~~~The Lightning Lucian Bute Battleship~~~

Discussion in 'World Boxing Forum' started by Decebal, Oct 15, 2007.


  1. Decebal

    Decebal Lucian Bute Full Member

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    Saw a video of Bute on the scales: 3 weeks before the fight he weighed in at 81.2 kgs. So...maybe it's not as bad as we thought.:D

    Says he sparrs 3 times per week...8 rounds, 10/12 rounds and sometimes 15 rounds. 10 rounds of sparring takes off 2 kgs.

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-mZFlp6Ere0
     
  2. Maxime

    Maxime Sweet Science Full Member

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    Dude, post that video/article/etc. :p
     
  3. Maxime

    Maxime Sweet Science Full Member

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    Unfortunatly I think Bute will need to beat a few more american names before HBO accepts to throw money at a Taylor-Bute fight. :|
     
  4. Decebal

    Decebal Lucian Bute Full Member

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  5. Maxime

    Maxime Sweet Science Full Member

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    Fan made video:
    http://espace.canoe.ca/thefuenz/video/view/36744

    Recent pictures from a photoshoot for Le Journal de Montreal:

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    Right knee injury? :think
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  6. Decebal

    Decebal Lucian Bute Full Member

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    Bute was delighted to Jacques Villeneuve at a Canadiens game last week.

    "He knew who I was. We had a chat and he wished me good luck aganst Joppy. He told me he liked boxing because it gives an adrenalin rush, like F1. He might come to the fight." - Bute.
     
  7. Maxime

    Maxime Sweet Science Full Member

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    hahah cool stuff! :thumbsup
     
  8. Maxime

    Maxime Sweet Science Full Member

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    Jul 19, 2004
  9. Decebal

    Decebal Lucian Bute Full Member

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  10. Maxime

    Maxime Sweet Science Full Member

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    http://www2.canoe.com/sports/nouvelles/archives/2008/02/20080226-101503.html

    Les promesses de Joppy

    Daniel Cloutier
    Le Journal de Montréal
    26/02/2008 10h15
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    Quelques minutes après avoir récupéré ses bagages, hier soir, à l'aéroport Pierre-Elliott- Trudeau, William Joppy a servi un sérieux avertissement à son adversaire Lucian Bute.
    «My friend, be ready for a war (mon ami, prépare-toi pour la guerre», a-t-il déclaré.

    Joppy (39-4-1), un pugiliste de Washington âgé de 37 ans, disputera son 15e match de championnat du monde de boxe professionnelle vendredi soir au Centre Bell. Bute (21-0-0), qui réalisera alors la première défense de son titre mondial des poids super-moyens (168 livres) de l'IBF, en sera à son deuxième match de championnat du monde.

    «J'ai juré à mes partisans à Washington de rapporter la ceinture de l'IBF dans mes valises, a indiqué Joppy. Je vais tenir ma promesse. Je suis dans une forme absolument parfaite.

    «Bute? Je sais à quoi m'attendre de sa part. J'ai visionné les films de ses six derniers combats. Il est grand, il a une très longue portée et maîtrise un excellent jab, mais je sais quoi faire pour le placer dans l'embarras.

    «Bute n'a encore jamais affronté un boxeur de mon calibre», a-t-il affirmé.

    Joppy, qui a compilé une fiche remarquable de 11-3 dans le cadre de combats de championnat du monde, affirme qu'il n'est pas intimidé à l'idée de boxer à Montréal.

    «Deux de mes trois premiers combats de championnat du monde ont été disputés dans la ville de l'adversaire, et j'ai gagné les deux fois, a souligné Joppy. Ça ne sera pas différent vendredi soir.

    «J'adore jouer les trouble-fête dans la cour de l'adversaire. Et c'était tout à fait normal que le combat soit présenté à Montréal. Bute est champion en titre, et il vend beaucoup de billets ici. Mais mes partisans ne perdent rien pour attendre.

    «Je redeviendrai champion du monde et je me ferai un devoir de défendre le titre chez moi.»

    Laham au repos forcé

    Le poids super-plume (130 livres) montréalais Baha Laham (6-0-0), qui devait être impliqué dans le combat d'ouverture, a dû déclarer forfait, en raison d'un virus qui l'a affaibli depuis une semaine.

    Laham sera remplacé par Pierre-Olivier Côté, un boxeur de Québec, qui réalisera alors ses débuts professionnels. Côté se mesurera à Martin Huppé (1- 6-0), de Victoriaville, dans un combat de quatre rounds.

    Plus de 14 000 spectateurs attendus

    Le groupe InterBox, qui a vendu plus de 11 100 sièges, peut prévoir que plus de 14 000 spectateurs franchiront les tourniquets du Centre Bell vendredi soir.
     
  11. Decebal

    Decebal Lucian Bute Full Member

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    :happy :happy :happy Go, Joppy!

