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Tūtohu Archives: Thomas Hearns
TOP WELTERWEIGHTS: THURMAN-PORTER WINNER TOO CLOSE TO CALL
Keith Thurman vs. Shawn Porter Undercard Complete
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Sugar Ray Leonard & Thomas Hearns, Two Hall of Fame Welterweight Champions, Weigh-In on the Keith Thurman-Shawn Porter 147-Pound Championship Battle at Barclays Center on Saturday, Pipiri 25 Live on CBS
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A LEGENDARY MARCH THROUGH THE DECADES – SHOWTIME SPORTS® CONTINUES CELEBRATION OF 30 YEARS OF SHOWTIME CHAMPIONSHIP BOXING®
Ray Leonard, Marvin Hagler, Thomas Hearns, Pirika Trinidad, Ricardo Lopez, George Foreman & More Showcased In March
Pāwhiritia HERE For A Look Back At Some Of The Legendary Moments On SHOWTIME CHAMPIONSHIP BOXING: http://s.sho.com/1RkA3CE
NEW YORK (March 2, 2016) - SHOWTIME Sports rolls out its third installment of a year-long salute commemorating 30 years of SHOWTIME CHAMPIONSHIP BOXING in March with “Legends’’.
This month will be highlighted by legends Sugar Ray Leonard, Fakaofo Marvin Hagler, Pirika Trinidad, Ricardo “Finito” Lopez and George Foreman. Seven of the most unforgettable and important fights from these legends – some of which have seldom been re-aired since their live presentation – are available now on the network’s on demand platforms and will air will air on “Throwback Thursdays”in March at 10 p.m. AND/PT i te SHOWTIME EXTREME.
Te Rāpare, March 10 presentation of Marvin Hagler vs. John Mugabi airs exactly 30 years after the final win of Hagler’s Hall of Fame career on March 10, 1986. Hagler vs. Mugabi was the first main event to ever air on SHOWTIME®.
The classic fights, which are also are available on SHOWTIME ON DEMAND®, SHOWTIME te Wā® and via the network’s standalone streaming service, will be wrapped with brief context and commentary from SHOWTIME Sports host Brian Custer.
Below is the schedule of SHO EXTREME premieres for the month of March:
- Apopo, Rāpare, March 3: Terry Norris vs. Sugar Ray Leonard
- Rāpare, March 10: Marvin Hagler vs. John Mugabi
- Rāpare, March 17: Felix Trinidad vs. David Reid
- Rāpare, March 24: Ricardo Lopez vs. Rosendo Alvarez II
- Rāpare, March 31: Iran Barkley vs. Thomas Hearns I, George Foreman vs. Gerry Cooney (10:15 p.m. AND/PT), Gerald McClellan vs. Julian Jackson I (10:30 p.m. ET / PT)
In celebration of the best rivalries on SHOWTIME, see below for a special column from SHOWTIME Sports expert analyst and boxing historian Steve Farhood.
Legends
By Steve Farhood
Boxing without legends would be like religion without saints.
There’s no formula for a fighter to advance from star to superstar to legend. The process depends on timing, circumstance, and sometimes as little as a point or two on the judges’ kāri.
And oh, yeah: It helps if a guy can really fight.
As we celebrate 30 years of boxing on SHOWTIME, we’re focusing on a different theme each month. Throughout March, the theme will be Legends.
I roto i te 130 years from John L. Sullivan to Floyd Mayweather, boxing has given us what other sports can’t provide. Consider:
- The Associated Press voted Luis Firpo’s knockdown of Jack Dempsey as the greatest sports moment of the first half of the 20th Century.
- The Frazier-Ali “Fight Of The Century” in 1971 was easily the most anticipated sporting event in history.
- Last year’s Mayweather-Pacquiao fight generated more than half-a-billion dollars — in one night!
Legends are made by big moments … and how they respond to those moments.
I SHOWTIME, we’ve featured three decades worth of legends. Here’s a look at those who will share the spotlight in March.
MARVIN HAGLER: Since Vince Lombardi didn’t exactly say, “Timing isn’t everything, it’s the only thing,” Hagler should’ve said it.
Hagler was a great fighter long before he was a superstar, but it wasn’t until he fought Roberto Duran, Thomas Hearns, and Sugar Ray Leonard (three of Hagler’s last six bouts) that Marvin became Marvelous.
