TBE: The Best Earner ever is No. 1 on Forbes’ money list

By Norm Frauenheim-

Floyd Mayweather Jr. is No. 1 on the list that really matters to him. After all, he calls himself Money for a reason.

That reason turned up big – as in $915 million – on top of the Forbes’ list of the top-earning athletes of the decade. From this corner, at least, it is further confirmation of his place in boxing over the last 10 years.

There’s a reasonable argument for Canelo Alvarez and Manny Pacquiao. But he beat them both. There’s a better argument for Andre Ward, but it’s eroded by the controversy over the scoring in his decision over Sergey Kovalev in their first fight. Ward clearly won the rematch.

But there was really no argument about what Mayweather did in the ring for the last 10 years. There’s plenty of argument about what he did outside of those ropes. Within them, however, he won. He only won. There wasn’t much drama attached to any of the victories. But there was the money, suit cases full of it. Mayweather posed with the Benjamins more often than he did with opponents.

For 10 years, his defensive skill had no equal. But it was the money – all that money – that separated him from everybody else. It brought – and bought – drama often lacking in his bouts. It also brought – and bought – worldwide attention. Bottom-line, he is The Fighter of the Decade for not losing a fight while earning unprecedented money. Risk-to-Reward, he had no rivals in this decade or any other.

He has talked about coming back in the decade that will begin in a few days. Then again, he has also said, no, he won’t be back. Maybe, maybe not. Guess here: He’ll try. Remember, money is his motivation. Eighty-five more million and he’ll be billionaire.

I’m not sure he could earn $85 million in today’s market. It began to shrink in 2019, although Canelo was still earning $35 million-a-fight. In the Forbes annual list of top earners last June, Canelo was No. 4 at $92 million and Anthony Joshua No. 13 at $55 million.

I’m also not sure what Mayweather’s place a top the decade’s money list will mean to his place in boxing history. From jets to Ferraris, it’ll buy him a lot of toys. But it’ll only buy a Legacy if it’s made and named by a high-end car maker. His boxing legacy will be judged and re-judged throughout the forthcoming decades.

He has tried to influence that historical view with T-shirts and caps that are inscribed with his official record: 50-0. That includes the money-making show against a boxing novice, Conor McGregor, an MMA star who had about as much of a chance against a pound-for-pound best as an amateur would have had. History, it says here, won’t look kindly on that bout, or whatever it was.

Meanwhile, Mayweather risks his historical claim on the 50-0 milestone if he ventures back into the ring against just about anybody other than another MMA star or perhaps in an oft-rumored rematch with 41-year old Manny Pacquiao. Mayweather is 42. He’ll be 43 on Feb. 24. Mayweather’s dates with McGregor and Pacquaio paid him more than $500 million, according to Forbes.

He’ll be tempted. In fact, it sounds as if he’s wrestling with that temptation now. That’s why we’re hearing that, no, he’s coming back on one day. Then the next day, he reverses himself, saying, yeah, he’ll be back 2020.

Who knows? I’m not sure he knows. But know this: Mayweather caps and T-shirts proclaim him to be the best ever with the acronym TBE. But it really means: The Best Earner. Ever. If you don’t believe, read Forbes.  




Joshua vs Klitschko preview

By Michael Serra-

On April 29th at Wembley Stadium, Anthony Joshua defends his IBF heavyweight championship against former champion Wladimir Klitchsko.

The general consensus is that Joshua despite winning the title, is largely untested, and still has lots more to learn! Question marks loom over the champion.
In recent performances Joshua has at times looked a tad crude for better use of the word and in winning the title last April, had very little to beat in the champion Charles Martin whom contented himself by taking the count and making no attempt whatsoever to get up and continue.

Last time out Joshua looked a lot more mature, better defensively and looked much better but in all fairness, Eric Molina provided very little and soon folded once Joshua landed, yet again it told us nothing and proved little more than a routine defence for the likeable Hertfordshire man!

Klitchsko hasn’t boxed since losing to Tyson Fury back in November 2015! That night he seemed out of sorts, letting the Mancunian spoil and grab his way through a lackluster twelve rounds.
This is a typical match up of the changing of the guard, the old lion versus the young lion.

This is definitely what the American’s would call ‘a pick em’ while Joshua has youth on his side, Klitchsko has experience.

Joshua’s best chance of victory is going to be by the short route, he has what we call the proverbial punchers chance, and if he can land clean enough he may well be with in a chance of stopping the Ukranian.

Remember back in 2003 when Wladimir defended his WBO title against Corrie Sanders! This is I feel Joshua’s best chance of victory, however if Klitchsko get’s into a rhythm and starts to work that left jab of his, then the Englishman could be in for a long and painful evening.

I’m going to stick my chin out here and go for a stoppage in favour of Joshua, I feel ring rust and father time won’t help and I feel Johshua hits as hard if not harder than Sanders! And that was almost 14 years ago! Joshua for me in six rounds!

For ticket details please visit www.matchroomboxing.com




Haye vs Bellew

By Michael Serra

Month after next, Eddie Hearn’s Matchroom outfit put on what many feel will be one of the most explosive of meetings to take place in a British ring in many a year!

Liverpool’s Tony Bellew whose the proud possessor of the WBC’s cruiserweight crown is moving up to heavy to take on former World cruiser and WBA heavy king David Haye in a battle of punchers.

Londoner Haye first boxed at heavy way back in 2006, though many will argue it was in 2008 when he stopped Monte Barret, his first win at heavy saw him stop West Ham’s Garry Delaney in emphatic fashion!
Bellew at the time was still boxing amateur and did indeed box himself as a heavy winning an ABA title, though as a pro, Bellew has never boxed at heavy, mainly campaigning in the light heavy and cruiser divisions, with mixed success.

Bellew’s first World title chance came at 175 against Welshman and fierce rival Nathan Cleverley, before succumbing to a points defeat, Bellew bounced back and had a crack at the WBC king Adonis Stevenson before getting stopped in a brave effort, with that the scouser moved up to cruiser where after a series of lukewarm performances got Bellew a crack at the vacant title, in which despite finding himself on the deck in the opener, came back to stop and win the WBC title, an impressive stoppage last time out of number 1 challenger BJ Flores in front of a certain ringside guest, no prizes for guessing!

Bellew after the destruction, made no secret of his dislike has he attempted to rush at Haye, whom calmly smiled at the rampaging champion! Screaming obscenities from the ring, Bellew kept calling the handsome Londoner Sponge Bob Square pants, a character from a children’s programme from over here in England.
There and then the fight had been has good as made, at the hastily arranged press conference, things got a little out of hand has the two giving the usual photo shoot with the typical staredown! Haye took a swing at Bellew, however it was more handbags than anything!

An interesting conversation took place has promoter Eddie Hearn and Haye began to trade insults, while Bellew just sat quietly….not for too much longer though!

This is a fight that many will deem as a fight that won’t see the final gong, both possess explosive power, though Bellew is if you like largely untested at heavy, some believe Bellew may have the proverbial punchers chance, while the general consensues and smart money lies with Haye!

Bellew is in a win win situation, if he loses, he will have cashed in on a massive payday, plus he will still be WBC cruiserweight champion, on the other hand Haye if he should lose has no where to go, if he wins then he possibly won’t get the credit and the school of thought will be that he only beat up a beefed up cruiser, yet again, he will get a payday and then the possibility of a World title chance may well loom! For ticket details please visit matchroom.com




London Boxing Memorabilia Fayre, October 15th. Regent’s Park, London.

If you collect boxing memorabilia you surely will be interested to know that the annual boxing memorabilia fayre is taking place next month, it’s possibly not that well advertised thank’s to the trade paper Boxing News showing little if any interest in helping it gain any exposure! though for a paper that boasts that Lloyd Honeyghan was a World amatuer champion, and that the ill fated Joe Bugner-Ulric Regis fight was the last professional show to have featured in the London borough of Hackney back in 1969, when it clearly wasn’t, Darren Barker our European middleweight champion boxed at the Hackney Empire in 2006! it clearly show’s that there writers might just be out of the achne stage let alone Hackney! talking of Bugner-Regis, looks like they would’nt know the difference from Bognor Regis, let alone Bugner-Regis! and possibly it would be in there interests to attend such a show! maybe they’d learn a thing or three!
I’ve attended this fayre for the last three years now and I can’t recommend this enough, I’ve purchased some rare and hard to obtain items at this fayre and the amount of various memorabilia on offer is amazing, from book’s, gloves, magazines, boxing video’s and dvd’s, photos to anything that’s boxing!

However this year it will be at a new bigger venue, as the old venue has been closed due to the priest of the church closing the hall, you could say it well could be a blessing in disguise! However the new venue is larger than the old one which was in Euston, and has a cleaner look, though I did love the old venue as it lent itself to the very nature of the fayre with it’s 1970’s look!
So where is the new venue, well it’s in Regent’s Park and the start time is 1:30PM TO 5:30PM, Chas Taylor along with his wife Kymberly whom organise and run the fair are pleased with the new place and welcome all to the fair that this year will be situated in the Dick Collins hall!
Even if your not a collector, I’d really recommend that you do come, it’s worth having a look around and the last show’s I been to have all featured some famous boxers, in 2008 there was former Commonwealth welter champ Sylvester Mittee, the year after former World welterweight champion John H Stracey whom actually had a stall selling items himself, also only last year there was former World, British and Commonwealth featherweight king Colin McMillan who also had a stall there along with former World heavyweight champion James J Braddock…….ok I know, it was the guy who portrayed him Tony Longhurst who was selling the very film he played the Cinderella man in called Ten Percent, a great film that I had the honour of reviewing! check his website on how to purchase the film! so bring along a pen and some paper and get some autographs, you never know who’ll you bump into….and if it’s some fat curly haired bloke, that’ll be me!
Michael Angelo Serra

So now for the important bit’s

Venue: Dick Collins hall, Redhill Street, Regents Park, NW1 4DJ
Date: October 15th
Starts: 1.30pm to 5.30 pm
Admission: £2 of which goe’s entirely to the British boxer’s benevolent fund!
If you need any more info then please telephone Chas on 01707 654677 but please do so at a reasonable hour!




Boxing returns to the Elephant and Castle!

Boxing returns to South London, where many a show has taken place over the years, they have all boxed here, Honeyghan, Calzaghe, Duke Mckenzie, the latter even created history here when he beat Gaby Canizales to replicate Bob Fitzimmons as only the second British boxer to win three World titles in three different weight divisions!

However enough of the history lesson, Mickey Helliet put’s on a good card featuring none other than 12 fights, topping the show is Chas Symonds against Gavin Tait for the vacant Southern Area welterweight title in a fight over ten rounds.

Also on the show are Margate’s Jack Morris who returns at light heavy in a six rounder, Morris best known for being in Prizefighter the light heavys where after winning his opening fight against Billy Slate on a controversial decision had to be withdrawn by doctors due to a fractured hand! Morris will be looking to get back with a win that hopefuly will lead to a rematch with Michael Banbula for Banbula’s Southern Area title! Banbula being the only man to have put a blip on his record, Morris was hoping to avenge that loss in the aforementioned Prizefighter as Banbula also competed but due to the injury it never happened! And also in the same division and from the same place is Daniel Woodgate whose also boxing on the show in a four rounder, Morris and Woodgate have oponents yet to be named.

Also on the show is Eder Kurti the Woolwich super middle and middle Wayne Alwan Arab who both could be soon contesting titles, and at light heavy there’s Joe Smyth who’ll be looking to put the disapointment of last Janaury’s Prizefighter behind him and get back in the win column, up a few division’s at heavy and cruiser you got Dillon Whyte and Nathan Skeen, the latter who faces Lee Kellett!

Okay now all the way down to lightweight and there’s Marcin Marzarak making his pro debut and Lee Cook and talking of Lee’s and debutant’s you got Lee Owen and Warren Fenn taking there respective pro bow’s and Darryl Still whose having his professional fight at welter, and before I forget Ben Day is making his pro debut or in the words of the last two boxers surnames, I still can’t wait for the day when this mammoth show happens, mammoth? well it is at the Elephant! also please note the London annual boxing memorabilia fayre is less than a few months away, which takes place on the 15th October, email me for more details at micksnice@aol.com and talking of a Elephant and memorabilia, how could you forget!

Oh yeah the important bit, for tickets for the boxing show please phone 0207 388 5999, prices are £30 to £60 and the venue is about a minutes walk from the Elephant and Castle tube station.




Miranda Carter’s Left Jab promotions present an afternoon of boxing

Miranda Carter puts on a Sunday afternoon show at the York Hall in the East End of London on September the 18th.

Topping the bill will be the come backing Leon ‘Solid’ Williams at cruiser who is hoping to get back into title contention.

Also at light welter is Ideh Ockuko in a four rounder, while at feather and super feather you have Akash Batia and George Jupp respectively in four rounders.

Brett O Callaghan features at light middle, while Danny Connor doe’s at welter, at middle there’s Diego Burton and at light Francis Gichecha who along with Luke Fowler both make there debuts!

Heavyweight Ian Lewison fights in a four rounder, and also you have the comeback of Paul Bowen whose been out due to various injury’s, Bowen is hoping to get into title contention in the not too distant future, Paul whose been out since February last year will be boxing at cruiser!

