More classic fights: ESPN2 showcases controversial decisions

ESPN2 is showcasing five of the most controversial decisions of the past 30-plus years beginning at 7 p.m. tomorrow (Wednesday).

You be the judge.

ESPN2 is showcasing five of the most controversial decisions of the past 30-plus years beginning at 7 p.m. tomorrow (Wednesday). The classic fights can also be seen on ESPN+.

The lineup kicks off with Oscar De La Hoya vs. Felix Trinidad from 1999. De La Hoya, the biggest star in the sport at that time, was leading on the cards when he inexplicably ran the last three-plus rounds, which cost him the decision.

At 8 p.m. is De La Hoya vs. Shane Mosley II from 2000. Mosley won their first meeting by a split decision. And the second give-and-take fight also was close. De La Hoya outlanded Mosley 221-127, according to CompuBox, but lost a unanimous decision.

At 9 p.m. is Manny Pacquiao vs. Juan Manuel Marquez III from  2011. Many believe Marquez deserved to win a decision in this fight but Pacquiao emerged with the majority-decision nod.

At 10 p.m. is Marvin Hagler vs. Sugar Ray Leonad from 1987. Leonard came back from almost three years away from the sport to stun Hagler and the boxing world by winning a split decision. Did he deserve it?

And at 11 is Floyd Mayweather vs Jose Luis Castillo I. This might’ve been the most difficult fight of Mayweather’s career, as Castillo’s mauling tactics made the pound-for-pound king’s life miserable. Mayweather emerged with a unanimous decision but not everyone was convinced.

10 fights all true boxing fans absolutely must see

Boxing Junkie gives you 10 fights that all true boxing fans absolutely must see.

Boxing fans have been treated to a long list of ring battles they’ll never forget.

To whittle these classics down to the 10 best was essentially an impossible task. So what we decided to do was choose 10 that we know will satisfy the craving you have for some insane in-the-ring action.

Sit back and enjoy.

***

Archie Moore vs. Yvon Durelle I
Date / site
: Dec. 12, 1958 / Montreal
Result
: Moore KO 11

Moore vs. Durelle might be the best example of resilience in the history of the sport. The 40-something “Old Mongoose,” defending his light heavyweight title, went down hard three times in the opening round and once more in Round 5 at the hands of his rugged Canadian challenger. It wasn’t a matter of “if” Moore would lose his title but “when.” Well, when never came. Moore somehow tapped into a deep reservoir of energy, turned the tide and put a fading Durelle down four times before referee Jack Sharkey finally counted him out 49 seconds into Round 11. Moore, an all-time great, had many special performances. None of the others could top this.

Showtime Boxing Classics: Tony Weeks, Joe Goossen discuss Corrales-Castillo I

Two of those with the best view of the classic first fight between Diego Corrales and Jose Luis Castillo recently discussed it.

Two of those with the best view of the classic first fight between Diego Corrales and Jose Luis Castillo recently spoke with Brian Campbell of the “Morning Kombat” show.

Referee Tony Weeks worked the 2000s’ Fight of the Decade and Joe Goossen was in Corrales’ corner.

The epic 10th round saw Corrales go down twice only to get up each time and ultimately stop Castillo on May 7, 2005 in Las Vegas.

Showtime is replaying that fight and the Corrales-Castillo rematch as part of its “Showtime Boxing Classics” series at 10 p.m. ET / PT tonight (Friday).

“Never did I dream the fight would elevate to the level that it did,” Weeks said.

The veteran ref added: “Fifteen years later, I still think about this fight every day. What an honor to be a part of history. The two fighters put in all the work, and I just did what I was trained to do. …

“It really hit me when I went home and I’m getting all these phone calls for interviews, or people congratulating me on a great job. It was like, ‘What happened?’ When I had the chance to really sit down and look at it and see it, it was like, ‘Wow! What a fight.’”