Hagler’s one appearance on SHOWTIME, which happened to be the first bout televised on the network (March 1986), was the final win of his career. Undefeated over 10 tau, Hagler had established himself as one of the greatest middleweights in history. And while it could be argued in hindsight that at age 31, the ultimate blue-collar fighter was slightly past his prime, much of what made Hagler special was on display during his savage defense against his unbeaten and ferocious challenger, John Mugabi.
Almost three decades after his retirement, Hagler remains the middleweight today’s 160-pounders are measured against.
SUGAR Ray Leonard: If Hagler bloomed late, Leonard was a superstar before he threw a single punch as a professional.
Back in the mid-‘70s, that’s what a magnetic smile, an Olympic gold medal, and repeated exposure on prime time television could do for a young fighter.
It’s ironic that Leonard was initially viewed by some as a coddled creation of the media. I roto i te meka, he was as tough as any fighter of the star-studded early-‘80s. Better yet, he remains the best fighter I’ve covered in 38 years on the boxing beat.
Leonard’s appearance on SHOWTIME was the penultimate bout of his career. In electing to end yet another lengthy layoff, Sugar Ray, 34, chose outstanding 23-year-old super welterweight titlist Terry Norris as his opponent. Leonard dropped from 160 ki 154 pounds and fought at Madison Square Garden for the first time.
The bout served as a reminder that at least in a pre-Bernard Hopkins world, boxing was very much a young man’s game.
FELIX TRINIDAD: There are only three Hispanic fighters who became superstars in the USA without speaking English. The first was Panama’s Roberto Duran. The second was Mexico’s Julio Cesar Chavez.
The third was Puerto Rico’s Trinidad.
Trinidad’s motto might as well have been, “If you can’t be from America, then beat America.”
A classic puncher with a boy scout’s smile and a fan-friendly personality, Trinidad made his name by defeating four U.S. Mau maona, Pernell Whitaker, Oscar De La Hoya (albeit by a terrible decision), David Reid, and Fernando Vargas.
Ano, Whitaker, De La Hoya, and Reid had all been gold medalists.
The fight we’ll feature on March 17 on SHO EXTREME, Trinidad vs. Reid, was Trinidad’s 14th and final appearance on SHOWTIME CHAMPIONSHIP BOXING and SHOWTIME pay-per-view.
From his welterweight title-winning kayo of Maurice Blocker in 1993 through his defense against Mahenge Zulu in 1998, 13 of Trinidad’s 14 bouts were aired on SHOWTIME. Twelve of those fights were knockout wins.
Where Trinidad ranks with Wilfredo Gomez, Miguel Cotto, Carlos Ortiz, Wilfred Benitez, and the rest of the legends from Puerto Rico is debatable. What is inarguable is that “Tito” generated as much excitement as any fighter of his era.
RICARDO LOPEZ: What’s smaller: the chance that a strawweight (105 pauna) becomes an American television star or the fighter himself?
There’s never been an American world champion at strawweight (or minimumweight). We just don’t grow fighters that size. I roto i te meka, until the emergence of Mexico’s Lopez in the early-’90s, most American boxing fans couldn’t have identified a single strawweight if armed with a map of the world and a set of WBC ratings.
Lopez was so complete, so dominant, so technically perfect, that from 1994 to ’99, he was a staple of SHOWTIME’s boxing programming. He fought 13 consecutive bouts on SHOWTIME CHAMPIONSHIP BOXING or SHOWTIME Pay-Per-View, and the first 11 of those contests were defenses of the strawweight title.
And if you think the little guys can’t punch, pai, there were some one-punch kayos sprinkled in.
Lopez, who retired with a mark of 51-0-1, is universally acknowledged as an all-time great. Too bad he never fought America’s Michael Carbajal at light flyweight. Had he won that bout, he’d likely be acknowledged as one of the two or three greatest Mexican fighters ever.
Which is saying a lot for a fighter who never faced an opponent recognized by the American viewing public.
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8-TIME AO TOA THOMAS”TE Hitman” HEARNS CONFIRMED FOR SECOND ANNUAL BOX FAN EXPO TAKING PLACE SATURDAY IN LAS VEGAS
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Te hui wheako tahi hopea e homai pā mekemeke te whai wāhi ki te whakatau-a-te oha runga whawhai, rongonui mekemeke me te iwi ahumahi
in an up-close, tautuhinga whaiaro
Las Vegas (E whitu. 8, 2015) – Eight-wā toa ao Thomas “Ko te Hitman” Whakapumautia Hearns e, e puta a ia i te tihokahoka i te Convention Center Las Vegas mo te tuarua ā-Pouaka Fan Expo e ka tango i te wahi Rāhoroi. Ka hāngai te Mekemeke Expo ki te Floyd Mayweather vs Andre Berto taitara whawhai, e tango i te wahi i muri mai i taua ahiahi, me Mexican Independence wiki. Kei te wātea tuihono i tīkiti ki te Expo Pouaka Fan:http://www.boxfanexpo.