No opponent’s were announced at time of going to press, for ticket information please phone 07825 795616 for ticket’s or alternatively log on to www.leftjab.co.uk for ticket information.

Door’s open 2 pm and the first fight is 3pm.




Brighton boxing show, Pro-Am June 11th 2011.

On Saturday the 11th of June former British and Commonwealth heavyweight champion Scott Welch promotes a Pro-Am show at the Brighton Metropole hotel, the scene of his title winning effort against the late James Oyebola.

The card features amatuer Chris Eubank jnr, son of former World middle and super middle champion Chris Eubank amongst a few other amatuer fights, pro action features light middleweight’s Nick Jenman and Darrell Setterfield who face respective opposition against yet to be named opposition, plus light welter Ross Payne tops off what should be a well put together show.

Doors open 5 pm and first fight’s at 6pm.
For tickets please phone 01273 715 800 or alternatively 07734 351 966. tickets are priced at the following £30 seating or ringside which is £50.




Goodwin promotions present an evening of boxing.

It’s a case of history in the making on Saturday the 4th of June at the historic hall that’s been dubbed ‘the spiritual home of boxing’ as Olivia Goodwin will create boxing history in the promotional sense when she become’s the youngest ever British boxing promoter!

Olivia whose only twenty years old promotes a marathon card of fifteen, yes fifteen fights!

Featured are a couple of ten round fights featuring Ryan Barrett at lightweight against Geofrey Munika who a good few years back held current British welterweight champion Lee Purdy to a disputed draw at this very venue!

The other ten rounder has Toks Owoh pitted against an opponent yet to be named oponent at cruiser.
Also booked for action on this marathon show at light middle are Sam Standing against Aaron Fox, and while with the 11st brigade Nathan Weise takes on Gary Cooper, no not the former British light middle champ from the late 80’s of the same name!, then again what with Bernard Hopkins recent performance you’d be forgiven for thinking otherwise!

A couple of welterweight fights see Brett O Callaghan and Danny O’Connor pitted against gritty journeymen Matt Scriven and Danny Dontchev respectively!

Back up to cruiser and heavy, {what with all this weight jumping I’m feeling dizzy!} you have Mitchell Balker who takes on Harri Miles a one time prospect from the Calzaghe camp! and Prizefighter contestant Ali Adams against I guy whose name I can’t spell let alone pronounce! oh by the way that’s at heavy!

Down at middle you have Mark Adam’s {no relation to Ali, Adam’s that is!} making his pro bow and also at that weight is Kris Agyei Dua who’ll be looking to do something against Luke Osman, who comes to fight, {he once escaped a car crash on the way to a fight and still fought and won against Kenroy Lambert!} Also at middle is William Cayzer making his debut has is Diego Burton against there respective oponents!

Down at lightweight Luton prospect Michael Devine takes on the well travelled and aptly named Dan Carr over four at light and then finally up at super middle transplanted Albanian Eder Kurti takes on tough Jodie Meikle who last time at the York Hall lost on points to Margate light heavy Daniel Woodgate, the Margate fighter who also fights on the show against switch hitter Sabie Monteith which looks to be an interesting affair, Monteith in his pro debut boxed fellow Margate fighter Jack ’13’ Morris back in 2008!

All fights other than the two aforementioned ten rounders will be contested over four rounds!

For tickets and show start please call Daniel on 0780 7013111 or you can order via the website which is www.goodwinpromotions.co.uk

Ticket’s are £30 and £50 ringside.

Gap Aims to Make Mark in Online Shoes

AP Online October 18, 2006 NEW YORK – Gap Inc., the leader in online sales among apparel specialty chains, plans to move beyond its brands to make its mark on one of the fastest-growing segments in e-commerce: shoes. go to web site piperlime coupon code

The San Francisco-based chain, on Tuesday is slated to begin testing Piperlime.com, a Web site with 100 shoe brands, from $24 flip-flops from surf-clothing brand Roxy to $900 boots from orthopedist/designer Taryn Rose. Gap, which will officially launch the site Nov. 1, believes a stylish selection hand-picked by its staff can set it apart from online-only shoe merchants such as zappos.com and shoes.com, which offer a massive selection.

“Online footwear is growing rapidly. And it is so complementary with apparel,” said Toby Lenk, president of Gap Direct, the company’s online division. “It’s like peas and carrots. Apparel sells footwear, and footwear sells apparel.” Gap’s venture to sell outside its own brands is reminiscent of how the company got its start in the 1970s by selling Levi’s jeans and corduroys to teens.

This time around, Gap, which operates stores under its namesake brand, Old Navy, Banana Republic and Forth & Towne, is counting on its marketing power and its data base of customers to make a big footprint in shoes and help spur overall lagging sales. But while the online venture doesn’t require the same investment as building a new store concept, analysts are wondering whether Gap should first fix its merchandising problems before venturing into yet another new business.

Gap is counting on a merchandising makeover and increased marketing to climb out of a two-year slump. In August, it reported a 53 percent drop in profits in the second quarter. Sales were unchanged at $3.72 billion.

Gap’s sales at stores open at least a year, known as same-store sales, have declined for eight consecutive quarters, though analysts say improved merchandise is winning back customers. The company averaged a 7.1 percent decline in same-store sales in February through September; Gap reported a 3 percent dip last month, smaller than analysts had expected.

Gap’s shares are now trading at the high end of a 52-week range of $15.90 to $19.98 as investors seem to believe the worst is over.

Still, some analysts question the latest move.

“My first thought is, doesn’t it make a lot more sense to make sure the foundation is stable before you add things on top of it?” asked Patricia Edwards, portfolio manager and retail analyst at Wentworth, Hauser & Violich in Seattle. “Management is flailing, trying to figure out some way to grow the business and show success.” Only a year ago, Gap launched Forth & Towne, its first new store chain in 10 years, to cater to boomers.

The Web site is “a real cheap way to get some revenue and customers into the door,” Edwards said, but it’s not the right time for the company to take its eye off the business. She pointed to once high-flying Chico’s Fas Inc., whose sales at its namesake stores have stalled recently because of what she believes is overexpansion in other store concepts. web site piperlime coupon code

Gap, which rebuilt its e-commerce platform last year, generated online sales of about $600 million last year, making it the biggest specialty apparel chain online, according to Internet Retailer magazine. For the first half of fiscal 2006, Gap’s online sales, including both shoes and clothing, has averaged a 21 percent increase.

Lenk said Piperlime.com will accept all Gap Inc. credit cards, allowing customers to earn and redeem rewards. And Lenk envisions that Gap’s Web sites, which will have a link to Piperlime, will eventually sell shoe brands featured on Piperlime.

Gap joins other recent players like Amazon.com, trying to grab a big piece of the online shoe market.

“It’s the category du jour,” said Heather Dougherty, senior analyst at Nielsen/NetRatings Inc., an Internet research company.

Online shoe sales are expected to reach $2.9 billion this year, and are expected to almost double to $5.7 billion by 2011, according to Forrester Research Inc. Online shoe sales are expected to account for 10 percent of the projected overall $30 billion shoe market in 2006 and Forrester forecasts they will account for 17 percent of total online sales in 2011.

In comparison, online apparel sales should account for only about 5 percent of the projected $176 billion apparel market this year; by 2011, online apparel should make up 11 percent of total online sales.

Catherine Beaudoin, senior vice president and general manager of Piperlime and a 10-year Gap veteran, said there is enormous potential for Gap as the online shoe market is very fragmented.

Beaudoin noted that a survey of its online customers showed that while they’re interested in buying shoes online, they consider it a “stark utilitarian experience.” “We realized there was a real absence of passion. This is an ultimate shoe lovers’ experience. It’s not just transactional,” said Beaudoin.

Piperlime, which will offer 150 brands when it is officially launched, will feature free advice from experts, starting with celebrity stylist Rachel Zoe. Each page features what’s hot in shoe styles and highlights the brand of the moment; customers can search by style or brand.

Competitors say they’re unfazed by the new entry. Established rival shoemall.com has redesigned its Web site to make it more user friendly, and online shoe leader Zappos.com, which expects to generate sales of $600 million this year, has expanded into other accessories such as handbags and most recently eyewear.

“Customers shop online to have a larger choice,” said Fred Mossler, senior vice president of merchandising at zappos.com. It now offers more than 700 brands in 40 categories, from running shoes to special occasion. “We want to be a destination in each of the categories.” Mossler also believes zappos.com can compete better on service.

Like Zappos.com and some other competitors, Piperlime will offer free shipping and free returns on every order and provides a 24-hour customer service number. But Zappos allows shoppers up to 365 days to return items; Piperlime sets a 60-day deadline.

—- On the Net:




Q & A with Lenny Lapaglia

It was August 1987 when I first read the name Lenny LaPaglia, mmmmm correction possibly a few month’s earlier when I read somewhere in the English trade paper Boxing News about an Italian American called Lenny LaPaglia wanting to fight the then World I.B.F super middle champ Chong Pal Park after dismantling one of Park’s former challenger’s in Marvin Mack inside of a round, Mack had taken Park the full course!
Let’s roll forward a few month’s and I read that my hero Doug Dewitt has got a win over a certain Lenny LaPaglia and was back to winning way’s after the shattering loss the previous Febraury at the hands of Puerto Rican puncher Jose ‘Pepo’ Quinones.

Reading that Dewitt had been badly hurt in the ninth, I kind of figured this Lapaglia guy whom I vaguely remembered reading of a few months back must be able to punch to be able to shake a tough guy like Doug, telling my great uncle Alf himself of Italian parentage and a former pro flyweight back in the 1930’s of Dewitt’s win, Alf a scholar of the noble art remarked of LaPaglia and seemed surprised I knew little of him as Alf remarked of Lenny as the kayo king!
Sadly Alf would pass the following December and I remember him saying I’d soon give up following my new found hobby and get interested in something else, if only he knew that I wouldn’t and some day I’d even interview the guy he called the kayo king! I’m sure he’s somewhere up there now smiling down on me during this interview……now he know’s…..

Michael Angelo Serra: So tell me Lenny how did life begin? and what was the place you grew up like?
Lenny LaPaglia: I grew up in Melrose park, Illinois, an all Italian neighbourhood.

M S: How did you become a fighter? what was it that told you that you were going to be a boxer?
L L: I became a fighter by not taking any shit from anybody that I believe had it coming to them in my opinion anyway.
I guess it was a gift I just had, I had a lot of fights just by hanging out with all my Italian friends, and with them noticing the way I punched they said ‘you should box and that might just keep you out of trouble’.

M S: Other than yourself did any one else box in your family before you box?
L L: No

M S: So Lenny you mentioned that your friends told you about the way you punched, so would you consider yourself a naturally gifted puncher? was your power something that you was born with?
L L: Yes, it’s almost like throwing a ball, some people can just throw good and other’s like myself can throw it all the way!!! that’s the way I fought, I just went for it!! I always gave it 110%.

M S: So you have what I would call raw power, a gift from God?
L L: No, I had the raw power.

M S: So do you feel it was something you feel you were born with? and not something a trainer nurtured by teaching you to turn your shoulder into a punch?
L L: It really came from being trained to me by my trainer Pat La Cassa.

M S: Sounds to me you got plenty of knockouts on the streets before you ever did in the ring?
L L: Yes I did have a lot of knockout street fights also.

M S: When you first began boxing, how old was you? And what did you achieve in the unpaid game?
L L: I started boxing at the age of 16 years old. And I achieved experience and confidence, enough confidence and determination to win the 1978 Chicago Golden Gloves Novice middleweight championship at 165lbs.

M S: So what was your record in the amatuers? kayo’s etc?
L L: I’m not sure about that, I’ll have to find out, I have that somewhere around here.

M S: Bet you scored some pretty vicous kayo’s in the streets? if so what one street fight or street fights stand out in your memory?
L L: I don’t really want to talk about that Mike, sorry. {Lenny changes his mind}
Yeah I guess you can say that, well there were a few that when we did {streetfight} you can say it was RAGE-O-LICHIS!!!

M S: What is RAGE-O-LICHIS? {laughs}
L L: RAGE-O-LICHIS speaks for itself!!! when the Rage is RAGING it’s RAGE-O-LICHIS!!!

M S: So how did the nickname ‘The Rage’ come about?
L L: So I got my name {The Rage} from before boxing. From friends of mine from fighting in the streets really, and it just stuck with me.

M S: You had a terrific kayo streak before the Collins fight, you stopped every opponent, many inside of a few rounds, with one lasting just before the fifth round, surely it must have been the best kayo streak at the time in World boxing?
L L: Well I never researched it. But John Collins was right up there with his record as well, I have to give all props to John Collins as he was a true champion as well.

M S: Lenny the Collins fight was a war and despite being dropped twice by Collins you showed so much heart that Lou Duva took an interest in you after this fight, tell me more about your thoughts going into the Collins fight?
L L: Well, by me fighting Collins was really a next step up in class in my career and Collins career at the same time.
We both being undefeated and both of us having a great ko record, I had no bad feeling towards John Collins going into this fight, and as far as the Italian-Irish stuff, everyone know’s that’s all PR and the build up for the fight.

M S: Would you say the Collins loss improved you as a fighter?
L L: For sure it did, first it teaches you how to lose. Second it gave me more experience, taught me how to get knocked down and get back up and finish a ten round fight for the first time in my career, John Collins was a great fighter.

