Boxing News magazine 2.2.2007 Download pdf
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- Product Code: 2.2.2007
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Boxing News magazine 2.2.2007 Download pdf
Boxing News Magazine 2007 Memorabilia
Boxing News Magazine 2007 History
Boxing Results 2007
Boxing News Magazine Amateur Results
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THE bitter war of words between WBO
welterweight champion Antonio
Margarito and his mandatory man
Paul Williams has been playing out
for months.
DANISH southpaw MADS LARSEN,
who in 2003 bumped off one of
Wilfried Sauerland's fighters when
he dethroned EBU champ Danilo
Haeussler, last week signed a
three-year deal with the German
promoter.
FIGHTNEWS.COM pulled no punches
in an article on James Toney last
week, and neither did the fighter's
trainer Freddie Roach.
Brad Rooney wrote: "During a
post-fight interview after his second
loss to Samuel Peter, it was evident
Toney's speech was slurred, and
during the fight itself it seemed his
legs just wouldn't let him get out of
the way like they used to."
When Rooney asked Roach about
this, he said: "If James doesn't show
me the things in the gym that I need
to see, I'm going to have a long talk
with him, and it may be time."
EXPERIENCED Belfast craftsman Brian
Magee clinched a crack at Peter Oboh
when he outpointed Hackney's Andrew
Lowe over 12 uneventful rounds in a
final eliminator for the British lightheavyweight
title.
WITH one thudding right hook to the
body, Isaac "Argy" Ward brought the
Commonwealth super-bantamweight
title back to the North East and back
to the Neil Fannan gym in Billingham.
The punch left Tanzania's Francis
Miyeyusho on his knees at the Tall
Trees Hotel, listening to the doleful
decimal being tolled by referee Victor
Loughlin. He never looked like beating
the count and didn't. It was all over at
just 2-06 of round two.
WHEN former 'world' middleweight
champion Jorge "Locomotive"
Castro stepped into the ring last
April against Colombian Jose Luis
Herrera in Buenos Aires, he had only
just recovered from a traffic accident
that nearly killed him.
That fight was billed as his big
comeback. But right from the start
Castro was bullied, outboxed and
appeared woefully unprepared. He
went down in the fourth to the very
tough-looking Colombian and looked
very sickly when he clambered up.
It was rightly stopped.
YOU will probably all have read about it by now,
because this lovely story made the daily papers,
but here goes... former British middleweight
champion Brian Anderson has become
Britain'sfirst black prison governor.
Anderson; who boxed out of the Brendan
Ingle camp in the 1980s, is now in charge of
1,100 inmates at Doncaster Prison - the same
prison former stablemate Naseem Hamed
spent a night in last year after being
convicted of dangerous driving.