Posted in British Forum, Thought i'd get more replies in here. The Philadelphia Spectrum This content is protected The Spectrum was opened in 1967 in the southside of the city. A arena that was built for the city's major sports teams Philadelphia 76ers and the Philadelphia Flyers. Although it was built for those two sides it was actually boxing that was to be the first event at arena. It would home Joe Frazier vs Tony Doyle in a 10 round contest that Frazier won via technical knockout in second round. It was to be a success and from there on the Spectrum was to hold another 15 shows from 68-72. The shows would be headlined with a 10 round bout and a few undercard bouts but it was in 1973 when Promoter J Russell Peltz took the role of director of boxing at the Spectrum that the venue would home not only some of greatest fights in sport but develop some of the greatest fighters. Over the years the Spectrum would bring through Matthew Saad Muhammad, Jeff Chandler, Benny Briscoe, Tyrone Everett, Billy Douglas and the 'Marvelous One' Marvin Hagler. It was to become a breeding ground of talent in a hard working class area. Fighters would enter as boys and leave as men. Hagler would enter the Spectrum in 1976 and lose his first two fights at the venue (Bobby "Boogaloo" Watts & Willie "The Worm" Monroe) and was believed to be told he's got to win or face going back to the smaller halls and work way back up. He'd beat Eugene Hart and avenge his loss to Willie Monroe and then beat Bennie Briscoe and leave with a 3-2 record at the Spectrum. Hagler vs Hart [ame]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ft5S7hopZp0[/ame] It was the place that would make or break a fighter and for Hagler it was the place that made him the fighter he would go on to be. The venue would host many epic battles with Bennie Briscoe and Eugene Cyclone Hart battling to a thrilling draw and missed out for Ring Fight of Year to 'Thrilla in Manilla'. Briscoe vs Hart I [ame]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ozogMMvMdg0[/ame] It would also host a controversial decision win for Alfredo Escalera over South Philly's Tyrone Everett which allowed him to retain his WBC Super Featherweight title. Till this day it still holds the record indoor attendance in Philadelphia(16,019). Alfredo Escalera vs Tyrone Everett [ame]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Fv_q3Oaomwo[/ame] Over years the venue would hold tournaments for local middleweights and would open doors to the great Roberto Duran who would face Edwin Viruet in a televised contest. Though the likes of Hagler and Duran passed through the Spectrum the venue would always be synonymous with Matthew Saad Muhammad who would have two exceptional battles at the venue against Marvin Johnson and Richie Kates. Matthew Franklin (Saad Muhammad vs Marvin Johnson [ame]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I8_3tAsHrGA[/ame] Matthew Saad Muhammad vs. Richie Kates [ame]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vKReIgeReFo[/ame] Sadly with all the money and casino venue's coming into the sport the fights at the Spectrum would be taken to the more glitzy and glamorous venue's in Vegas. There still would be shows over the years but it would start to dwindle although the likes of Tyson and Tua had fights there and hometown son Bernard Hopkins would feature on undercard of the Tua bill. The last bill at the Spectrum would be Jameel Wilson and Richard Stewart who fought to a 8 round draw. It would sadly close it's doors to sports and boxing in particular and would be demolished in 2010 despite the talk of a 'farewell boxing' show. It may be gone but the memory still lives on, The Real Fight Factory. This content is protected This content is protected Hope you enjoy, Please add to it. Bit rushed, have no doubts there's error's and false tales. Just took what i read and saw been meaning to do a thread on it for a while.
Great thread. The Spectrum is legendary and I haven't seen most of the fights you put in here. Thanks.
There are a good few middleweights from the Spectrum's halcyon days who would have won a belt nowadays. Wasn't there a particular midweek night that hosted the great bills in the 70's? Can you imagine having access to that nowadays for the same ticket prices they paid then? I'm sure even comparitively the prices would still be very favourable nowadays.
Great thread. I still remember going to the Spectrum as kid. The food was terrible, and so were the Sixers, but the seats were great. I'm 29, so the fight scene in Philadelphia hasn't been big in my time. I did however get to catch one fight at The Spectrum, Tyson vs. Buster Mathis Jr. I think Tyson knocked him out in 3 rounds. I miss that place. The Wells Fargo Center is a lot nicer, but the seating is nowhere near as good if you're not on the first level.
:good No Problem. Yeah i think there was, have to try dig up some info on that. I'd love to see something like this brought back. Really brought through superhero type fighters. :good Thanks :good Nice post.
The Spectrum was legandary ..They don't have buildings like that anymore ..So many wars in that place ..Thats truly is where you made a name for yourself ..
:deal Could you imagine if they brought this back, would be amazing. A old school building. Old school type fighters!. Golden Boy tried that fight night which was okay but some mismatches on there cards. There's a promoter in UK called Spencer Fearon who has a promotion called Hard Knocks which is trying to bring back 50/50 fights. One of his prospects got beaten last time out Mitchell Balker. You guys may of heard of him, He won Golden Gloves. Anyways he lost to a 7-0 guy. Showed bravery though down in 2nd round IIRC and got to points.
Glad to see someone post about the spectrum.. Tyrone Everett is my Grandfather.. only fight i saw was the esculera.. Tyrone Really beat esculera easily.. won atleat 13 out of 15 rounds and got robbed!!... Tyrone was killed at the age of 24 with a record 36-1.. Many say he would of been great and would of been better then arguello... He came up with the philly sheld.. & even pernell whitaker say he had tyrone everett style
Just found this interesting, never knew he was jobbed in this one. Taken from 'bestboxingblog' 'It was clear Hagler had the edge in terms of aggressiveness, strength and power, but Bobby Watts was from Philadelphia and so were the ringside officials. While Marvin clearly deserved the win, after ten rounds the judges gave the decision to Boogaloo. The verdict was bad enough to prompt J. Russell Peltz, the Spectrum’s boxing promoter, to actually go over and apologize to Hagler’s people. “It might not have been the worst decision of all time,” Peltz would say later, “but it was pretty bad.” I may have some free time tomorrow and friday to do some more like this maybe about Blue Horizon. If you'd like some more thread's like this just ask for a subject and i'll try get down to it.