M S: So you go on after the loss to Collins to lose to half decent Danny Blake twice, so after three consecutive losses, piling up a few more ko win’s you then go fight Carlos Tite in his home state, what happened in that fight? Tite wasn’t a bad fighter, how come you lost the fight?
L L: I don’t think I lost that fight!! we fought in his hometown of Hammond, Indiana and I was ROBBED!!!!

M S: After the loss to Tite, a few more wins get you a fight with Mike Moore for the Illinois state championship, it must have been nice to have been a champion of your own place of origin? was it one of the high’s in your career?
L L: No, that was not one of my high’s in my career, I knew I was going to knock out Moore, with a 6-9 record and the boxers he fought, I knew he wasn’t in the same league as me.

Be sure to look out for part two of my interview with Lenny in the coming weeks!

Michael Angelo Serra interviewing former World cruiserweight champion Lenny ‘The Rage’ LaPaglia




Q & A with Daniel Woodgate

Margate’s not particulary that well known for it’s fistic prowess in the fight game, Sven Hamer a Swede and Takaloo an Iranian formed the gloved threat from the seaside resort from the South coast in good old England some years ago…..British fighter’s from the postcard setting of the famous seaside resort have been few and far between until now that is……..enter Jack ’13’ Morris and the very subject of this interview fellow Margate native Daniel Woodgate, as you possibly know I’d done an interview with Daniel before that touched on his early day’s in the fight game and his even earlier days as a kid in a tough part of Kent called Sidcup. {please check under my name for our first interview if you missed it}
However since our last interview Daniel has fought quite a few times though he seemed unlucky to lose on points to fellow prospect Sammy Couzens over four rounds, Daniel has bounced back with two win’s in as many week’s and since the Couzen’s defeat there’s been a few changes made in team Woodgate and also on a happy note in his personal life Daniel became a father for the first time when on Christmas eve his baby daughter Evilyn was born.
Daniel has got back on track since the Couzens defeat, 2011 has I just mentioned as got off to a flying start with win’s over tough uncompromising type’s in Jodie Meikle and the big punching Elvis Dube, however prior to his daughter’s birth just after the loss to Couzens Daniel relocated away from his family and friends to Manchester to try and get some much sought after guidance from the Manchester fight scene, and notably Daniel’s come on in abundance!
Manchester a place best known for Coronation street and the great red-blue divide due to that of the city’s great footballing rivalry {though don’t tell Daniel that, like me his a staunch West Ham supporter} however it’s no surprise why Daniel relocated to the Northern city as it’s considered British boxing’s home, James J Braddock, yes the Cinderella man was born there and moreso Ricky Hatton amongst other’s put Manchester on the boxing map, World heavyweight champ David Haye’s last two defences of his W.B.A heavyweight crown have also been there so it tell’s you the type of place boxing wise were talking here.

M S: Firstly I’d like to offer my congratulations to you on the birth of your daughter Evelyn on Christmas eve, surely that’s a Christmas you won’t forget, obviously now a proud father, so beside’s boxing how doe’s it feel to be a dad? Are you enjoying the joy’s of fatherhood?
D W: I’m loving it mate it’s an amazing feeling and has really given me a boost in my attitude to succeed.
She’s beautiful like her mum, they’ve both given me that little extra incentive and would like to be able to give something back to them in the form of a belt.

M S: What do you think of the super six series that’s going on in your weight category, and who do you think will be crowned the champion supreme?
D W: I think it’s a great thing, before it started I’d have definately said Carl Froch would have won it, but looking at it now I’d say it’ll be Ward or Kessler.

M S: What do you think of your division domestically?
D W: I think it’s amazing, I could quite easily walk around at 14 stone plus at cruiser and a lot of people say to me why don’t you go to cruiserweight, there’s no one about and I would say the best fighters are at super middle and the second best competition around my area {weight} is light heavy and I want to fight the best so what’s the point in fighting bums to be a champion, if you want to be a champion you got to fight the best fighters and I think it’s amazing like Degale, Groves, Paul Smith, Magee and I think it’s really exciting at the moment and I’d like to be involved in it.

M S: Who do you consider the best out of the likes of British champ Paul Smith, Groves, Degale and Jeffries?
D W: At the moment I’d say Groves, he had a bit of a dodgy one in his last fight but it was a massive night in Las Vegas, obviously the travelling and it could’ve got to him but he weren’t no mug the guy he fought, when he first started out I was a big fan of Jeffries but it seems to me he’s heart’s gone out of it, he just doesn’t seem that he’s bothered but to be honest I cannot stand James Degale, his attitude towards other fighters and the sport itself is digusting, I can not stand him I would quite happily give me two or three fights I’d put myself in with him and I reckon I’d knock him out and I reckon I could, I don’t really rate him at all, he slaps when he punches, he moves are very strange I don’t know what his movement’s about but he’s a typically good amatuer which whose fast tracked into being a pro.

M S: Who’d win out of Degale and Groves?
D W: Both are really open and it’d be a great fight between them two and I certainly see Degale getting knocked out in the first couple of rounds, as soon as Groves hit’s him Degale will go!

M S: So are you a full time pro, or do you hold a day job?
D W: I’m a builder and roofer and I work with my dad Dave and he basically supports my boxing, I got no sponsorship or anything but I’m going to be in a training camp basis so I’m going to be more like a full time pro now and I’ll be able to train everyday and if I need to get away from work my dad helps me out with travelling costs and stuff like that, if it weren’t for my dad I wouldn’t be able to box, he’s seen me through my boxing and he believes in me as well

M S: And what do you like to do in your spare time to unwind?
D W: To be honest I love training I absolutely love training, if I’m not training I go to the cinema, I like going out eating, just basically relaxing and chilling out, I train so hard I don’t really want to do anything on the weekends.

25, Have you a set time for a shot at a title?
No I haven’t set a time with myself but I always said by the time I’m twenty nine, thirty {Daniel’s 27} I’d like to know that I’m going to be going for a title whether it be five years down the line or six months I’d like to know by then that I’m moving up the ranks and I will be getting a chance soon, if I get to that age and I’m still a nobody and I’ve lost fights and I’m not going nowhere then I’d give up, I’m not in it for money I’m only in it to win things, I want to win titles and I want to make all the people that come and watch me and pay all there money to watch me and all my family, I want to make everyone proud of me, and thats basically it for me, so if I’m not going to be anywhere or be winning titles then there’s no point in me doing, I wouldn’t have turned over {gone professional} if I didn’t think I was good enough, that’s the reason I’m in it {to win titles}

M S: Looking at you via your face book photo’s you seem a well conditioned fighter, is super middle where you’ll stay or do you think you’ll eventually move up to light heavy?
D W: I’d like to be super middle, I’d like to stay there purely because that’s where the best competition is at the moment but I don’t know if I can make it {super middle} if not it’ll be light heavyweight I’d fit in quote comfortably there.

M S: What do you thinkk of the current state of boxing?
D W: I think it’s getting better if you’d asked me this two or three years back before Hatton was big and everyone started hearing about Hatton and also David Haye came along, I think boxing’s getting better and I think U.F.C’s took over a few years back for a little bit and people were interested in that, hopefully people can see it for what it is!

M S: Back to Jack, how far do you think your fellow native of Margate can go in the pro ranks and also do you think he could beat the likes of Degale and Groves?
D W: Yeah definately his got the ability he just needs the chance like everyone and the oppurtunity to do it and I think he could probably beat wearing my heart on my sleeve both as it is now but there getting fast tracked so there going to get a lot better a lot quicker but I think Jack can hold his own against them and I know he won’t get stopped by them I know that {if he did lose}.

M S: Oh yeah, his a very durable guy I don’t think {Jack} has ever been floored, have you ever been floored yourself?
D W: No, no I got a chin of granite mate, I’ve been punched with bare fists by massive guys and I’ve always stood up and went back at them, I know it sounds a silly thing to say but I think I was born to fight and it’s the only thing I’ve ever been any good at whether it be street fighting or boxing, I think I was born to fight and I can take a punch, I can give a punch and I’m willing to dig deep and fight to the end so I was definately a warrior in my past life.

M S: I’m gutted I got beat to doing the interview with yourself by a certain Adam Wake, he obvously was a wake before I was! enough of the puns and more of the punches, so what do you want to achieve in boxing and life itself?
D W: I’d love to be an holder of a Lonsdale belt outright, that’s my goal and I’d love to go beyond that but that’s my goal that’s what I’m aiming for it’s an amazing belt, to have it around my waist and have it in a little box tucked away in my loft somewhere and bring it out when the grandkids come around.
That’s what I want and basically in life I just like a nice life and a good family, I’d like to be a boxing fan after my boxing’s over with, I’d like to give something back afterwards, just to have a nice quiet family life.

M S: Also are there any guys in your division you’d like to one day box?
D W: I’d love to fight Degale, absolutely love to fight the guy, as far as light heavyweight’s go no one really, I’d only like to fight Degale because I don’t like him and I’d love to knock him out {laughs}, but anyone whose holding a title I want to beat them, Degale’s the only one, I’d jump at the chance!

M S: So Daniel, what’s the fun part of being a boxer?
D W: The fun part? the training I love training, love training hard, I like the fact you get a bit of recognition when your out in the town and people come up and go ‘Hello Dan’ everyone know’s you and I always wanted to be the centre of attention as a kid I remember getting in the ring and thinking ‘This iss what I’ve wanted all my life!’ I love that side of it, I just enjoy like the training and the little bit of recognition.

M S: and the not so fun part?
D W: Yeah the training {laughs} no there’s nothing about boxing I don’t like, if I didn’t enjoy it I wouldn’t do it, the only part of boxing I don’t like is the skipping.

M S: Margate boxing wise has featured very little success wise, sure you’ve had Sven Hamer and Takaloo, but now we have Jack Morris who won but had to pull out of Prizefighter due to injury, in some respect’s he put Margate on the map, but now with yourself, do you think you guys can put Margate on the map boxing wise, say moreso yourself?
D W: I’d like to think so, I think we definately got the talent to do it, both of us, it’d be nice to go out and get ourselves together and be on the same bill, and two Margate fighters fighting together and like you say try and put Margate on the map but with boxing you need the right oportunity’s and that’s just what we need really, just need the oportunitys, we both got the talent and we both got the want to do it but we’ll see.

M S: So in boxing, what would you like to achieve?
D W: Well I think when I started because it was at the same time as Degale and Groves, my main aim was to be in the mix with them.
Ive since realised not because I’m not good enough but because the way boxing is it’s gonna take me a long time to get to their level so at the moment I’m just concentrating on training hard and making the progress I know I can. I was always in a rush boxing wise because of my age but after watching the like’s of Bernard Hopkins and Mosley I think it’s relaxed me a little. I know that those guys are exceptions to the rule but if they can last in the sport why can’t I? I think that’s something I’d like to achieve….longevity.

M S: also do you have a fan base?
D W: Yeah I got a Facebook page, a couple of thousand people on that and the last fight I had two hundred people coming to watch me, Vinny {Woolford a local fighter} fought on the same show and he sold a couple of hundred tickets as well, I got a lot of people interested in my boxing and everyone I meet likes to know I’m doing well and stuff like that, I think for a one fight pro I got a really good fanbase.

M S: so you mentioned your no longer with Michael Aldiss, so whose managing you nowadays?
D W: I’m now managed by Mickey Helliet, he seem’s a good guy and certainly know’s his way around the boxing scene. I think with Mickey making the right moves on my behalf I can realise my potential.

M S: Who is your favourite active boxer?
D W: Ooh that’s a tough one if you would have asked me six month’s ago I would have said Mayweather hands down but since watching and studying Bernard Hopkins of late I can’t help but see how amazing what he is doing is, he’s a real role model that everyone could learn a lesson from.

M S: Also what fight would you like to see made?
D W: Got to be Pacquaio v Mayweather, that’s the fight we all want to see I think also I’d like to see Woodgate v Degale or Groves {Laughs} nah those guys have come on fast, don’t get me wrong I’d love to have a POP at both of them but when the time is right. They’re way too advanced for me yet gimme a few years and if everything goes the way I plan them boys will be worried when I’m knocking on the door.
D W:

M S: So Daniel you’ve boxed since our last interview against Sammy Couzens, you lost on points please could you tell me more about this?
D W: Yeah no problem, it’s not something I’m ashamed of quite the opposite really. I mean if I hadn’t lost to Couzens I may not have made the changes I think quite clearly needed to be made. I was struggling with fitness in the lead up to the fight, something wasn’t right, it was part mental part physical I think but for some reason I couldn’t seem to get myself fit. I was doing a lot of travelling for work and training in the lead up to the fight, maybe that was it! anyway taking nothing from Couzens he won the fight, after watching the DVD of my fight with Couzens I think it should have been a draw but like I said if I didn’t lose I wouldn’t be training in Manchester now, I think it’ll end up a blessing in disguise.

M S: So you’ve moved to Manchester under the guidance of Ensley Bingham, how’s everything there and are you finding it okay up there in Manchester?
D W: I love Manchester the place, the people I just love it and Ensley Bingham in my eye’s is one of the best trainer’s in the country, he’s amazing at his job and under him I know I’ll be a champ. I went up for three weeks to train for a fight that ended up cancelled and I came home like an animal, I was lighter than I’ve ever been, faster, more powerful and in a mood to do some damage. As they say it’s different gravy up there. Don’t get me wrong like, Alldis was an excellent trainer and I learned a hell of a lot from him, I just think the travelling did me in the end.

