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January 2002 - July 2006 - The Jerry Quarry Foundation

January 2002 - July 2006 - The Jerry Quarry Foundation

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I'm wrong.Remember I said a GREAT big man and a Great little man.Example was<br />

Foreman/Frazier,two great fighters.|<br />

|9/10/03 04:31:25 PM|Massimo|Rome||hhj||||10|max-I have an example in mind:<br />

Sam Langford wasgreat and beat many great fighters like GeorgeGodfrey,<br />

Sam Mc Vey etc. Of course, it was a lot of time ago ! Mike Tyson ( great ? Bah,<br />

probably...) could be another example ! Anyway, your rule is true very often !|<br />

|9/10/03 05:57:09 PM|Angelo|Washington, DC||funktron@yahoo.com||||10|Well, it's<br />

a bizarre theory if you think about it:When a little man beats a big man,<br />

suddenly, the big man goes from being great to just good. If the big man wins,<br />

it's a case of great big man beats great little man. If the little man wins,<br />

the big man's reputation is tarnished, and then you say that the big man<br />

might not have been so great after all! I always thought Jess Willard was a<br />

respected Champion, until Jack Demsey (little man) cleaned his clock---then<br />

Willard wasn't so great anymore!On another topic, we always talk about the<br />

great heavyweights of the 70's. One very good and underrated fighter of the<br />

80's was Tim Witherspoon. He's a "would have been, could have been/should have<br />

been" if ever there was one. I always thought he had sweet boxing moves and a<br />

good, solid punch and also, he seemed to come into his fights in very fine<br />

condition. I don't know why he didn't get the matches that would have<br />

positioned him to be a dominant fighter of his era. I've read and heard that<br />

Don King blackballed him, but who really knows? Also, I'm no Don King defender,<br />

but you have to hand it to him: He promoted most of the great fights we talk<br />

about, he promoted one of the highest grossing concert tours of its time and<br />

he's managed to beat the rap whenever he's been in trouble. In short, for all<br />

the things everyone says he's doing wrong, he must be doing something right to<br />

always end up in the right place at the right time. I have a copy (poor<br />

quality, but a copy nonetheless) of Sonny Liston vs. Chuck Wepner. It took<br />

place in 1970. Does anyone know if this was Liston's last fight? |<br />

|9/10/03 09:21:20 PM|Kent|La Habra, Ca||kentallenent@aol.com||||10|Don King is<br />

an example with what is wrong with America. That money can sometimes buy<br />

anything, even freedom from jail.King, years ago, beat a man to death<br />

for 600 dollars. King was a loan shark and the man owed him the money. King,<br />

by the way, outweighed the man by 100 pounds. He was orginally charged with<br />

second degree murder but the charge somehow was downgraded to manslaughter. He<br />

served 2 years and he was suddenly pardoned by the outgoing governor of, I<br />

believe, Ohio. So King killed a man for "blood" money and it is now not part of<br />

his record. Were there payoffs involved? I don't know for sure but I think<br />

there very well might have been. ONLY IN AMERICA, HUH DON?|<br />

|9/10/03 10:20:22<br />

PM|Roadscholarette|Chicago||roadscholarette@hotmail.com||||10|Sonny Barger,<br />

founder and president of Hell's Angels International, once laughed that, "Only<br />

in America could we exist." Not quite true, but the sentiment and reality is<br />

clear. Unfortunately, in a country like America, with unequaled liberties and<br />

freedoms, people like Don King are often able to slide through the loopholes and<br />

cracks. Even cockroaches are free here. Also, unfortunately, a system with such<br />

freedom ~can~ allow certain corruptions and atrocities to surface from time to<br />

time. Sigh.So, Holyfield-Toney, everyone!<strong>The</strong> fight's an<br />

interesting proposition, which should be decided by "ifs."<br />

Holyfield will be 41 next month. Four of his six total losses have come since<br />

the Tyson ear biting fight, two against Lennox Lewis. He's<br />

big, strong, has no weaknesses, and is on a very short list of<br />

the most experienced men ever to hold the title, having fought<br />

more quality opponents than anyone, other than Muhammad Ali. He's three inches<br />

taller than Toney (no kid, in boxing terms, at 34). Toney<br />

hasn't fought anywhere near the caliber of opponents that<br />

Holyfield has, though there can come a point when having<br />

fought that many wars can be a detriment. <strong>The</strong> monkey can

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