Boxing News magazine 17.10.2008 Download pdf
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Boxing News magazine 17.10.2008 Download pdf
Boxing News Magazine 2008 Memorabilia
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NATE CAMPBELL has declared
Chapter 7 bankruptcy after his fight
with Joan Guzman fell through.
Campbell needed the money
from that fight to pay a longstanding
IRS bill, according to his
friend Terry Trekas, quoted on
ESPN.com.
Campbell was said to owe the
IRS more than S100,000 and his
$300,000 purse for defending his
three lightweight titles would have
paid it off and eased the pressure
on the married father-of-six.
Had the bout happened, he was
also going to collect a $200,000
signing bonus from his promoter
Don King. However, part of the
bankruptcy means his contract with
King is now void, said Trekas.
That could open the door for the
Floridian veteran to face Golden
Boy Promotions boxers Juan
Manuel Marquez, Michael Katsidis
and Juan Diaz, the man he beat for
the tHIes.
BRASH Australian A n t h o ny
Mundine, accompanied by
manager Khoder Nasser and film
star Russell Crowe, told Oscar
De La Hoya and members of his
Golden Boy Promotions t e am in
Los Angeles that he wanted to fight
the winner of this weekend's Kelly
Pavlik-Bernard Hopkins bout in
Atlantic City.
FORMER world champ Riddick
Bowe, still looking for fights, was
at ringside. Bowe slurs slightly -
nowhere near as bad as I'd been
made to believe - and is still pretty
sharp, verbally at least.
"I think I have the style to
beat both the Klitschkos," he
said, before talking about "tapping
[Audleyl Harrison's ass."
Bowe hopes to fight in December
on the Wladlmir Klitscko-Alexander
Povetkin bill, against "someone I
can beat."
He told fellow observer Herbie
Hide that the Norwich man had hit
him the hardest, "but then he woke
me up and I went and took care of
business." He sure did, dropping
Hide six times in total.
CHRIS EUBANK JUNIOR did not
disappoint a sell-out home crowd as he
kicked off his amateur career on British
soil with a points victory on Move's
charity dinner show.
The host club's Lloyd Ellett topped
the card at the Metropole Hotel as a
Hove Select took on the combined
might of the Royal Navy and Marines
but there was little doubt as to who
many people in the crowd had come
to see.
The cries of "Eubank, Eubank" once
reserved for his father Chris senior
during his heyday accompanied him to
the ring, while there were jeers f r om his
opponent Luke Batstowe's fans.