M S: You’ve had to give up work, family and friends to chase your dream, I tip my hat to you are you adjusting okay or do you miss home?
D W: Yeah missing my family is the hardest part of being away, I’m very close with my family and just having a little baby of my own has made it even harder to contemplate but I keep telling myself I’m doing it so she can be proud of her daddy.

M S: Aparently I hear someone’s been trying to cause a rift between yourself and Jack, that you’ve been going around saying that you’ve bashed him up in sparring and want to get a fight with him so you can do a number on him, you’ve both told me one time or the other that your good friends, it to me doesn’t make any sense, obviously in our first interview you clarified that it was you and not Jack who was getting the worst of your respective sparring sessions, have you a message for that certain individual, also why do you think they’re trying to cause trouble between you guy’s?
D W: Yeah it’s a strange one this, the first I heard was a text from Jack himself asking why I’ve been saying stuff. I explained that wasn’t the case and that was that really. It’s either someone stirring stuff or someone has got the wrong end of the stick, anyway Jack’s a mate and want him to go all the way so it’s not an issue in my eye’s.

M S: Maybe it’s a promoter?
D W: Wouldn’t have thought so, don’t think either of us are that important {Laughs}

M S: So Daniel now your a proud father, is Manchester still an option or are you due to your latest arrival coming back home and basing yourself back in Margate where training’s concerned?
D W: I’m staying put in Manchester like I said before I’m doing this for my family, I know it’s going to be hard and I’m not looking forward to being away from little Evelyn but it’s the best oppurtunity I’ve had so far in boxing and I’d be a fool not to go for it.

M S: Jack was in Prizefighter the light heavy’s, is this also something you’d like to be featured in someday?
D W: I’d jump at the chance, it’d set my career up nicely.

Look out for part three of me and Daniel’s interview, where I’ll be asking about Daniel’s latest two victories amongst other topics concerning his career.
Michael Angelo Serra reporting from home




Goodwin boxing promotion, York Hall, Bethnal Green, London. March 5th 2011

At the York Hall this coming Saturday March 5th, Steve Goodwin put’s on a marathon twelve fight show at the famed York Hall in Bethnal Green.

Topping the show is Toks Owoh who takes on former Prizefighter contestant Billy Boyle over four rounds at cruiser.
Also booked for action are unbeaten Phil Gill who drops down to light to take on Jason Nesbitt whose fresh off of a loss to North London prospect Chris Evangelou, losing a four round decision Nesbitt managed to drop Evangelou to the canvas in the opener and fought a spiteful ill tempered affair before dropping the decision at Wembley a week or so ago!
Also at lightweight Met Sekiraqa makes his pro debut against the tough Robin Deakin whose seldom in a bad fight, that one’s over four three’s!

However up at light middle Jamie Boness takes on Louis Byrne from Norwich, as doe’s unbeaten Hackney fighter Wayne Alwan Arab who takes on a tough guy in Bulgarian Danny Dontchev over four.
At super middle Eder Kurti takes on Jamie Ambler who showed good form last week to former World super middle king Robin Reid losing over four to the comebacking Reid by just a single point, also up a weight at light heavy is Margate’s Daniel Woodgate who takes on Lee Nicholson over four rounds.
Daniel will be looking to put the disapointment of his last fight a points loss to Prizefighter finalist Sammy Couzens.

For tickets please phone 07816 167137 or visit www.goodwinpromotions.co.uk for more information




Miranda Carter present’s an afternoon of boxing at York Hall, Bethnal Green.


ON this coming Sunday afternoon Febraury 20th in London’s East End at the famed spiritual home of boxing Miranda Carter promotes a nine fight card in this her eleventh show of her so far short but successful promotional career as British boxing’s busiest female promoter!

Headlining is Albanian hero Kreshnik Qato whom tops the bill at middle where he faces a yet to be anounced opponent over six rounds.
Also booked for action at lightweight are Mark McCullough and Thamesmead’s Ryan Barrett who once fought current W.B.A light welter champion Amir Khan, plus also there’s prospect Tony Owen whom impressed last time out against Johnny Greaves in the Strand just before Christmas.
Also featured at lightweight is Danny Brown, however up a weight you have Duane Grimes at light welter and moving up to light middle is Gavin James, also
at middle to finish an impressive line up is debutant’s in Kris Agiya-Dua who hope’s to do-a number on his first professional opponent! as doe’s Ricky Boylan who makes his pro bow on this a Sunday afternoon show that starts at 3pm.
All feature in good value for money matchup’s that seasoned matchmaker Jim Evans has expertly put together.
All face selected opposition in what should be a terrific show.

Tickets for this show are priced at just £30 balcony, £50 and £75 for ringside.
If you would like to book your ticket{s} online then please do so at www.leftjab.co.uk/buytickets
Or alternatively phone 07825 795616

Please note door’s open at 2pm and first fight commences at 3pm, so don’t be late!




Wembley Arena Championship boxing February 5th

O’Donnel-Watson……a case of history repeating itself at the venue of legends or a case of sweet revenge?

Ok it’s not exactly at the venue of legends but it is just across the road from the famed venue, however it’s at the Wembley arena that’s hosted many a big fight night down the years…..Hope-Mattioli….Minter-Antuofermo….amongst countless other big nights.

On February 5th Mick Hennessey put’s on an interesting show featuring the return between John O’Donnell the Shepherd’s Bush based Irishman against a man he’s beaten before in Manchester’s Craig Watson, the pair fought in April 2009 at the York Hall when O’Donnell beat the Mancunian for the Commonwealth welterweight crown by a split decision and winning it by a single point on two of the judge’s scorecards.

Since then O’Donnell after one successful defense against Essex fighter Tom Glover has vacated and has since won two on the trot, last time out beating former Olympian Terence Cauthen by a wide point’s decision, while Watson has battled his way back into contention by rebounding from that loss by stringing together six wins and also stopping Uganda’s Badru Lusambya impressively in two rounds to win the Commonwealth light middleweight title a year ago almost, since then Watson’s kept on winning in setting up this a rematch and a shot at the vacant British welterweight crown vacated by Kell Brook.

And talking of British title fight’s there’s also on the show a battle for Lenny Daw’s British light welterweight title against Ashley ‘the treasure’ Theophane in what I can see being a hard long night for both men, Daw’s if he win’s will win the Lonsdale belt outright but Theophane nicknamed ‘the treasure’ will be looking to add it to his waist moreso than his chest!

And if that’s not enough there’s also the return of former British, Commonwealth and European middleweight champion Darren Barker over ten rounds who has been inactive since winning the European title last April at the Alexandra Palace due to a hip injury.

Barker was to have figured last year in a big fight with rival Matthew Macklin but pulled out through injury, Barker whose promotional outfit have now won purse bids for the aforementioned match up with Macklin, will be looking to impress and set up such a mouth watering spectacle.

The rest of the undercard look’s like value for money as popular Albanian Kreshnik Qato come’s back after a short lay off against selected opposition as do Enfield’s Chris Evangelou, Phil Fury cousin of Tyson, Colchester’s first pro champion Lee Purdy, Tyler Goodjohn and puncher John Ryder who will be hoping for a more satisfying outcome as he last time was headbutted repeatedly by Sabie Monteith who opened a nasty cut over his eye, Monteith naturally was DQ’d in a round!

Ticket are priced at £100, £75, £40 and £30 and can be purchased from www.hennesseysports.com or from www.wembleyarena.co.uk or alternatively call 0844 815 0815 or 0844 888 4402.

Hope to see you there

Michael Angelo Serra




Prizefighter the light heavy’s “13” could well be the luck of the draw!

On Saturday January 29th at Olympia in posh Kensington in London, Barry Hearn’s Matchroom promotions put on the second Prizefighter at light heavyweight.

Taking part in this the first Prizefighter to be screened in 3-D exclusively by Sky Sports, is a fine line up indeed featuring the likes of Travis Dickinson the younger brother of last years Prizefighter champion at cruiser John-Lewis.
Also there’s former British title challenger at super middle Tony Dodson who’ll be hoping to create an impression and get back into title contention via this tournament, also featured is St Alban’s puncher Joe Smyth, Menay Edwards, Llewellyn Davies, two fight novice Billy Slate who’ll be hoping to keep a clean one!
And then there’s an old score possibly to be settled as Michael Banbula whose on a good winning streak since stopping Tony Oakey, and holding Olympic bronze medalist Tony Jeffries to a draw! also the transplanted Pole currently holds the Southern area light heavy bauble and is featured alongside Margate’s male model Jack ’13’ Morris who could well be the luck of the draw with such a nickname!
Banbula and Morris fought in 2007 in the Margate man’s debut and was awarded a controversial point’s decision that clearly was a robbery, Jack had to lose some eight pounds on fight day thank’s to poor management! and still clearly won only to be robbed over six rounds, even ringsider Steve Collins the former W.B.O World middle and super middle champion went into Morris dressing room afterward’s and told the handsome Margate native he was robbed, so there’ll be an angle for revenge if those two get matched in a rather compelling tournament that if the last Prizefighter was anything to go by, then expect a few surprises in the mix for the £32,000 prize!

For ticket information then please visit seetickets.com or visit contact Matchroom on 01277 359900




Gary Mason {1962-2011}

It was in the mid eighties or there abouts that I first saw Gary Mason box on the telly, as it happens
it was October 1986 to be precise against a certain Donnie ‘master of disaster’ Long who didn’t last that long against the powerful chunkily built Mason who obliterated his American adversary in devastating fashion.

The win’s would pile up for Mason who not particularly a decorated amateur did annex the South East counties championship at heavy back in 84! in the unpaid ranks, possibly Gary’s brawling style was best suited to the pro game though.

Mason would appear again against Lorenzo Boyd and would destroy Boyd in quicker time than that of Mike Tyson who at the time was still a month or so shy of his first title try v Trevor Berbick, Mason lifted Boyd off of the floor ala Foreman-Frazier back in 73!

Still Mason pummeled on all put before him and his reputation was fast growing as a force to be reckon with, one guy who didn’t fall down too easy was Welshman Andy Gerrard who put up a tremendous performance on the Bruno-Bugner show back in October 1987 despite getting stopped by the Londoner, Mason the following year would move up a notch name wise and was fed a couple of former World cruiser champ’s in Rickey Parkey {ko 1} and Alfonzo Ratliff {ko 6} before taking out James ‘Quick’ Tillis who simply wasn’t as Mason caught up with him stopping the durable cowboy in four!

Mason was now in contention for the British title vacated by former stablemate Horace Notice as Gary duly obliged and KO’d Trevor Hughroy Currie in brutal fashion, finally Mason had arrived and was for real it seemed has he was finally stepping away from the shadow of stablemate Frank Bruno.

In Vegas for Bruno’s title attempt at Mike Tyson in Febraury 1989 Mason while being interviewed on tv told of the legendary Floyd Patterson telling himself that he had the style to defeat Tyson……!
Still Mason had to earn such a monumental task and in subsequent fights Gary would dispatch Jess Harding inside of two rounds in an easy defence of the British crown there in Brentwood in Essex before being moved up into World class against the still useful and World rated former Olympic Gold medalist in Tyrell Biggs who himself had only been defeated by World champion Tyson and future W.B.O World champ Francesco Damiani.

Mason was bewildered as he was comprehensively out boxed by the slick Biggs until finding the equalizer and kayoing Biggs in the seventh, many ringsiders at the time were wondering if a punch did land, it did I should know as I was there!

Mason next couple of outings would prove testing, more so the one versus Mark Wills, Wills had stopped former W.B.A boss Greg Page twice and proved a durable opponent for Gary, the following year Mason would defeat former prospects in Everett Martin and James Pritchard, all the while a certain Lennox Lewis had just annexed the European title by defeating French gypsy Jean Maurice Chanet in Crystal Palace the previous October and naturally Mason-Lewis for the combined British and European titles was a natural in the British public’s eyes.

The match was made for March 1991 and Mason put up a brave effort, sadly Mason’s eye’s were almost closing and Lewis put paid to Mason’s reign as the ref stepped in and saved a brave but outgunned British champion in seven rounds…….Mason finished on his feet and throughout his career showed tremendous durability never tasting the canvas and possessed the crippling punching power to make many fold before his brutal fists.

After a short while Mason due to eye trouble had his British license revoked and went to America to box, where he got a win but Gary despite his victory called it a day and became a professional rugby player and opened his own jewelers aptly named ‘punch n Judy’ however Mason wasn’t to be far from the public eye as he also enjoyed success as a tv pundit on Sky’s Ringside show alongside the likes of presenters Richard Keys and Simon Reed {brother of Oliver the famous actor who once himself sparred 60’s heavy Billy Walker}

Strangley enough an old computer game called ‘World championship boxing manager for the Commodore 64 had on the games cover a drawing of Gary Mason holding up the I.B.F World championship belt, it might have been just a bit of artwork for a computer game but if Mason had been around today it surely would have been art imitating life what with today’s limp brigade disguised as the I.B.F heavyweight champion!

