Boxing News magazine 17.8.2007 Download pdf

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  • Brand: British Weekly
  • Product Code: 17.8.2007
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Boxing News magazine 17.8.2007 Download pdf
Boxing News Magazine 2007 Memorabilia
Boxing News Magazine 2007  History
Boxing Results 2007
Boxing News Magazine Amateur Results
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DAVID HAYE'S WBC and WBA
cruiserweight title challenge to France's
Jean-Marc Mormeck has been moved.
It is expected to go ahead at the
same venue - the Palais des Sports
Marcel Cerdan in the Paris suburbs
of Levallois - on November 10.
But first promoter Don King must
agree to several conditions f r om the
Haye camp.
If he does not, the match could go
back out to purse bids.
Originally, the match was to have
taken place on September 28.

ANTHONY MUNDINE, the WBA
super-middleweight champion, has
spoken for the first time about his fears
that his career could be ended by a
serious eye infection that is affecting
his sight.
The former Australian rugby league
star has been told by specialists at
Sydney Eye Hospital that it could be up
to six months before he knows if he
will fight again.

AMIR KHAN, who meets SCOTT
LAWTON in Nottingham on October
6, has moved into the WBO top 20.
The Commonwealth lightweight
champion is placed at No. 18 after
climbing off the floor to defeat Willie
Limond in July at the 02 Arena.
The former Olympian also
features in a new Channel 4 show,
starting on Tuesday at 11.05pm.
Khan's Angry Young Men will
see the fighter try to transform the
lives of six troubled youths through
boxing in a three-part series.

WAYNE ELCOCK'S bid to dethrone
British middleweight champion
Howard Eastman will go ahead in
Coventry next month.
Promoter Frank Maloney had won
the purse bids and then pulled out
because the September 28 date clashed
with David Haye battling Jean-Marc
Mormeck for the WBC and WBA
cruiserweight and Sky Sports decided
not to feature Eastman any more.

THE five-strong GB Olympic team (four
English) returned from China with a
silver medal for Neil Perkins and a
bronze for James DeGale - plus plenty
of useful experience.
First up was seven days' training in
Macao on the South China coast. This
was at the holding camp the British
Olympic Association have established
for the Beijing Games next year.

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