    Hope he still has enough to make it a good, challenging fight!:good
     
  12. Decebal

    Decebal Lucian Bute Full Member

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  13. Decebal

    Decebal Lucian Bute Full Member

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    By Cliff Rold

    ep·i·logue: 1. a concluding part added to a literary work, as a novel;
    2. a speech, usually in verse, delivered by one of the actors after the conclusion of a play
    Like most fighters, most people, 37-year old former Middleweight titlist William Joppy (39-4-1, 30 KO) of Silver Springs, Maryland doesn’t want the end written for him. All but forgotten since a lopsided decision loss to then-future World Middleweight champion Jermain Taylor in December of 2004, this is likely Joppy’s last chance to delivery a more positive postmortem.
    He shouldn’t need it. Three alphabet titles in a fifteen year career; pay-per-view headlines losses that no one could be ashamed of against future Hall of Fame entrants Bernard Hopkins and Felix Trinidad; by all rights a successful career in the squared circle. They should be enough to hang a hat on.
    For Joppy, the failures in those two fights, the listless performance against Taylor, and turmoil in his life outside the ring leave him a man in search of an epilogue in his own words. A walk out from behind what was assumed to be the drawn curtain on his days as a serious world-class prizefighter to deliver the final statement on his terms.
    The script is supposed to read otherwise. This Friday night at the Bell Center in Montreal, Canada is not supposed to be his stage. He will face 27-year old Romanian born but Canadian-based Lucien Bute (21-0, 17 KO) in Bute’s first defense of the IBF 168 lb. belt. This script is familiar: “fighter wins title; makes easy first defense to cash in against faded name.” Bute fighting from essentially his backyard is par for this course as well.
    Joppy knows the script, having written a similar chapter himself once upon a time. In 1998, he faced a 47-year old version of all-time great Roberto Duran, stopping him in three rounds. Joppy doesn’t see much of a parallel to the past. “When I fought Duran I was 28, he was closer to fifty. This guy I’m fighting, he’s 26, he’s a younger guy but I’ve watched him fight. He’s not on my level. He’s big up there in Montreal but Montreal doesn’t have a lot of fighters come out of there. Hockey is their sport.”
    He knows the thrill of defeating a local star in his backyard for a title. Joppy’s first of three WBA middleweight belts was won in Yokohama, Japan in October, 1996 against hometown favorite Shinji Takehara with a ninth-round stoppage. “He was big there. When I went to Japan, in his hometown, he couldn’t handle all that pressure. He was a handsome Japanese guy. Everyone was coming to see Shinji. ‘Shinji! Shinji!’ Cameras on Shinji. But I looked at him at a press conference and I said ‘He’s nervous. He can’t handle all this fame. I got this guy.’ I see that in this guy Lucien.”
    Those who have seen Bute fight know that he’s no hockey player and, with several big drawing bouts already under his belt in Montreal, appears up to the pressure. A 6’2 southpaw with solid speed, power and craft, Bute is seen as one of the rising stars of the increasingly deep field at Super Middleweight and one of the chief candidates to replace World Champion Joe Calzaghe on top of the division some day. He’s regarded highly enough that most people see Bute-Joppy as a cruel mis-match, an example of the ills of boxing, the way it devours its aging own.
    It’s a more than fair point.
    Joppy doesn’t want to see it that way. He wills himself to believe he can be young again. Given some of the dark days that have dogged him in recent years, he’s earned the right to do so.
    “The last couple of years of my career, since my loss to Trinidad (May 2001), I know I’ve been on the decline. But you know, I’ve been going through a lot of things in my life.”​

    Those “things” took away any chance he would have had to enjoy his shot, in December 2003, at the Undisputed Middleweight championship of the World. “When I fought Bernard Hopkins in 03, my daughter had just been killed.” That daughter, 5-week old Vashti Scotlyn Joppy, passed away in the summer of 2003 after a tragic accident. Her passing was followed by a slate of legal troubles.
    “I was charged with first-degree assault. I had three warrants out for my arrest when I fought Bernard Hopkins. Let me tell you what happened. I was in the gym training for Hopkins and the repo man came to the gym to repossess my trainer, Adrian Davis, his wife’s mini-van. (Another fighter in the gym) beat the repo man up…repo man comes back and says I did it.”
    “I fought the case for two years. I was going through all this, and my daughter being killed, when I fought Hopkins and Jermain Taylor. For two years, I spent almost $60,000 on a case where I didn’t even know what happened until two days later. All I know is the police picked me up, put me in lockup, and said I was being charged with assault.” He beat the charges, with the case being thrown out of court, but as Joppy astutely observed, “I beat it but I paid for it.”
    With the past behind him, Joppy now looks forward to this Friday. Considering his age, and the many years that have passed since his last win against a legitimate top ten fighter (Howard Eastman in November 2001), a win over the youth and fury of Bute would stand out as a dramatic resurrection. Joppy is aware of what the fight looks like to the rest of the world.
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    This is the epilogue for William Joppy.
    Cliff Rold is a member of the Ring Magazine Ratings Advisory Panel and the Boxing Writers Association of America. He can be reached at
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  14. laffie

    laffie Montreal Full Member

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    So Pascal was his sparring partner...
     
  15. Decebal

    Decebal Lucian Bute Full Member

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    Yeah...much better than anyone Bute has sparred with and certainly prepared Joppy for speed. I hope Joppy is as good and ready as he says he is!