I remember the time in 1991 when Mason celebrated his 29th birthday “I’m glad to be here, many don’t make it to this age” he would say in the Sky Sports studio on the show, sadly Gary won’t make it to his forty ninth birthday this year…….

it’s true what they say you know ‘the good die young’….




It’s the season of joy the Savoy!

Mickey Helliet put on a three fight card at the recently £220 million refurbished Savoy Hotel in the Strand in London as part of a charity event to raise money for the Antony Nolan charity that helps Leukemia patients get matches for transplants.

‘Kid’ Lewis Edwards {Guildford} v Danny Dontchev {Bulgaria}
First up was a light middle tussle between Bulgarian hard man Danny Dontchev {10st 11} and Lewis Edwards {11 st 2} who call’s himself ‘Kid’ Lewis, possibly named after that great fighter from yesteryear Ted ‘Kid’ Lewis.

In the opener Lewis looked to use his left jab which he did sparingly as Dontchev took a few rights before trying to come back with some of his own, Lewis easily seemed to take the opener.

In the second Dontchev changed tactics completely as he came forwards taking the fight to Edwards and ultimately bullied the Guildford man out of his game plan as he kept up the pressure, from the second round on Dontchev kept up the pressure on his man, though sustaining a cut late on that bled from over his right eye, undettered Dontchev stuck to his game plan and kept it, though he took a few for his troubles the Bulgarian was on top and scored a solid right hand to Lewis chin who seemed to run out of idea’s let alone stamina as he breathed heavily, Dontchev sustained a cut over his right eye in the third but kept coming proving the stronger of the two protagonist’s it was Lewis not surprisingly who found himself in a corner, one right landed from Dontchev just before the bell as if it was a punctuation mark to end the last three minutes of fistical dominance from the Eastern European!
Fourth round action saw Dontchev hurt Edwards with a decent left hook that seemingly stopped Edwards in his tracks, one time Dontchev slipped to the canvas more a sign of enthusiasm getting the better of him than anything of note that Edwards could produce, at the bell Dontchev planted a kiss on his vanquished foe and took a well deserved 39-37 points winner.

***************************************************************************************************************************

Tony Owen {Carshalton} v Johnny Greaves {East Ham}

At light Tony Owen took on solid journeyman Johnny Greaves in a good value for money four rounder, Greaves the recent feature of an interview in Boxing Monthly magazine was getting the worst of things as southpaw Owen a tall rangy type could hardly miss as he connected with sharp combinations that Greaves couldn’t help but take, that said it looked early on that Owen {10st 3} might achieve something of a variety and actually get the stoppage over the normally durable East Ham man who did begin to try and mix it and did start to find his way back into the contest.
In the third Greaves was certainly getting the better of things throwing far more leather than that of his adversary, in the final session both almost stood toe to toe for the best part of the round, but it was Owen who was resuming control as Greaves began to concede ground and found himself cornered where at one stage he dropped his hands and invited Owen in to have a ‘go’ Owen duly obliged and took a hard fought points verdict of 40-36, though I had it quite a bit closer mathematically myself {for what that’s worth}

***************************************************************************************************************************

Gavin Putney {Luton} v Bheki Moyo {Earl’s Court}

In a battle of journeymen, Luton’s Putney and West London’s Moyo {10st 8} a transplanted South African closed the show with a fairly messy crude swinging affair at times, though Putney {10st 9} exhibited the slightly better boxing skills of the two, it was hardly text book the way he moved and threw jabs, he at times resembled a novice who seemed devoid of any real skill factor.

Moyo proved the aggressor throughout has the Luton man got on his bike as he flicked out a fairly tame left jab as he got on the move, but Gavin seemed to do enough to shade the opener, in the second Moyo seemed to do enough but from the third Putney seemed to get the worse of it as Moyo was throwing hayemakers from the front row almost, crude swings were aimed at Putney many of which missed the intended target, Moyo seemed to connect enough but then all of a sudden Putney connected with a good left hook that sent Moyo to the deck for a count, getting up he fought back gamely showing a lot of courage , but it wasn’t too long before Putney connected again with another big left hand that made Bheki stagger in an almost delayed reaction, Moyo showed heart and fought fiercly to the bell.

The final session saw Putney keep out of harm’s way as he literally circled the ring as Moyo kept coming forwards but Putney seemed to be that bit quicker in the final session as cornerman and former British lighweight champ Graham Earl worked Gavin’s corner, at the bell Putney got the decision on ref Ken Curtis card of 39-37.

If you are interested in finding out more about the aforementioned charity then please visit www.anthonynolan.org.uk




Movie Review: Ten Percent

It’s the first time I’ve ever done a film review and I felt compelled to do so as it was about the heavyweight championship of the World, it’s a title that has many stories behind it and possibly more so than any weight division in our glorious sport that is the noble art!

This film which one an award at the Waterford film festival tells the story of the 1937 heavyweight championship fight between the Cinderella man James J Braddock the unlikely lad who came off of the bread line to win the title worth the most bread, the heavyweight championship of the whole wide World…. the richest prize, and his defence against the first black man to challenge for the title since Jack Johnson over some twenty years previously, Louis had it all to do to help heal the wounds Johnson had inflicted on white America’s face and restore some credibility to the black American, Louis had a task indeed and in finally being able to challenge for the coveted prize had to take a massive pay cut in doing so, taking only ten percent of the purse on offer to finally clinch a challenge at the champion!
However it is in many respects the most important period in the history of the World’s heavyweight championship.

I’m not as I have stated in the first instance a film reviewer as such, so I’m no Barry Norman or Jonathon Ross both respective and respected film reviewers over here in Britain with the t v show that naturally reviews films! funnily enough small World that it is, it’s the aforementioned Ross whose brother Tony who actually directs this very film your about to read about!
Playing the part of Braddock is Tony Longhurst, who pretty much like the man he portrays has had to endure many an hardship in getting this film together, and in many respects as been as Cinderella as Braddock ever was, even having his own two ugly sisters to contend with along the way in the shape of his health and wealth suffering in finally overcoming many an obstacle to realise his goal in getting this originally his idea finished, and unlike Cinderella it’s been far from a fairytale ending!

So to the film…..
Filmed completely in black and white to obviously capture the atmosphere ala Raging Bull of a bygone period, the mood is captured by the various 1930’s musical scores played throughout that compliment the visuals.

The film begins with each fighter being introduced to the crowd and each respective protagonist’s ring walk is filmed separately as though your watching the fight as it would have happened all those years ago, this is cleverly done and gives the viewer the feeling of actually being there in the tunnel leading to the ring….also chucked in with the announcement’s are various radio excerpt’s that have been faithfully reproduced, the action doesn’t just concentrate on the fight, naturally it skip’s back and forth to both fighters before they make that fateful walk to the ring and there own destiny’s and tells the story behind the fight, the deal and the dealing’s behind it for one of the most historic fight’s in the division’s history, taking in the training camps of both men to the bout’s of soul searching between the two and there respective right hand men, ‘you were beautiful Jimmy’ Braddock’s told during one scene of his championship victory over Max Baer, another sees an angered James scream at the equally annoying fight reporter Sam Stone who make’s many an appearance throughout the film, with that most classic of remarks in the fight game ‘what about friendship?’

Longhurst’s portrayal of Braddock is amazing and much better than that of Russell Crowe‘s version of the former champ, he not only look’s like the former champ facially but even talks like him, it’s obvious a lot of attention to detail has been paid in the making of this flick, even to the way each fighter fall’s to the canvas on each knockdown, just has it happened at the time to even the handy patchwork of plaster’s to Braddock’s battered post fight countenance!
The one liner’s are well put together, one time Braddock’s manager tells the champ ‘I wouldn’t be Joe Louis tonight for all the whiskey in Ireland!’ and one such remark ‘the World’s not ready for a black champion’ set’s the scene and of the racial tension still lurking after Jack Johnson’s reign of terror on white America some decades earlier, to Louis mentor who boldly states to the challenger ‘They must be on welfare, Lord knows what all those black people have sacrificed to come see you’ the comment haunt’s Louis during one crisis during the fight and helps spur him on to victory, how very Rocky you might think but this is about real life not reel life!

The fight scenes are nicely choreographed as the crowd can be heard and not seen, it captures the fight through the fighter’s eyes and the loneliness of the ring as both Braddock and Louis square off against each other, it reproduces the feeling of just you and the other guy, it’s very well done and the fight scenes are realistic and faithful to what actually happened that fateful night in June of 37!

I won’t tell you how it end’s, you’ll have to watch it yourself but I can’t recommend this film enough has it is a welcome addition to one’s film library and what with Christmas just around the corner, I’d recommend you buy this film for the fight fan in your life, Ten Percent? Ill give it ten out of ten, however all in all this is a brilliant portrayal of life back in a bygone era to the props, the clobber {cockney idiom for dress} to the clobber {in the ring} the racial tension and the acting more so that of Longhurst who play’s Braddock, to the politics involved all leading to the climax, the fight and of the time a black man regained the heavyweight championship of the World for his race…. the human race.

If your interested in purchasing your copy then if you go to www.amazon.co.uk you can purchase it there or alternatively you can contact Tony Longhurst himself to purchase this film by emailing him at tony_longhurst@hotmail.co.uk or tenpercent@hotmail.co.uk
The film is priced £7.99 plus £2.50 postage and packaging.




HAYE DESTROYS HARRISON, WELL SORT OF!

In my experience as a boxing fan and historian I’ve never witnessed such a poor excuse for a World heavyweight championship fight, I felt ashamed to call this a fight, it was more of a farce as it happens!

Audley Harrison’s effort or should that be lack of has earned him the number one position of the worst ever title challenger in a World championship fight and I mean any World championship fight, I felt sorry for myself having just paid out 95 for almost nine minutes of a non event, but more so for the high rollers who paid 50 yes that’s right the best part of two thousand pounds for a disgraceful fight if you could call it a fight that is?
Sure there’s been poor displays from some fairly inept challengers through the history of the big men, Puerto Rico’s Joe Roman was brutally outclassed by the fists of George Foreman inside of a round in Japan in 73, Liston it was claimed threw the ‘fight’ against Ali in 65 and so forth but Audley Harrison on this showing has topped that list, to think they call him A Force, surely after this they should rename him A Fraud!

So enough of my rant, let’s read about the so called fight, shall we….?
Coming into the ring to a chorus of boo’s I mean Audley came in decked in a red t shirt about saving some adventure playground, Haye the champion was given a better welcome.
Haye outweighed by just over three stones {43lbs} looked much the smaller man despite being just two inches the shorter, as the paying public anticipated the outcome and that Harrison always had the proverbial punchers chance, sure the tangibles were there though David was much the more fancied going into this his second defense of the W.B.A heavyweight title.
Both to begin with did very little though Audley pressured to begin with as he came forward but Haye soon had Audley backing off with the odd attempt of a punch that failed to land and has soon as forty or so seconds had elapsed into the round the knowledgeable few began to boo both combatants, which I felt was a little premature and unfair, Haye to his credit threw a two punch combination to silence the few impatient fans, and a roar went up, but it didn’t last long!
Thing is one minute had elapsed, then yep you guessed it two minutes as neither boxer threw a punch that landed and even when they did throw which was a rarity in itself they missed or fell short has both looked far too cautious and then the bell rang to conclude the worst three minutes in the whole history of the World heavyweight championship in my opinion, I felt disgusted to even call this interesting but hey give the guys a chance, the usual feeling out process is all very well in the opener but you expect to see at least one of two meaningful punches land, sadly neither party wanted to dance!
So to the second but yet again both Audley and David did anything other than spar for a opening and it wasn’t pretty, again unbelievably neither was willing to take the initiative, it was dismal plain and simple and yep you guessed it right again, no body threw a punch and to think people call the Klitskco’s boring is rather unjust when you watch fights like this, at least they do show a little work rate.
If British heavyweights through boxing history have been called the horizontal heavy, then it’s bad enough seeing them just stand there and look at each other, no body was willing to do anything and I mean anything, even the third man Luis Pabon called for more action and to think they billed this one as ‘the best of enemies’ it seemed they were really the best of friends! by now within eighteen seconds of the second stanza the crowd began a slow hand clap…..oh dear!
Then Haye after a minute or so of inactivity finally threw a right hand that had Harrison on the retreat with his hands up, though Haye landed with a cuffing right hand shot that had very little power behind it, before both went into retirement mode again, however Haye did manage to land a decent straight right to Audley’s midsection about several seconds later but again both went to sleep and after almost a minute and a half into the round Ref Pablon called for them to get busy! Haye did in the last thirty or so seconds but landed with half hearted shots has he simply wasn’t setting himself properly, Audley seemed content to just cover up and get on the move……..the crowd booed some more at the bell to end another fruitless session, both were tarnishing the heavyweight championship, a belt that Mssr’s Johnson, Louis, Marciano and Ali had once held with pride, was now becoming something of a joke!
Oh yeah sorry meant to say Audley did actually land a straight southpaw jab to Haye’s handsome countenance in the second, sorry it was so boring it was hard to keep track!
So to the third and Harrison met Haye center ring, Haye cockily had his left hand slightly extended as if he was using it as a measure to Harrison’s chin, Harrison tried the odd punch but couldn’t find the target, after fifty seconds of unequaled boredom Haye finally came too life and threw a combination beginning with a succession of rights that had Audley backing away to the ropes where Haye punctuated it with a two handed body attack, again both looked each other over and then Haye exploded a two punch combination with a solid right that landed to Harrison’s chin before getting out of harms way, literally seconds later a series of right hands caught the bigger Harrison on the ropes that sent him spinning around, before Haye launched a series of right hands that found the target starting with a big right to the body before bringing the attack to Audley’s head has he cowered on the ropes and seemed to be here to make up the numbers, a series of straight rights pierced Harrison’s high guard before Haye unleashed right uppercuts and started to catch Harrison around the side of the head with more rights that had Audley dazed, a final combination sent Harrison over for the count as he fell forwards and rolled onto his back, Audley was almost a pathetic sight as he got too all fours and made it to his feet at the count of eight, the referee Pablon put Audley’s gum shield back in as though he was prolonging Audley’s agony, Haye like a tiger patiently waited in the corner and wasn’t to let victory out of his sights as he went in for the finish rushing across the ring trapping Audley and not allowing him off the ropes and with both hands flailing, a left hook and a few right hooks had Harrison wobbling again but the third man Pablon had seen enough and saved Audley the embarrassment of a second visit to the canvas in as many seconds as he rightfully waved it off, Audley still erect but badly wobbled stopped at 1:52 of the third.
Haye did the job but seemed too cautious in my opinion and it was beginning to stink out the joint, in the post fight interview David spoke of the brothers but on this performance Haye should really reconsider such a task, beating Audley Harrison’s one thing but in against either brother would be a far tougher proposition, as Harrison spoke of possibly giving it another go!
THIS WASN’T BOXING, THIS WAS BORING!

