Boxing News magazine Download 25.6.1993.pdf

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  • Brand: British Weekly
  • Product Code: 25.6.93
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Boxing News Magazine 1993  Memorabilia
Boxing News Magazine 1993  History
 
Ampofo gets his chance
 
Logan can repeat Blair win
 
Pazienza, the man they can't keep down, has defied the doctors in
his search for athird world crown 
 
If Gent can survive Nigel's early
blitz, it will get interesting
 
Felix looks good blasting out BIocker
 
OLYMPIC finalist Wayne McCullough (8st 6'/2lbs)
mide an impressive hometown debut as he swept
aside Carnlough's brave Conn McMullan (8st6K4lbs)
in ihe third of a scheduled eight-threes at the
Maysfield Leisure Centre. It was McCullough's seventh
straight win, the first six having been earned in
a hectic fighting schedule in America, and the receptionhe
got from the Belfast crowd encourages hopes
thatihe might be the man to bring the glory days
baclato the city which nurtured Barry McGuigan's
talent a decade ago.
 
FOUR-fight novice John J. Cooke outlasted the more
experienced Gil Lewis to win a pulsating local derby
for the vacant Midlands light-heavyweight title at the
Civic Hall.
Cooke rode some rough patches, absorbed some
accurate attacks and eventually cut up and overpowered
his fellow Coventrian in the ninth.
 
WBC and WBO No. 1 super-middleweight title contender Henry
Wharton continues to test out his hands after repeated
injuries when he meets solid American Royan Hammond at
the Barbican Centre, York on Thursday (July 1).
The match provides Wharton with an opportunity to go one
better than stablemate Richie Woodhall, the Commonwealth
middleweight champion, who went eight rounds before beating
Hammond on points in April at Birmingham's NEC.
 
LLOYD HONEYGHAN's 10 rounder against Vinny Pazienza at
the Atlantic City Convention Center tomorrow (Saturday)
brings together two former world champions who have
undergone remarkable transformations in recent years.
But while Pazienza has succeeded in turning himself from a
lightweight brawler into a powerful middleweight boxer, Honeyghan
has made the journey in the opposite direction; the
man who scored one of the greatest victories by a British
postwar boxer when he stopped Don Curry to become undisputed
welterweight champion in 1986 has slipped to the point
where the biggest asset he brings to the ring may be his reputation.

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