Goossen said: “When [Corrales] got the point taken away from him on the second knockdown [for spitting out his mouthpiece], he was arguing with Tony Weeks. In my mind, that was a good thing because that showed presence of mind that he didn’t like the fact that he was getting a point taken away from him. …

“Now, I will tell you there were some people very close to Diego that were sitting a couple feet from me that were yelling at me to stop the fight. That I heard. And I responded with a quick ‘no’ because they deserved my response. … I knew what I was looking at. They may have thought differently. From their viewpoint, it may have looked a lot worse than I thought it looked.”

Castillo stopped Corrales in four rounds five months later. Less than two years after that, Corrales was killed in a motorcycle accident.

Campbell and partner Luke Thomas will host a live episode of “Morning Kombat” on the “Morning Kombat YouTube Channel” during the “Showtime Boxing Classics” telecast tonight. They will react to the fights in real time and take questions from fans.

Classic fights to air on ESPN2 and Showtime this week

Both ESPN and Showtime will be airing classic fights on their platforms this week.

Boxing fans who miss sitting in front of their TVs and watching exciting fights will have their fill the next few days.

Both ESPN and Showtime will be airing classic fights on their platforms.

Seven hours of classic heavyweight fights will be featured on ESPN2 tomorrow (April 7) beginning at 7 p.m. ET with three of Muhammad Ali’s most memorable fights, against George Foreman, his third fight with Joe Frazier and his second fight with Leon Spinks.

Then, at 10:30 p.m. ET, comes a series of Mike Tyson fights, against Trevor Berbick, Larry Holmes, Michael Spinks and Buster Douglas.

And, finally, at 1 a.m. ET, the fight between Foreman and Evander Holyfield will air.

Meanwhile, Showtime Boxing Classics will be televised on three consecutive Friday nights beginning on April 10. The first Friday will feature Diego Corrales vs Jose Luis Castillo I and II; on April 17, Paulie Ayala vs. Johnny Tapia I and II; and, on April 24, Lucas Matthysse vs. John Molina and Mickey Bey vs. Molina.

The telecasts will also be available via the Showtime streaming service and Showtime Anytime.

Our favorites: Classic fights to fill the boxing void

In “Our Favorites,” each of the Boxing Junkie staffers gives you his three favorite fights to fill the void left by canceled live fights.

Boxing Junkies must be going through withdrawals right about now.

The fans are accustomed to several servings of their favorite sport each week. These days, with the spread of the coronavirus worldwide, there is a gaping void because live cards are being postponed or canceled every day.

What is a boxing fan to do?

Well, with your suffering in mind, we decided to put together “Our Favorites” to help you get your fix of the sweet science. Boxing Junkie staffers Michael Rosenthal, Norm Frauenheim and Sean Nam will give you their three favorite boxing matches, three favorite boxing movies and three favorite boxing books.

Today: boxing matches.

MICHAEL ROSENTHAL

Muhammad Ali vs. Joe Frazier III
Date / site
: Oct. 1, 1975 / Quezon City, Philippines
Result
: Ali TKO 14

 

Ali said after his third fight with his arch rival that “It was like death. Closest thing to dyin’ that I know of.” That gives you an idea of the brutality of the Thrilla in Manila. Ali and Frazier gave and took hard punches at a feverish rate in spite of the stifling heat in the arena, which Frazer guessed reached 120 degrees. They both grew weary but Frazier declined more rapidly than Ali, who handed out a vicious beating in Round 14. The great Eddie Futch, Frazier’s trainer, stopped it there to protect his beaten fighter. Thus ended arguably the greatest heavyweight fight ever.

Marvin Hagler vs. Thomas Hearns
Date / site
: April 15, 1985 / Las Vegas
Result
: Hagler TKO 3

Hagler vs. Hearns had to the most-action packed fight ever pound-for-pound … er, round-for-round. The fighters, two of the biggest punchers of all time, gave fans a classic opening stanza in which hard, accurate punches flew at a breathtaking rate. Hagler continued to attack with one thing in mind in Round 2 and Hearns – trying to box at times but unable to keep Hagler off him – returned fire. Then, in Round 3, Hagler landed a right to the side of Hearns’ head and then a straight right that took him out. Never was more mayhem packed into two-plus rounds.

