Boxing News magazine Download 1.10.1982.pdf

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  • Product Code: 1.10.82
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Boxing News magazine Download  1.10.1982.pdf

Boxing News Magazine 1982  Memorabilia
Boxing News Magazine 1982 History
Boxing Results 1982

Title-hunter Cattouse

Busy Duncan meets West

Kaylor has an early night

Classy McEwan!

Cockneys face Finns

IT'S the week of the young lions as dynamic flyweight prospect Keith Wallace and fiery
Irishman Hugh Russell, both unbeaten, eye the titles which are so close to them. Bantamweight
Russell (inset) fights Davey Larmour in a final eliminator (preview p. 10) while Wallace halted
Jimmy Bott in six rounds at Liverpool

AMID scenes of tremendous enthusiasm former St Helens
amateurs Keith Wallace and Jimmy Duncan made a triumphant
return to the hall where they had won so many titles in
their amateur days.
After almost 12 months in London under the Frank
Warren banner and with six fights apiece under their belts
these two filled the major spots on the first show of the new
season for promoters Mike and Charles Atkinson and did
everybody proud.

THE unbeaten record of West Ham's Mark Kaylor never
looked in doubt as he crushed Belgian middleweight champion
Maurice Bufi in three rounds at the World Sporting
Club. It was scheduled for 10 threes.
Solid body hitting in the second round paved the way for
another easy win for Kaylor ( l i s t 61b). Bufi ( l i s t 53/4b) was
dropped for seven and rose as the bell ended that round.
He was floored again in the third, and referee Larry
O'Connell called a halt as the Belgian's corner threw the
towel in with Bufi under heavy pressure at two minutes and
five seconds, and Maurice slumped to the floor again as the
fight ended.

FORMER ABA champion and Olympic Games
bronze medallist TONY WILLIS kept his unbeaten
record with a points win over Brighton's PETER
EUBANKS - but he was made to work all the way
in the chief support to Kaylor v Bufi.

BRITISH middleweight champion Roy Gumbs hardly
worked up a sweat in stopping the overmatched Nat King,
Miami, USA, after just one minute and 55 seconds of the
first of a scheduled 10 threes main event at the Bloomsbury
Crest Hotel.

THE three year long row over who seconds England boxers
in international matches reached an extraordinary climax in
London last Saturday.
Delegates to the ABA annual meeting, held in Northumberland
House Trafalgar Square, voted 38-34 to rescind the
1979 ABA Council directive which permitted ABA National
coach Kevin Hickey to act as chief second in all England's
home matches as well as away ones.

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