Any comments to micksnice@aol.com




Mayfair October 14th 2010

On an Autumn evening in posh Mayfair, Michael Helliet of the Mayfair sporting club put on a three fight dinner show in the plush surroundings of the Millenium hotel opposite the Grosvenor square on a Thursday evening all part of a dinner show.

Returning to action after sustaining a shoulder injury last time out was Helliet’s light middle hope Wayne Alwan Arab a transplanted Zimbabwean whom fights out of nearby Hackney, also showing there wares were Southampton newcomer Matty Tew and debutant Nathan Skeen a transplanted Australian making his bow in the paid ranks at cruiser.

First up at light welter was Matty Tew, whom having his fourth pro outing, was cheered on by a group of his followers in one of the corner’s of the largish room were treat to a good solid performance from the Southampton man who continuously backed up Damien Turner, himself coming off of a loss to another Helliet hope in Phil Gill who was in attendance.

Each round replicated each respective session as Tew dug in some good body shots and maintained a steady pressure throughout, backing Turner up with almost every onslaught Tew showed excellent work rate in each round, Turner in the final stanza did try and up the pace but it was too little too late, but showed a lot of balls throughout though he was outpunched and outworked.

Tew ran out a deserved 40-36 points winner on referee Jeff Hinds card.

Wayne Alwan Arab coming back from a six month hiatus has I mentioned earlier had damaged his shoulder last time out when he decisioned Ian Eldridge over four, despite having not boxed since that time Alwan looked surprisingly sharp has he outboxed the teak tough Matt Scriven, who gives a good account every time he steps into a ring.

Arab outboxed Scriven in every department for the first three rounds, and his dominance showed as early as the opener as Scriven’s face was bloodied, testament to Arab’s sharpshooting counters.
Arab as well as using a stiff jab now and again got inside and went well to the body before getting out of harms way and using the left jab as he got on the move, and dominated up until the fourth and last session of this a middleweight four three’s, as Scriven tried to make a fight of it as he backed up Arab continuosly on the ropes in the final round and seemed to take the session, but at the final bell there was only one winner as Arab’s early work had mounted up a comfortable lead on third man Hinds scorecard, and was rightfully adjudged the winner by 40-37, which I felt was an accurate asessment of events.

Showcloser was Australian Nathan Skeen who now resides in England taking on tough Nick Gigg over six two’s at cruiser.

Broad shouldered and looking in good shape Skeen didn’t waste any time as he got straight to work backing up Gigg straight away, it was a good pace to begin with as Skeen took control as he thumped in some heavy body shots as he backed up Gigg, the first couple of rounds saw some good action but from around the fourth things became a little scrappy at times as there styles didn’t gel that good, Gigg who seemed content to survive did try and match Skeen punch for punch at times but it was Skeen who seemed to find the target that bit more, although I gave Gigg a few rounds as he showed stubborn resistance and did at times just did enough to nick a few rounds, I thought Skeen whose continuos pressure seemed to do enough to take a hard fought but deserved decision in the best fight of the night.
Hind’s tally was 59-55 in favor of Skeen who could be one to watch.

Michael Angelo Serra reporting from Mayfair.




Interviewing Jay Darrell Ingleton….. the hardest kid at school 1982-1986. part one


It was 1982, when I first moved from East London to further afield, Essex to be more precise in Gants Hill, a mostly Jewish area, I did’nt really want to move further out but my stepfather Richie Ward was bettering himself, business was booming and his small motor spares shop in the Mile End road was getting bigger, his wallet fatter and he wanted a better life for his co habitar, my mother and her son, me!

I remember telling my great uncle Alf a former pro flyweight boxer back in the 30’s that going to such an area the kids there would be posh and I wouldn’t fit in, “Mick some of those Jewish kids are good little footballers, and they used to be pretty good boxers” but that was a long time ago in a bygone era back in 1930’s East London, a majority I would guess of those Jewish kid’s from the 1930’s would move out to area’s similar to that of Gants Hill and settle down with there family’s and the new generation, some of whom would be my new classmates, if you could call them my mates!

So it was the March of 1982, that I had my first day at my new school, mum packing me off with a light brown brief case, sent her little boy to this new place, the other classmates had heard of this new kid joining there school, an East end kid, thought’s of a right handful in the newcomer were dismissed clearly when they saw me walking up to the classroom situated just outside the main school, the classroom a mere outbuilding my other classmate’s felt threatened no more when they saw me for the first time a curly haired eleven year old holding a brief case, more an object of laughter than of fear, those Jewish kid’s would make my life a little uneasy for the next few year’s…. until that is, one day when one decided to crack more than a joke and more of an egg in my pocket came unstuck when I finally kicked off properly, offering two of the bastards out, they both backed down and funnily enough Jay was there looking amazed at what he was seeing, let’s put it this way they did’nt bother me no more!
Let’s get back to around April of 82, and after a month at my new school I’m in the changing room after a Physical Education lesson, me a skinny little kid amongst plenty of other skinny little kid’s are changing into our school uniforms when all of sudden I notice a black man in the corner of the dressing room and can’t believe how well developed he is, thinking to myself that must be one of the P.E teachers, thing is though he never took our lesson, and then I figured he must have been the teacher taking the next class or year above for there daily grind on the playing field!
Conversation sometime after that lesson got onto about the hardest kid in the year, a fellow pupil mentioned about some black kid who wears glasses, some kid called Ingleton, I could’nt place him and I’d never heard of him before or even seen him, and then one day I did and soon I realised something?
You know that black bloke getting changed in the dressing room I was talking about a good few second’s ago, well who I thought was one of the P.E instructors was’nt!
See that black man was a twelve year old child, with legs bigger than that of a man and a physique that many a grown man would envy, Jay Ingleton was his name and I’ll never forget the time down on the playing field when twenty or more kids attacked him only for him to punch and kick them off like a kung fu master just like the arcade game character Thomas did from the classic arcade game Kung Fu Master, that was also known originally as Spartan X in Japanese arcade’s and was the first arcade video game from my knowledge to be based on a novel that also made the transistion onto celuloid which Jackie Chan starred in, however for Jay bashing up almost a class of kid’s, this I saw with my own two eyes and he would have made some teacher surely!
Some years later I’d be passing by on a bus and see that same black kid now a fully grown man running bare chest in the pouring rain four or five times to neighbouring Ilford and back on the same run, also a friend going to work one morning would tell me ‘oh yeah I know him, I’ve seen him running out in the snow!’ whatever?, whoever this guy was?, he was one thing for sure a dedicated, comitted athlete who has I recently put it to the interviewee as such “Jay, you just don’t live the life, you’ve lived it all your life!”

So with out further a do, let me introduce you to one of a kind, not just another personal fitness trainer but some one a little bit special and I can vouch for this through personal experience, talking to myself on a Sunday evening Jay told me of the time he proved too much of an handful for the top martial art’s club in London The Shootfighters, if not Britain and was subsequently kicked out, even the instructor’s wouldn’t allow there pro’s near this man, nuff said!
So I during the conversation wanted to find out what made this machine of a man tick, and what with machines I wanted to press the right buttons, I dare not press the wrong ones!
Readers please let me introduce Jay Darrell Ingleton…..

Michael Serra: So where did it all begin, your early life for example?
Jay Ingleton: I was born at King Georges {hospital} so I’ve been a Essex boy my whole life, born and bred and I’m proud of that, especially now I’m starting to build my name internationally.
I always believe I been some kind of fighter even before I kind of knew what that is, I used to play fight {when younger} but always had a kinship for it, this is what I love doing, I’ve always been inclined naturally that way to be involved, looking back now I wished I’d done more because now I realise it is my path way but back then I did’nt know, I guess I felt a bit out of place a little bit because I had such a passion for it but no one else did around me and you feel your the odd kid out because you got this huge passion, I obviously didn’t unleash it as much as I would have loved too if I could go back right now, I’ve always been a fighter, always thought about it, always been on my mind no matter what from reading super hero comics from Spiderman to the X men, something was always going on in my head regarding super athletes, my imagination was the same at school has I used to have daydream’s about being some kind of super hero, being the toughest, something or whatever, this was on my mind all the time and at the time I was thinking is this normal? and looking back now and where I am in my life it all makes kind of sense.
I believe I’m a natural athlete, a natural fighter

M S: So tell me about your early fighting memories?
J I: It’s funny because I talk to some people and for some reason have got it in there head that I was a kind of bully {I can offer that Jay never bullied anyone simple as, he got picked on and they might have been picked off and up from the floor!, but Jay never bullied anyone to my knowledge} I may have messed around a bit yes, but I never remember myself being a bully {one bully who did mess with Jay was thrown to the floor, getting up and laughing, the bully walked out and saw blood, he never laughed after this!} I was a competitive kind of guy I think, if pushed and if push come to shove you know I would explode I guess, I had a temper on me but for me to actually go off, you’d really have to push me or wind me up or something.
I liked fighting a lot, but was always fair, I was’nt like a dirty fighter I would’nt take a bat to you or a weapon to you or anything, I might throw the odd chair here and there but I wouldn’t do anything under hand, I had some kind of principle’s, keep some kind of principle honour, but has I got older I though wait a minute, ‘other people don’t have that, so if I keep that kind of principle honour I’m might get hurt, you can only fight the same rules and if your sticking to fighting fair where someone else is’nt your going to get hurt, so I remember thinking has I got older with all the weapons that you’d see around, you think ‘it’s changed now’ you don’t expect to just fight someone and walk off, they could come back with other people or with weapon’s or whatever, so you got to expect the unexpected, but in the early day’s it was just fun and I used to enjoy it, I liked the competing, but I never {got really viscous} there was only one time I got really viscous was with {a kid at school} Steven Donald, he was racist, it was funny because we used to be mate’s but I did’nt realise he was racist, after we all found out he was National Front, has was his father {the equivalant of today’s racist organisation BNP} it was quite surprising because we used to hang around with him and he was okay and all of a sudden he just changed into this racist thug, he was very violent, he did drugs and shit, but you know I remember beating him up, I beat him up quite bad, but only because he pushed me that far I guess you know, so that was the reason why, when I swept him I tripped him up on Lord Avenue, he fell his head hit the floor and he knocked himself out and I jumped on him and pounded his face with some punches and bruised his face up, I remember that clearly and after that some people thanked me for doing that and a lot of people liked me for doing that, because no one liked him you know, thing is we used to be mates and then he just changed, and I thought about out of principal we used to be mates and you just change into this racist thug, the principal of that really pissed me off, it just drove me mad I guess, well not mad but just pushed me to that extreme.

M S: He brought a crowbar to school the next day, didn’t he?
J I: Yeah, he was a headcase, drugs and all that shit, in actual fact I saw him after I left school once, he saw me but he didn’t say nothing, he just walked right past, but I could tell he was high on drugs, he got a lot bigger after school {physically} and got into a lot of fights but it was purely out of being on drugs by then, it was just a crazy period back then but he was just basically a thug you know what I mean?, a thug and I did’nt realise that then, me with all my principles and I’m fighting a thug, it’s a different ball game.

M S: So Donald would pick up anything to attack someone with?
J I: Yeah.

