxing about the supposed Vitali Klitschko knockout loss at the hands of a British kickboxer, Pele Reid. It has been the subject of many internet gossipers across the boxing community, and little seems to be known about it, except that Reid was supposed to have KO’d Klitschko in a kickboxing fight many years ago before either became professional boxers.

    When quizzed about it, WBC Heavyweight Champion Klitschko allegedly asked, “Who’s Pele Reid?”, and when he was reminded that Pele was supposed to have KO’d him in a kickboxing match, Klitschko answered, “It was so long ago that I forgot all about him. I lost that fight because of a kick to the thigh, not because of any punch. Lennox is the biggest puncher in the world and he couldn’t knock me out.”

    Well it’s time to separate myth from reality and set the record straight. I HAVE SEEN THE FIGHT on video a week or two after it happened, and I also interviewed Pele Reid for a martial arts magazine earlier this year, and he spoke about what happened.

    So here it is...the TRUE account of what happened, from an eye-witness and from the guy who was in the ring with him.

    Firstly, a few facts about the fight. It was in Varna, Bulgaria at the WAKO European Kickboxing Championships, 1992, where each member country is allowed to enter a representative fighter. In the +89kgs Light-Contact division (which at this event was fought on a matted area, rather than in a boxing ring), Pele Reid was the Great British representative, while Klitschko was fighting for CIS (Russia). Both were singled out as top seeds immediately because of their sheer size: we all know Klitschko is listed at 6’7” plus, and Reid himself is a perfectly proportioned and muscular 6’4” and 235lbs or more.

    Reid was initially taken back by the big Ukrainian’s size, and took up the story: “I breezed through the semi-finals, and Klitschko did, too. He happened to walk past me after our matches and I thought, ‘man, this guy’s big!’. Then he looks down at me and smirks like he’s measuring me up. I was like, (sucks teeth) ‘Look at this boy here trying to look at ME!’. He looked at me like he was gonna bust me up and I knew then that I just had to put him down.”

    Reid and Klitschko met in the finals. After a quiet opening round that saw both taking a good look at what the other had, Klitschko began to open up. The Ukrainian lifted his leg to kick, left it out there for too long (the kickboxing equivalent of pawing with the jab), and Reid saw the opening, connecting with a perfect spinning kick that landed right on the tip of Klitschko’s jaw. The Ukrainian went down, and had it been regular Boxing or Kickboxing rules, there was no way there would have been any kind of ten-count. As it was, being a light-contact match, the ref just waved the fight off and Reid was the new European Champion.

    With the help of an amateur video recorded by one of the members of the British team, I witnessed the knockout. The picture was perfect and there was no mistaking what had happened...Pele Reid knocked out Vitali Klitschko, not with a kick to the leg, but with a bonafide spinning kick to the jaw. Don’t believe me? I took this excerpt from the January 1993 issue of Martial Arts Illustrated, where a brief mention is given to the fight by writer Peter Lewis:

    “Our fourth Gold came from Pele Reid when, after some superb fights, he met Klitschko of CIS (Russia) in the finals of the 89 plus category...an opponent even taller than Pele! With little trouble, Pele KO’d the huge Russian in round two with a reverse spinning kick to take the gold.”

    After several more big medal victories around the world, Reid turned to pro-boxing and ran up a 13 fight knockout streak before losing to British Champion (and Mike Tyson-victim) Julius Francis. Suffering a further knock out loss to Orlin Norris, Reid bowed out with a 16-4-2 (15) record and entered the K-1 Kick/Thai-boxing Arena.

    Klitschko, as we all know, went on to win the WBC Heavyweight Title given up by Lennox Lewis on his retirement, which he still defends to this day. But next time Vitali talks about never having been knocked out, remember that little-known Pele Reid once achieved what Lennox Lewis couldn’t (albeit with a kick instead of a punch), and flattened the Ukrainian in two rounds.

    http://www.boxnews.com.ua/en/news/1...ed-Vitali-Klitschko-Out-What-Really-Happened-
     
  10. SJS19

    SJS19 Obsessed with Boxing Full Member

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    Jun 13, 2011
    You take a spinning kick to the jaw from a 234lb man and tell me how you're doing.
     
  11. Foreman Hook

    Foreman Hook ☆☆☆ G$ora ☆☆☆ Full Member

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    But Stiverne, while a ma$$ive-puncher, does not hit as hard as Lenny Lion Lewis.
     
  12. zxcvbnm

    zxcvbnm #TeamHWFuture Full Member

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    May 29, 2010
    How do you explain Vitali denying that the kick landed on his chin when unbiased eyewitness accounts show that the kick did in fact land on his chin? :rofl:rofl

    I am a white man myself so your comment is ridiculous. I support talent and expose frauds regardless of race :nono
     
  13. Foreman Hook

    Foreman Hook ☆☆☆ G$ora ☆☆☆ Full Member

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    I heard on tv, Legs are on average 7 times stronger then Arms. :admin
     
  14. DrMo

    DrMo Team GB Full Member

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    Does everyone know that Vitali only lasted a round with Maskaev in the ams & avoided him like the plague as a pro?
     
  15. zxcvbnm

    zxcvbnm #TeamHWFuture Full Member

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    KO of the year 2011 :deal

    [ame]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NnZhjcEp7BU[/ame]