09.12.2012 Views

January 2002 - July 2006 - The Jerry Quarry Foundation

January 2002 - July 2006 - The Jerry Quarry Foundation

January 2002 - July 2006 - The Jerry Quarry Foundation

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

Create successful ePaper yourself

Turn your PDF publications into a flip-book with our unique Google optimized e-Paper software.

alone... Never in this wordl or in the other one !|<br />

|11/28/03 11:33:50 PM|Evan B|Sydney||evanb46@hotmail.com||||10|Gerry Schultz<br />

makes a good point, although not the one about Cooney and Morrison being good<br />

fighters. To reach the limelight, be ranked in the top 20 or 50 or 100, to go in<br />

against name fighters, or to fight in the major venues is a tremendous<br />

accomplishment most of us take for granted. (<strong>The</strong> exception is when promoters buy<br />

a kid into the Top Ten just to hype him for a fight.) <strong>The</strong>se achievements are<br />

equivalent to making the NBA, NFL or major league baseball. So even someone like<br />

George Chuvalo, Ron Lyle, Buster Mathis and others we see as mediocre and<br />

undistinguished were actually in the 97th or 98th percentile, better than almost<br />

all other pros. From 98th to 99th, though -- that is, from Chuvalo or Wepner<br />

level to Ali or Frazier level -- is a HUGE JUMP. I have a friend in Jersey<br />

who calls anyone who loses a fight "a bum". This is grossly unfair to anyone<br />

with the stones to climb inside the ring and fight. I don't care if it's a Boys<br />

Club Fight Night in La Habra (agree, Kent?) or a PAL smoker in Brooklyn, nobody<br />

who fights is a bum. I was hoping more people would comment on Barrera, with<br />

the device in his brain to fix the aneurysm. Someone said nobody cared about<br />

that until he started losing. Bullshit. I don't care if he ran his record to 50-<br />

0-0 against ranked fighters -- that kind of reckless disregard for a human life<br />

is disgusting. And please, no jive about how a man's got to do what a man's got<br />

to do. At the very least, when a man gotta be that stupid, taxpayers have to<br />

pick up his ER expenses and the cost of his MRIs, CTs, and extended ICU costs<br />

before he crumps -- all so he could show the world what a tough monkey he was.<br />

Even Koo Koo would agree with that, if we could get him stabilized on his<br />

medications and out of his restraints. |<br />

|11/29/03 12:19:42 AM|Pete|Cleveland||pco@hotmail.com||||10|" I think <strong>Jerry</strong><br />

would have been in better shape to continue than George would have been, but<br />

that isn't the point, particularly when a fighter might be strategically staying<br />

down till eight or nine, in a screaming arena." (QUOTE)George really<br />

didn't win many big fights. He ko'd Doug Jones, He ko'd <strong>Jerry</strong> <strong>Quarry</strong>, he ko'd<br />

Manuel Ramos and he decisioned Cleveland Williams. But George, like <strong>Jerry</strong>, had a<br />

big heart and was and still is held in high esteem by most Canadian fight fans.<br />

I liked his fight with Frazier. Frazier was up and coming at the time and just<br />

demolished poor George's eye socket. It didn't last long, but it was a great<br />

display of pugilism. When the Foreman/Chuvalo fight was stopped, George turned<br />

to the ref and said, " What are you, nuts???" I think that George was quite<br />

proud of his showing against <strong>Jerry</strong> and later attended a dinner in <strong>Jerry</strong>'s honor,<br />

when he was diagnosed with his condition. George has experienced a lot of family<br />

tragedy and today he hosts a Classic Boxing television series in Toronto and<br />

does a lot of charitable work where educating young people of the dangers of<br />

drug abuse is concerned. |<br />

|11/29/03 12:46:49 AM|Forest Ward|South Carolina||joekevin@cs.com||||10|Hi Evan,<br />

I agree with you whole heartedly on Barrera, and Cooney. First Barrera.<br />

I spoke about this on an earlier post. I was not aware of Barrera's<br />

medical condition until you brought it up (reason being I don't follow boxing to<br />

closely anymore). Imagine, a guy has a problem with his brain. So in order to<br />

help him they put a implant in his brain. Good so far. <strong>The</strong>y determine that the<br />

damage done to his brain, cause UKNOWN (maybe from sleeping on a hard pillow);<br />

is undone. Bravo, and now he is allowed to go into a ring and get hit in the<br />

head again. This sounds like a torture only Saddam Hussein could think<br />

of.I never regarded Cooney as a good fighter. And God forbid, I would<br />

never mention him in the same breathe as <strong>Jerry</strong> <strong>Quarry</strong>. <strong>The</strong> reason I regard<br />

Cooney as your average run of the mill fighter is simple. Cooney never won a<br />

fight that went beyond 8 rounds. He never got up off the canvass to win a fight<br />

after being knocked down. All good fighter's never mind great fighter's have<br />

done this at some point in their careers. I will give Cooney's management<br />

accolades for picking the right "fights" for him, and moving an average fighter

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!