M S: Today’s black youth possibly don’t suffer that much racial abuse as they once did, please tell me what it was like a black kid growing up in the seventies and eighties, in a mostly white area like Clayhall, Essex?
J I: A mostly Jewish area, I used to go to the Redbridge Jewish club, so I was always hanging around with whites and Jew’s, yeah at times I felt it {Racism}, Yeah at times I definately felt it, people would say things and you’d be ‘what, what was that about?’ you know what I mean?, they’d get funny and you’d think ‘what you getting funny for?’ you just try and reason with them, and if they were unreasonable you’d think ‘okay alright’ I used to try and reason with them and hoping it’d work, and then just walk off and just be fine or whatever, I’m trying to be nice and your being nasty, my feelings would get hurt of course, I did try and reason with it, if that did’nt work I’d just walk off, looking back on it, it’s kind of funny, but when the Tottenham lot came down {Tottenham a notoriuosly tough place some miles from Jay’s home, famous for the riots at Broadwater farm, a council estate where Police officer Keith Blakelock was killed in 1985} with Horace {another black kid} and a lot of things changed, I would’nt say for the better, but there was a bit of trouble for them too because they saw me differently also, they’d come down drinking there Tennant’s {beer} and all that rubbish, I don’t know I guess that was just me and I dealt with things because of my fighting and my mind was elsewhere and I was always the toughest or the fastest so I had something to focus on I guess, so it did’nt hit me that way because I ignored a lot of it {racism}, sometimes I was like a sore thumb {the only black guy}

M S: So tell me how long have you been involved in physical culture?
J I: Since the age of thirteen, fourteen so your talking twenty six, twenty seven years.

M S: What was it that first got you interested in martial arts?
J I: Probably this older kid Anthony Joseph, I used to look up to him has he used to talk about karate and stuff, but he never knew what it was but he pretended he did, he pretended he could teach us and that he fought also, he was about four years older than me and pretended he was a karate master and we thought he was, we did’nt know any different, so he was my first real entrance into a fake {person} but it planted a seed into me, a seed of interest, also the Kung Fu series from tv with David Carradine, also hearing Bruce Lee’s name for the first time, his films then Chuck Norris, he was my biggest influence watching Chuck Norris, then I was thirteen, fourteen I was trying stuff out before I tried my first karate class, it was Hayden Joseph {no relation to Anthony} who took me to my first karate class and there was a guy called Dave Slapper from the East London karate school, it was Hayden who introduced me there and to my first proper martial arts training, and it went on from there really, I remember that clearly and then from karate I went into kung fu, into mugendo, jujitsu and then into win chun, then some kick boxing, thai boxing, then later on Brazilian jujitsu, submission wrestling and some other stuff also, but I was trying stuff out before I knew it technically, some things came to me more naturally than others.

M S: You were quite a good all round athlete, but what sport did you particulary excel in?
J I: I was a good sprinter, I was good at cricket, also rugby when I could be bothered to play, I was probably a better rugby player than a sprinter {I remember at the sports days, the school would film and the 100m that Jay ran in, the camera solely was on him and him alone, such was the impression he caused amonget the sports teacher} I once scored four tries in a row and everyone got jealous of me because I would’nt pass the ball to them I just scored all by myself and they hated me for that, and I remember my rugby teacher Mr Wookie telling me “just keep doing what your doing, don’t worry about what they say, just keep doing what your doing” because I kept scoring all the time so I’d say at school level rugby was my best but I was a good sprinter too I’d say now it’s running long distance outside of martial arts has I’ve done marathon’s and stuff, fitness running I absolutely love.

M S: What martial art would you say you excel in?
J I: I consider myself freestyle, they call it mixed martial arts but I been doing this {mixing} for years, so I just call myself freestyle.

M S: So what did you do when you left school?
J I: I went to college and studied acting for two years at Redbridge tech, theatre class and now I’m hoping to put it too use {laughs} I wanted to be an actor back then but I did’nt have the confidence then I came out of there and drifted around and was doing bit’s a pieces like assistant lift engineer, you know all kinds of odd jobs, until I started teaching when I was twenty six has a fitness instructor.

M S: So you have studied and practised and studied many different fighting styles, is there any particular one that you prefer?
J I: Right now I’d say Thai boxing.

M S: Have you ever had any competitive fights, though I know you had plenty streetfights {laughs}?
J I: I fought in karate competitions, semi karate competitions and I always fought the winner of the tournament but I never saw my talent right the way through, I could have been but my mind wondered off, if mixed martial arts, ufc had been around then I think I would have been in to it, but because of the time there was’nt anything like that around but like I said I did try semi contact karate but got bored a little bit and did’nt really bother with it.

M S: So what was your record in karate?
J I: Fightwise I never won any competitions, but I must have fought about three or four competitions and each time I either fought the winner of the tournament, got beaten by the winner, but one time I fought the area champion and was kicking him all over the place and for some reason I just lost my focus and just because of that and not because he was better than me, not a great record not at all so I’m not going to say it was, but the ability was there but I did’nt focus on it really so I’m not going to claim anything there.

M S: I seem to remember at school, you wanted to be a stuntman, did you ever do this and also did you ever have any involvement in films?
J I: I didn’t do it, but I’m doing it now but not as a stuntman as a such, more of a martial arts stuntman, so I can focus more, anything to do with martial arts, I don’t really want to fall into buildings!, anything to do with fight choreography, that’s what I’m doing now {Jay has a showreel on his facebook and youtube, type in his name then take a look and see for yourself the kind of guy I’m talking too and about on the respective aforementioned websites} and pursuing acting, my first acting gig was for I.B.M and that was for an I.B.M video, I got paid for that professionally for playing a boxer, and right now I’m pursuing it more seriously.
That really was my goal before but I never saw it through, my friend Steve Spiro went on to become one of the youngest stunt men in the country while I went off course a bit and I was teaching but now I’m a martial arts stuntman, well we’ll see if someone wants to hire me and pay me to do something and it’s within my ability then I may do it.

M S: I once heard you starred in a film?
J I: I did one film, but I didn’t get paid for it, I acted my part out well but the rest of it {the film} didn’t come together well, so I think the film got locked away somewhere.

M S: What was the name of the film?
J I: Furor, nothing came of it, it had someone in it who was a thirteen times World champion, I was supposed to have got a showreel from that, I didn’t get a copy of it, yeah I did that but my real start was the I.B.M video, that was a professional guy who filmed Jackie Chan in Shangai Knights, the director has worked with Benicio Del Toro, and it’s a company that is known World wide, so I’d say I’m happy that this was my first professional job, so the next payday I hope will be for something like that, plus I got an agent whose on the look out for me.

M S: So in the film what part did you play?
J I: Just an extra, I was a karate extra, one of the bad guys, an henchman, just a small scene really, I thought it was going to be bigger.

M S: So if there’s a film producer etc….reading this and they want to contact you how would they go about this?
J I: I now have an agent, Sheila Foley who works for the Extra Mile agency and she can be contacted by her email which is Sheilafoley@theextramileagency.com

M S: So Chuck Norris named you the awesome kicking machine, is this true and if so how did that make you feel?
J I: It’s incredible, my friend’s a good friend of Chuck’s and he literally talks to him every week, his that good a friend of his, he sent him the video link {of Jay} and told him {Chuck} you got to check this guy out, this was like two or three years ago before when no one was talking about me, now everybody is, but Chuck was the first person to say anything about me, so I’m like ‘oh my God’ Chuck said what? you kind of disbelieve it a bit but his been sent my latest show reel, but now I’m waiting on his latest response, but it made me feel great to be recognize by a guy like that who had a show that was number 1, Texas Walker Ranger that was the number one network show in the {United} States, the number one martial arts show, his contacts, his brother’s producer who produced all his films, I’m hoping if I can impress him that maybe, I mean he helped Van Damme out, he gave Van Damme his first break, I’m not bragging or anything but if your good enough, you can open up a door and I’ll jump through it so I’m hoping when he see’s this showreel that something may come up and pass it onto someone who may want to use me, and to be honest with you and to be totally honest with you that’s where I’m at right now, that I can be that pro active that I can get him to say ‘well look maybe I can pass this guy onto someone’
I mean like two years ago when he said that about me I was like ‘great’ but I never pursued it, but now I’m pursuing it, and now that’s the difference, now I’m pursuing.

Michael Angelo Serra speaking to Jay Darrell Ingleton.

Oh yeah you might also want to check out Jay’s own website at www.jaydarrellingleton.com

Also be sure to look out for the second part of this interview in the next month or so!




Memorabilia fayre 2010

Yes it’s that time of the year again almost, the annual boxing memorabilia fayre.
I attended last year has I did the year before and can say on each occasion as a boxing collector that I was amazed at what was on offer, as I entered the hall and paid my entry fee of hat goes to a worthy cause to the ex boxers charity, I was in awe of the huge amount of various items for sale, everything from old fight posters, program’s art prints, vhs tapes, books, photos….etc….etc…. to everything boxing related that you could imagine and hey it’s very reasonably priced also.

I must say though that the fair that’s run by Chas Taylor is well worth the admission fee alone even if you not interested in collecting, it’s a day out on it’s own and what with the huge amount of collectibles, it would take you the allotted four hours that the fayre’s open for to look through everything that’s on offer.

And there’s always a famous face or four at the fair, for example in 2008 former British and Commonwealth welter champ Slyvester Mittee was in attendance as a guest, and then last year was none other than former World welter champ John H Stracey who even had his own stall believe it or not!
However not only will you see many a famous face from the inside of the roped square, there many boxing personality’s also to be found looking through the many stalls of memorabilia, the usual suspects in attendance are avid collectors like Frank Warren’s longest serving team member, corner man Lennie Lee as well as fellow corner man Mick ‘Red’ Brennan and writers and commentators such has Eurosport’s Steve Holdsworth who himself has a huge fight library for sale via his website that Steve has filmed himself from the ringside, go to www.steveholdsworth.com for more details and his lists, another seasoned collector and true gentleman is George Zeleny who once even produced his own magazine ‘boxing outlook’ so be sure to look not only through the many collectibles but out for a few famous faces also.
I’ve got one problem with the fair, it’s only on once a year!

So the questions you’ll be asking me

WHEN………OCTOBER 23RD 2010
WHERE……ST ALOYSIUS HALL, EVERSHOLT STREET, EUSTON, LONDON, NW1
STARTS……1.30 PM
CLOSES…..5.30PM
PARKING…YES ALL DAY.
BAR AND FOOD…..YES THERE’S A BAR AND SNACKS
ADMISSION…….0

For event information please phone organizer Chas Taylor on 01707 654677 or 07956912741, but please do so at a respectable time.




Q & A with Daniel Woodgate

It’s possibly no surprise that your wondering why I’m interviewing a guy whose boxed only once in the professional ranks, a points win against Welshman Adam Wilcox, but I felt it needed to be done, what with Margate having few names boxing wise, other than Sven Hamer and Takaloo many years ago, {I know hardly a couple of English men}, however we now have some home reared talent from the famous seaside resort, has there’s Jack “13” Morris who like Woodgate is a super middle, and also you have the Woolford brother’s Scott and Vinnie, who seemingly are more often than not in the role of journeyman status nowadays!
So on a Summer’s evening from home I made the call to Daniel Woodgate, the latest offering from Margate, the interview went good and I liked the way he answered my question’s with truthful answer’s, this guy comes across as down to Earth and is obviously a realist in his view’s on how he hopes his career to pan out, answering my question’s in a direct and positive tone Dan sure seemed a no nonsense type but at the same time a nice chap, with a voice that sounds a little like former W.B.C 168lb king Carl Froch’s and a build more like that of a scaled down Frank Bruno with a similar muscle definition to that of big Frank, obviously Dan would one day like to emulate both in the ring and become a World champion, especially that of fellow super middle Froch, he certainly does’nt seem to be a fancy Dan, but in time Dan could well be the man!!!!!!!

*******************************************************************************************************

Mike Serra: So Dan, how did you get started in boxing and why?
Daniel Woodgate: I boxed a little bit here and there as a kid like most kids do and stuff like that and I never got seriously into it until I started playing football, and then I broke my foot and put on load’s of weight and went up to like seventeen stone, I had a friend whom carried on boxing from when I first went with him and I knew I did the training well and he invited me back to the club, I went back there and my coach soon has I got in the gym said I ‘got something, and to get some weight off of you’ and then I got carded and within three months I had my first fight that I lost, but that’s how I got into it really just too lose a bit of weight and I was enjoying it after the first few weeks and {thinking} I’m going to do it properly though I used to smoke, but I gave up smoking and stopped going out drinking and stuff like that.

M S: So how old was you when you had your first competitive fight?
D W: twenty one, twenty two.

M S: Was there any inspiration from anyone in particular?
D W: My all time hero of boxing was Chris Eubank and I used to love Naseem Hamed also, I used to love the way they put on a show, obviously you’ve got all the greats but I was really only into the British scene really, I wasn’t massively into boxing as I only knew only the big stars but I couldn’t tell you anyone who was on the undercard, I liked the Benn, Collins, Eubank era.

M S: Are you a bit of a show man yourself?
D W: I wouldn’t say I put on a show and I don’t want to come across as arrogant, I’m not flash but I’d say I’m a gentleman as a boxer, I always wish a fighter good luck before I fight him and I’m a big fan of people that respect each other in and out of the ring and I know people do the old war of words, but I would do it to sell a fight, but I’d like the guy I’m having the war of words with to know it was part of the business if you know what I mean.

