Boxing News magazine 22.9.1995 Download pdf

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  • Brand: British Weekly
  • Product Code: 22.9.1995
  • Product type: This item is a downloadable product This item is a downloadable product

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Boxing News magazine 22.9.1995 Download pdf
Boxing News Magazine 1995 Memorabilia
Boxing News Magazine 1995  History
Boxing News Magazine Professional Results
Boxing News Magazine Amateur Results 1995
Pdf Magazine Downloads 1995

RUNCORN middleweight Robin Reid ( l i s t lOlbs) conceded
an early lead to Bournemouth's fast, unpredictable
Trevor Ambrose ( l i s t 9lbs) before finding
one of the best right hands he will throw.
The punch, delivered over the top of a left lead,
slammed against Ambrose's jaw and jerked his head
around. As he fell, Reid clipped him again on the top of
the skull.

The new season in London got off to a lowkey
start wfien Chicago prospect Montell
Griffin cruised to an easy sixth-round
knockout victory over late sub Hunter Clay
in the 10 round main event at the Town Hall.
Griffin (13st) boxed well within himself
before eventually stepping up the pace to
dump Clay (12st 4 1/4 lbs) near the end of the
fifth with a left hook to the body.

TOMMY G I L M O U R ' S first show of the season produced
four Scottish winners. Three unbeaten
records were retained and there was also a succesful
pro debut at the St. Andrews Sporting
Club, reports JOHN MORRISON.
Former ABA flyweight champion Keith Knox (8st
21bs) hustled and bustled his way to a 79-78 points victory
from referee Len Mullen over Leicester's Shaun
Norman (8st 0 l/21bs).

THEY call him, rather inappropriately, "The Entertainer", but
Sheffield cruiserweight Johnny Nelson will probably be remembered
for his part in two of the most excruciatingly dull 'world'
title fights ever seen.
The experience still haunts him to this day, And the public have been unforgiving
of the "bore draw" with Carlos DeLeon in 1990 and the points defeat by James
Warring two years later, two astonishing nights on which Nelson froze and barely
threw a punch in anger.

PROMOTER Don King was
supposed to have four world
title fights on his card, but
The Mirage was the appropriate
venue since two of them vanished
into thin air four days earlier
Instead, a painfully thin
Mexican, Rafael Orozco, was
given the call to face hard-hitting
Panamanian Carlos Murillo with
t h e largely ceremonial WBA
Fedalatin light-flyweight title on
the line.

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