Hearns atu famously mohiotia rite “Ko te Hitman,” ka te kaimekemeke tuatahi i roto i te aamu ki te riro taitara ao i roto i te wha wehenga. E hoki riro ia te toa tuatahi i roto i te aamu ki te riro taitara rima ao i roto i te rerekē wehenga e rima. Te ingoa Hearns I Ring Magazine Fighter o te Tau i roto i 1980 a 1984 a kei te pai mohiotia hoki tona whawhai ki Sugar Ray Leonard, Marvin Hagler ko Roberto Durán. I tapurahia oia i roto i te Mekemeke Hall o Rongonui i roto i 2012. Ka whai hoki Hearns i runga i te ringa, T-hāte, karapu me ngā pikitia hainatia hoki pā ki te hoko, me te pārekareka.
Hearns hono tona tāwhai tawhito Durán, Tim Bradley, Zab Hura, James Toney, Sergio Martinez, Shawn Porter, Mia St. John, Terry Norris, Joel Casamayor, Fernando Vargas, Ruslan Provodnikov, Ray Mancini, Jessie Vargas, Mike McCallum, Austin taraute, Kevin Kelley, kaitautoko Richard Steele, te Nevada mekemeke Hall o te Rongonui, te Kaunihera mekemeke Ao (WBC) me te Ao Mekemeke Association (WBA) i roto i te tīmatanga o fafauraa ki Pouaka Fan Expo o tenei tau.
Tēnei hui wheako tahi ahurei, i whakaaetia pā ki te whakatau, me te oha ki pakiwaitara mekemeke, toa mua, me te nāianei, me te tahi atu rongonui o te hākinakina, Räkau Mahuru whakamutunga. I tēnei tau, te Expo ka rere i10 a.m. ki 5 p.m. a kotahi ano, tukua pā i te whai wāhi ki te kohikohi tëneti, tango whakaahua, me te hokohoko hoko, me memorabilia.
Exhibitors pērā i taputapu mekemeke, kakahu, Ka whai pāpāho päpäho me ētahi atu kamupene waitohu te hunga e hiahia ana ki te whai wāhi i te whai wāhi ki te whakaatu i ō rātou hua ki te pā, me te ahumahi mekemeke katoa.
Tuatahi Expo Pouaka Fan o tērā tau ngā etahi nga toa tino rongonui, me te rongonui mekemeke o roto i te aamu tata nei. Tukinotia pā i ki toronga ki a Mike Tyson, Roy Jones Jr, Martinez, Amir Khan, Hura, Mikey Garcia,Toney, Riddick Bowe, Leon Spinks Terry Norris, Mau, Chris Byrd, Hehe James Leija, Lamon Brewster, Ray Mercer, Earnie Shavers, St-John, Erislandy Lara, Peter Quillin, Jean Pascal a Austin te taraute. Ano putanga ko Champion WBC nāianei Deontay Wilder, te whai mana Vinny Pazienza, Paora Williams, tuhia te kaikōrero Al Bernstein me te kaiwhakangungu Roger Mayweather o Mayweather Whakatairanga.
Ka haere tonu te rārangi o tae hoki o tenei tau Pouaka Fan Expo ki te kia kauwhautia i roto i te ra torutoru i muri ārahi ake ki te hui.
Hoki tetahi i roto i te ahumahi mekemeke waitohu ranei kamupene e hiahia ana ki te whai wāhi, ka waiho i te tihokahoka hei exhibitor whai wāhitanga tautoko ranei, tēnā whakapā Pouaka Fan Expo i:
Tau waea U.S.A: (702) 997-1927 ranei (514) 572-7222
Hoki tetahi pātai tēnā īmēra: boxfanexpo@gmail.com
E wātea ana i ētahi atu mōhiohio i runga i te Expo Pouaka Fan:http://www.boxfanexpo.com
Tirohia te ataata promo mana o Box Fan Expo konei:http://www.boxfanexpo.com/
Ka taea e koe te whai i Pouaka Fan Expo i runga i Twitter i: https://www.twitter.com/
a i runga i Facebook i: https://www.facebook.com/
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