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January 2002 - July 2006 - The Jerry Quarry Foundation

January 2002 - July 2006 - The Jerry Quarry Foundation

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calling, shaking down old ladies for their retirment checks!|<br />

|6/9/02 06:19:02 AM|Evren|London||Evren@btinternet.com||||10|<strong>The</strong> fight, apart<br />

from the first round , was very one sided. Although I pulled for Lewis and hoped<br />

he would win I was very upset seeing Tyson and his Era end in such a devestating<br />

way. Tyson was absolutely terrible compared to the great fighter we remember. He<br />

was outjabbed, outsped and outfought. His footwork was slow and it seems the<br />

decision to bring him in heavier was a mistake. Mike would'nt have needed<br />

anymore power than he had already. All the weight meant was that he was'nt able<br />

to get inside Lewis' reach with his notoriously fast movement. Lennox, it<br />

must be said was excellent, sticking to Emmanuel Steward's game plan,<br />

frustrating Tyson early and then dominating after Tyson had 'blown out'. <strong>The</strong><br />

afterfight interview was touching and it was a great moment to see Tyson accept<br />

his defeat like a man. No excuses and full of praise for Lewis' ability. I think<br />

he may have earnt himself a lot of respect right there. He can be a nice,<br />

intelligent person and it would be nice to see more people to try and get to his<br />

sensitive side when writing about him or interviewing him. <strong>The</strong> end of an<br />

era... I must rate Tyson of the eighties and early nineties in the top ten<br />

Heavyweights of all time with Lewis just outside maybe (it is very crammed up<br />

there). He must also, surely go down as among the top five 'punchers' in history<br />

along with Foreman, Liston, Shavers and Louis. My respect goes out to Lennox<br />

(once again) and my respect goes to Tyson for being graceful in defeat. Tyson's<br />

quote 'Thankyou, it was a great payday' was one to remember.|<br />

|6/9/02 07:22:05 AM|SABRINA|FLORIDA||SABRINALPORTER@AOL.COM||||10|WAY TO GO<br />

LEWIS...TYSON IS ALL WASHED UP.I DIDN'T GET TO WATCH THE FIGHT BUT I'M SURE IT<br />

WAS A GOOD ONE...I KNEW LEWIS WOULD WIN.....|<br />

|6/9/02 08:39:55 PM|Bob Bumbera|NC||renfbera@aol.com||||10|Well, Lewis did it!.<br />

I did not see the fight but it does not suprise me at all. Tyson is not the<br />

fighter he once was and maybe he doesn't care to be. I said here a couple of<br />

months ago I wanted Tyson to win, but thought Lewis would take it. Hey, at<br />

least from what I read, Tyson went down like a man this time. I also believe<br />

there is nothing else for Lewis to prove. He should retire and live a healthy<br />

life from now on. <strong>The</strong> Marciano-Frazier fight would be brutal indeed. A Prime<br />

vs. Prime fight between these two, I'd have to give the nod to Frazier. I think<br />

Joe would get hurt, but that hook is too fast for <strong>The</strong> Rock. It would cut him up<br />

like it sliced up Ron Stander. I'm not positve, but the two times Rocky was<br />

knocked down in title fights were from left hooks, Walcott and Moore. Neither<br />

man was a fast starter so I'll say 8th round TKO for Frazier. Louis would KO<br />

Williams within 6 rounds. Liston KO'ed Williams once in the 6th and again in the<br />

2nd. So I know Louis could do it in the same time frame. Although, in the<br />

second fight <strong>The</strong> Big Cat hit Sonny with a tremendous right that bloodied<br />

Liston's nose, so Joe could have been knocked down by a right, as he sometimes<br />

was. A question for you guys. Who is/are the fighter(s) <strong>Jerry</strong>'s putting the<br />

wood to on the opening page and home page of this web site? I've trying to<br />

figure it out for months now. My best guess is Lou Bailey. Am I way off base?<br />

|<br />

|6/10/02 02:10:26 AM|Slade|Oregon||info@ptctel.com||||10|It's amazing how Lewis<br />

continues to peak. If he continues to fight, I wonder when we will see him<br />

start to deminish? At 37, 39, 41? He has done such a great job developing in<br />

his laters years. Age probably isn't the most significant factor that effects a<br />

fighters ability. If you look at some of the great title fights over the last<br />

century, some folks might argue that fighters tend to lose skills because once<br />

they have fought their greatest fight (say, winning the title), they no longer<br />

have the overwhelming drive to peak at that point again. I noticed in the after<br />

fight interviews, Lewis was often asked "what's left for you to prove?" and he<br />

didn't have an immediate answer, other than he was going to take some time off<br />

and consider his options... |<br />

|6/10/02 04:09:51 AM|Evren|London||@||||10|In the competition we have Frazier

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