The poster Darryl1914 said it was a really bad robbery, but then again, since when did I listen to what a racist weatherman has to say?
Precisely Man...........Vernon Paris is only HALF-BLACK!!!!! so could never legit beat a REAL BLACK MAN!!!!!...........like Manny Augustus!!!!! Hell..............I tell you people this ****.....................ALL THE TIME!!!!!!! and you all call me racist? WRONG!!! yOU peeps is CRAZY!!!.....................
Darryl spent most of his time on here denying that he was a racist. Most of the time, he did it before anyone had even accused him of anything.
My favourite thing would be when he'd start threads on "best worldwide prospects"............. 100% of his ones? Black guys from the American mid-west.
I know this ain't the right thread but seeing as you're here, check the S&R forum, I just got some guy to disclose private business matters by telling him I was part of ESB's PR team.
Name: Paul Takeshi Fuji Height: 5'6 This content is protected Boxing record Total fights 38 Wins 34 KO's 29 Losses 3 (2) Draws 1 A Japanese-American Light Welterweight, and one of the hardest puncher of all time at the weight, Paul Fuji was a fairly unremarkable fighter who was technically woeful, but at one point was the undisputed 140lb king, and is rated by some to be the hardest puncher in the divisions history. Losing to a Filipino journeyman early on (avenged) Fuji learned to implement constant upper body movement to create openings for his heavy handed barrages. One of the first to really experience the extent of Fujis assault was Sandro Lopopolo, the unified 140lb champ', and a tricky Italian who didn't go down easily (and had won the belts with a decision win over great 140lber Carlos Hernandez, admittedly in his Italian homeland), but Fuji just savaged him with wild, vicious punches, battering him to a 2nd round stoppage. [ame]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vPPujvw2sdk[/ame] Now that is a brutal display! The Italian would only be finished one more time in his career, in the pentultimate bout of 77 contests. Against German Willy Quatuor, you really see how Fuji made up for his lack of technical refinement. The aforementioned upper body movement, which admittedly doesn't stop him resorting to wild swings, as well as switching between southpaw and orthodox to try and draw space for his massive bombs. [ame]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3bEG7oAL440[/ame] [ame]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TZDVIr7ponI&feature=related[/ame] And then it was for the fight that most remember him for; a drubbing at the hands of 'The Master' himself, Nicolino Locche, who put on one of the masterful displays boxing has ever seen, against the dangerous Jap'. [ame]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GCxgODaBiBw[/ame] [ame]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kmwByRU3u8w[/ame] Unable to get anything going, missing all of his shots, and thoroughly bamboozled, Fuji, eyes closing and looking foolish, was not allowed to continue into the 10th round, and faced shame amongst Japanese fans for 'quitting'. He never returned to the big stage again, stopping a few journeyman before becoming a trainer in Japan.
Fantastic post Moe, some great footage there that I really enjoyed. I'd only seen one of his fights before & he was tailormade for Locche.