Boxing News magazine Download 31.1.1975.pdf

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  • Product Code: 31.1.75
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Boxing News Magazine 1975  Memorabilia
Boxing News Magazine 1975  History
 
THE British lightweight title vacated last year by Ken Buchanan is in good hands
again. Blond southpaw Jim Watt regained the championship he had held during
Buchanan's previous "exile" in 1972-1973 with an impressive, confident
seventh-round dismissal of London-based Scot Johnny Cheshire
 
BACK-AGAIN ALAN WRECKS DUNN IN THE FOURTH
 
Simmonds flies back to Canada
 
AFTER five years of frustration, the big-money chances are at last within the
reach of Liverpool heavyweight Billy Aird. If he licks Nigerian dangerman
Ngozika Ekwelum in their eight-rounder at the Twentieth Century Sporting Club,
 
WHEN GUTSY DOWNES WAS CLAWED BY THE 'TIGER
 
NORWAY'S Sven-Erik Paulsen retained his European
junior lightweight title by easily outpointing Domingo
Giminez, of Spain, over 15 rounds
 
A QUERY about that fine featherweight from Guyana, Cliff Anderson. Reader J.
Christie of Manchester wants to know if he was the first coloured fighter to
challenge for a British title
 
SEAN McLEAN (Eltham) is a lad who successfully
combines boxing and studying. At the Cafe Royal he
showed just how well he does this by lifting the London
Federation of Boys' Clubs championships, Class C 63.5kg
 
ENGLAND international GRAHAM MOUGHTON entered the ring for his first competitive
action since the World Championships in August, and finished a decisive winner over
COLIN POWERS (Seventh Feathers) on the Repton buffet show at York Hall
 
PLYMOUTH MAYFLOWER feather IAN McKINNON scored the best win of his brief
senior career on the Devon Sporting Club promotion at the New Grand Hotel
 
IT fell to Notting Hill middles favourite Peter Cain
and Islington's Mick Hussey to close Shoreditch
Town Hall, and this they did in a bout in the best
Shoreditch tradition — tough, uncompromising and
bloody. There could have been little in it when
Hussey's corner retired their man at the end of the
fourth round with a badly-gashed left eyelid.
 
HE was always hard to figure out, that Max Baer. Everyone
said he had all the tools to be an all-time great, yet he never
made it. He often would "do his own thing" as the saying
goes and liked nothing better than to have attention or a
crowd around him. Long before Muhammad Ali came along
he was the talk of all the media and everyone near and far
knew of the "Livermore Larruper." People flocked around
him like bees to honey and there was never a dull moment.
 
 

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