Archie Moore vs. Yvon Durelle I
Date / site
: Dec. 12, 1958 / Montreal
Result
: Moore KO 11

Moore vs. Durelle might be the best example of resilience in the history of the sport. The 40-something “Old Mongoose,” defending his light heavyweight title, went down hard three times in the opening round a once more in Round 5 at the hands of his rugged Canadian challenger. It wasn’t a matter of “if” Moore would lose his title but “when.” Well, when never came. Moore somehow tapped into a deep reservoir of energy, turned the tide and put a fading Durelle down four times before referee Jack Sharkey finally counted him out 49 seconds into Round 11. Moore, an all-time great, had many special performances. None of the others could top this.

***

NORM FRAUENHEIM

Sugar Ray Leonard vs. Thomas Hearns I
Date / site: Sept. 16, 1981 / Las Vegas
Result: Leonard TKO 14

From rock-and-roll to vintage cars, classic is an overused word. It’s another sales pitch. But there’s only one Leonard-Hearns I. It’s a standard, a reference point for what classic really means. It was a fight in which the welterweights switched styles. The boxer, Leonard, became the stalker. The puncher, Hearns, became the boxer. Leonard won. So did everybody who watched.

Diego Corrales vs. Jose Luis Castillo I
Date / site: May 7, 2005 / Las Vegas
Result: Corrales TKO 10

Some fights are dramatic. Some violent. Castillo-Corrales was more. The lightweight bout was spontaneous combustion. The first nine rounds were Fight-of-the-Year worthy. Then, boom, the 10th. Castillo knocks down Corrales. Castillo drops him again. Then Corrales lands a right and follows with a blinding succession of blows. It’s over. Corrales never won again. He died two years later, to the day, in a motorcycle accident.

Michael Carbajal vs. Humberto Gonzalez I
Date / site:  March 13, 1993 / Las Vegas
Result: Carbajal KO 7

They were Lords of the Flies. Still are. Two little guys came up big in a bout that led to rematches and a million dollars for each, a money milestone still unequaled for 108-pounders. Carbajal got knocked down twice, in the second round and fifth. He looked finished. He wasn’t, knocking out Gonzalez in the seventh with a right-left combo with deadly efficiency.

 ***

 SEAN NAM

Mike McCallum vs. James Toney I
Date / site
: Dec. 13, 1991 / Atlantic City, New Jersey
Result
: SD D 12

Skill these days seems to be a byword for being cute in the ring, but as veteran McCallum and rising star Toney showed in their middleweight title bout in 1991, skill at that time meant mean business. Altogether, both fighters threw more than 1,700 punches in their highly technical, but entertaining donnybrook. There was some controversy on the scorecards – the fight was ruled a draw – but make no mistake: There were no losers.

Timothy Bradley vs. Ruslan Provodnikov
Date / site: March 16, 2013 / Carson, California
Result
: Bradley UD 12

Some fights simultaneously enthrall you and make you wince. This was one of them. For a fighter who had just outboxed Manny Pacquiao (albeit controversially) and would go on to dominate Juan Manuel Marquez in his next bout, Bradley decided to go toe-to-toe against Provodnikov, a relentless pressure fighter from Siberia. Bradley, who was dangerously wobbled several times, managed to get the slight nod on the scorecards. But the damage both fighters incurred? Only they know.

Roberto Duran vs. Iran Barkley
Date / site: Feb. 24, 1989 / Atlantic City, New Jersey
Result
: Duran SD 12

It was Roberto Duran’s last hurrah before his inevitable decline. And what a show he put on that blustery night against a deadly threat in Iran Barkley. It didn’t matter that Duran had been somewhat irrelevant the previous five years. Or that he was a career lightweight now trying to make his mark at middleweight. When the bell rang, Duran was in vintage form, showing all the guile and chutzpah that formed his reputation over the previous decade. It was a close affair, however. A late knockdown courtesy of three well-timed right hands helped Duran seal the fight in his favor.