M S: So where was you born?, and what was it like there growing up?
D W: I was born in Sidcup, Queen Mary’s hospital Sidcup and I lived in a area called St Paul’s way, and it was quite a nice area when we first moved there but from then on it went slowly downhill and basically from a kid I was always a fighter and was always out street fighting and stuff like that, I would’nt say I was a tough kid but I never got beat up and could look after myself although I was’nt the type of kid who acted tough, no one ever messed with me and I was quite a tough kid really but I was’nt a bully it was just the way it was around there, I always wanted to be the toughest in school but looking back on it now I’m grown up it seems a bit strange but has a kid that was the main thing with the kids I hung around with, if you wanted to be someone you wanted to be tough and I got thrown out of school when I was fourteen and got moved to four different primary schools, I was a bit naughty and a bit of a rebel and it was mostly because of fighting, {but} I was a frustrated child but I’m really lucky my parents stuck by me, a good family behind me and I turned out to be not a bad person I think. {laughs}

M S: Though you’ve boxed once as a pro, you had a pretty decent amateur career, please could you tell me more about that?
D W: Like I said I lost my first fight but I can’t remember the guy’s name, I fought over in Maidstone {Kent}, and the only thing I remember about the fight that will stay with me forever was when I stood in the corner and went out all confident {walking to the ring} and was joking in the changing room, and I always have a laugh in the changing room’s as I’m not someone who get’s uptight about fighting, and then I got in the ring and the ring announcer went ‘and in the blue corner, Daniel Woodgate’ and I remember thinking ‘oh crap, that’s me! what have I got to do now?’ and I completely forgot everything I learned in training, I mean I got the fight on video and I watch it every now and then and I think I did’nt do has bad as I thought I had on the day, I completely blanked everything out {during the fight} and I did’nt remember anything and that’s all I remember from my first fight and then I went on to have two fight’s with the same guy Tony Barret, a bit of an arch enemy and I beat him twice it was all good fun and we was good friend’s afterwords and then I had my under ten novices and I was fighting at super heavyweight like sixteen stone and I went out to Las Vegas and I met Steve Foster {Commonwealth light middle champ 96}, and a friend who introduced me told Steve I wanted to be a boxer so he {Foster} said ‘lift up your shirt son’ I lifted up my shirt and he told me ‘your too fat, your going to go nowhere’, and I was like ‘oh nice one, thanks’ and that was the changing point in my amateur career and my boxing career as a whole, I went back home and lost two stone and got under fourteen stone within a month and had my under ten championship where I burnt so much weight off, I was so weak on the day but I only lost by one point and still gave it my all but it just was’nt there that day, then after that I went on and had two more fights with that club which was Canterbury, my first club and then I decided I wanted to turn pro so I left and went to a better club that I thought was at the time, but later I found out most clubs are the same you just get out what you put in really, I moved to another club had a few fights with them, did okay then onto another club and when I got stale and thought I were’nt going to learn anymore I decided to make a move because I want to get somewhere and I want to get there quickly because I’m old has I started out boxing at twenty two, and then I ended up training at Sittingbourne but because of commuting back and forth it was too much really, and by this time I’d had seventeen or eighteen fights and I won nine and then went into the championship’s the A.B.A’s a second time, the first time I got into the Southern Counties final on a bye {walkover} and I boxed a guy who had twenty fights, knocked out three hundred {laughs}, he was amazing he was supposed to be this really great fighter and he had a few pro fights as well and I went in there and I’d only had ten fights and I did really well against him, I took him the full three rounds and did myself really proud and everyone was really happy and could’nt expect anymore from them really and then I went in the A.B.A’s not last year but the year before and got to the quarter finals, my hardest fight was in the Southern counties final against a guy called Simon Hopkins, who’d also had a few pro fights and he was the toughest fighter to date I ever fought, he was like only 5″2 but he was an animal, a really tough fight and after that it was the combined services where I boxed Mick Mcgarry who was ranked in the top ten, obviously when I saw his ranking I was a bit wary so I trained even harder and made sure I was on the ball and I stopped him in the first minute of the first round, and I’d never ever stopped anyone like that before, I mean I stopped people but never with a single punch and I was buzzing after that and then I went onto the quarter finals and met a guy called Rob Evans and he beat me on points and went onto win the whole competition, so I did myself proud and I was boxing at 86 kgs and I’m only 5″10, this Rob Evans was 6″3 and built like a brick crap house, he was massive and after that I decided that was enough in the amatuer game for me, so I started searching around for promoters, managers and then I found Mike Aldis on Facebook and I got chatting to him and basically what he said to me was what I wanted to hear ‘if you want to make money out of the game, then find someone else, but if you want to get your head down and go for titles, then I’m the man for you’ so I decided to go with him.

M S: So winning the gold medal, it must have been a proud moment for yourself, on that podium, flag flying and a medal around your neck representing your country, please could you tell me more about what it felt like?
D W: What it was, was it was an international competition over in Denmark representing England but what it was you had to put your self into it, I was’nt picked by an England squad, I boxed a guy from Finland and a guy from Denmark, and when I got there I was a 86 kg and weighed in on the mark but found out in Europe they don’t do a 86kg, it’s under 91kg or under 81 kg so I boxed two guys at 91kg, about a stone heavier than me, the first one I remember looking at this man and thinking ‘this man is an absolute tank, he was huge, so I went on the back foot and outboxed him and I did really well against him, then the next was a tall, spindly boxer and I knew I had to take it to him and I stopped him in the second round, the ref stopped the count and I remember thinking I’d never done anything like that before an international competition and it was massive for me, I know I was’nt picked but to go out there to another country with my six or seven people plus my club as well, it was an amazing feeling to win the competition, it was a gold medal and I’m very proud of it and it hang’s on my wardrobe every day.

M S: Did you actually get onto a podium to receive the medal?
D W: No it was presented in the ring and it was done all in weight classes and skill classes so there was six fighters in each class, two got a bye to the next round and I was’nt expected to do anything has they were a weight class above, I was expected to get beat but it’s were’nt going to happen!.

M S: You mentioned earlier about your age, I don’t consider you being too old as I think you have turned pro at the right age, Jack you know, I won’t keep going on about Jack {laughs} I mentioned him enough in the emails {laughs}, his like twenty eight, and his only had six fights and you have years ahead of you, Jack has’nt done much lately, what with injury’s etc…and sadly he missed the prizefighter but you have both boxed in your last fight’s Adam Wilcox, I mean Wilcox is a good guy to have your first fight against has his been around, and fought everyone, and you comprehensively beat him 40-36 and Jack beat him 40-37, so you went one better than Jack. {laughs}
D W: The thing is I don’t want to wait around, I don’t want to waste no time, I saw a video of him {Wilcox} and me and my dad sat down and watched it together and my dad looked at me afterwards and said ‘you sure son?’ {laughs} and I turned around and said ‘if he comes out fighting like that, I promise you I’ll beat him’ because he fought a guy under Hatton promotions and watching the fight Adam Wilcox definitely won but did’nt get the decision and pretty much won every round I think, but I knew with his style {I’d win} I have always said I’ll beat anyone my height or smaller than me, because I think I got an excellent jab and I use it really well and effectively, I don’t waste shots so someone like that who comes forward is perfect for me really and I went out there and he was a tough guy, I don’t want to take anything away from him but I think I did a really good job on him and I was really pleased afterwards, obviously it was my first pro fight and I did a few little thing’s wrong but it ain’t going to be perfection in the first fight, but we will get there.

M S: How many fights did you box as amatuer and what were your honors?.
D W: I only had twenty one has an amatuer, I was Southern Counties finalist twice, A.B.A quarter finalist, I won a gold medal out in Denmark in the H.S.K box cup, the Danish cup.

M S: Your sweetest victory?
D W: Obviously the feeling of getting my arm raised in my first pro fight because that’s what I’d been aiming for, basically since I met Steve Foster I actually thought it was a possibility that’s what I been aiming at, being a pro just to get my hand raised in that ring, that was the most amazing feeling, my best victory as an amatuer would possibly be a loss actually, it was a Monday night I travelled up to Northampton and boxed a guy ranked number twelve and I’d had eleven or twelve fights and I went up there and I remember the first round he absolutely boxed my head off and I went back to the corner and my trainer turned around and said ‘what are you doing Dan?, what are you doing?’ so I said ‘I ain’t got a clue, I were’nt expecting this!’ {laughs} I were’nt expecting him to be this good so he said ‘get out there and take it to him’ and I had two more rounds of me basically beating him up for two rounds, I mean he’d had seventy fights and he was so awkward and tricky and he knew every time I had him in trouble he just tied me up and he knew all the little tricks but I boxed really well and I thought I might have nicked a decision on an home show but I would’nt take anything away from him, he was a brilliant fighter and that was at another point that a change come across me as well, where I thought I’m getting somewhere again against someone much better than me and I’ve done okay!.

M S: So have you found the switch over okay from amatuer to pro?
D W: Yeah I always think I was set better as a pro anyway, I’m not a quick in and out puncher, I’m an agressive counter puncher, I punch hard, like I say I don’t waste punches and every punch I throw I try and knock them out with it, whether it’s a jab or a right hook, I’m always trying to hurt someone with my shots!.

M S: Who are your favourite boxer or boxers?
D W: Yeah Eubank, obviously I travelled about to watch Ricky Hatton because I liked the crack, there was always a great atmosphere at a Hatton fight and he’s a genuinely nice guy and someone you don’t mind paying good money to go and watch, but I always say there’s two type of boxing fan, you either like Mayweather or Pacquio! I’m a Mayweather {fan} I like a classy stylish boxer but some people like Pacquio who goe’s out and throw’s has many punche’s as he can and put’s his heart on the line for every single fight really, some people find Mayweather boring but I find Pacquio quite boring because he just throw’s punches all the time, he’s an amazing fighter don’t get me wrong, but it’s Mayweather all day long.

M S: Mayweather v Marquez was just a boxing clinic?
D W: It was just amazing, I could’nt believe how he could be that good, Marquez has just beat Diaz and showed he is’nt past it and he gave Pacquio a good fight.

M S: your favourite fight?
D W: Eubank v Benn, the first one.

M S: Looking back on your amatuer career, are there any regrets?,
D W: No I would’nt change a thing, the person that beat me in the under ten’s I wanted a rematch with him because I knew I could have beat him, and then there was a little bit of bad blood between us and there was a little bit of a slanging match, not so much that I got involved in it but there was a lot of going’s {on} in between, a lot of things said about me, then a fight {rematch} was arranged and there was alway’s an excuse not to fight me, but by the time I’d had ten, fifteen fights I was way past him, I could have beaten him with one hand tied behind my back, there was just a lot of noise coming from him.
It was a bit like the professional game, where you hear one person slagging off someone all of the time, he tried to build a fight {rematch} up but never really wanted to fight me, I would have liked to have beaten him but it’s not a worry to me I’ll get to spar him one day!.

M S: Is he a professional now?
D W: No he’s still an amatuer but I keep trying to arrange a spar with him so I can beat him up!

M S: He sounds a bit like David Haye with the Klitcsko’s?
D W: it is a bit like that.

M S: So you’ve just turned 27, and you have one fight behind you a points win against Adam Wilcox, what are your future plans?
D W: I’m hoping to be fighting on October 16th at the K2 leisure centre.

M S: How far would you like to go?
D W: I think I’m good enough to go somewhere with it and I’m going to try, I don’t want to be a ‘coulda been’ man, I want to be a ‘was never good enough’ you know what I mean? people can say ‘he were’nt good enough, but he tried’ rather than ‘he could been there, but he did’nt try’ I think I’m good enough and I think I’ll win a title one day but we’ll see.

M S: Has you know, there’s also another super middle from your area called Jack Morris and strangely enough you are not only from the same place but also in the same division and you faced the same opponent last time out Wilcox, do you think you two will feature some time soon up there along the likes of the Degale’s and the Groves in the division?
D W: Jack’s a massively talented boxer, I remember the first time I saw him in the gym and I thought to myself ‘bloody hell, he’s really good’ and I know fullwell that if he keeps his head down he’ll go as far as he want’s because he is massively talented, I’m not sure what weight his going in at now, I know his talking about going up to a different weight but I think if I could make super middleweight I would’nt have any trouble in time with any of them, I mean there brilliant fighters and they’d obviously wipe the floor with me now, but I’ve not seen anything from them that’s made me think that I could’nt beat them in the future, I rate myself quite highly, Im not arrogant and cocky about it, but I believe in myself if you know what I mean, I could surpass them, will it happen? it depends whether I get the right chance’s or not, getting the right fight’s and see if I get my oppurtunity.

M S: With Jack Morris, as I know him personally has I have done a few interview’s with himself, he simply does’nt get the publicity and credit he deserves has the other names are getting, please tell me has you told me you guys once sparred a few times, what you think of him has a boxer?
D W: His a brilliant boxer, I have done sparring session’s with him, the first time I sparred him I was still an amatuer and I was surprised with his power and his speed and being the size he is, his quite a big guy and he was so fast and powerful I was just going away and I just basically covered up really and threw my jab out a couple of times, the last time I sparred him was a few months back and we had a really good sparring session, okay he probably got the better of me has his quite experienced, he’d be an excellent fighter if he could get a bit more in really {fights}

M S: And where would you like to be in say twelve months time fistically speaking?
D W: In a year’s time I’d like to have about five or six more fights, obviously all wins, and just keep safe really, keep on the straight road and all the way to the top time allowing, and see where it takes me.

M S: Although I’ve never seen your fight v Wilcox, you seem too be a rather strong robust type, has it look’s has if your continuosly backing Wilcox up, which speaks volume’s as he’s fearsomely strong at super middle, if you will please describe your style?
D W: I would say I’m an aggresive counter puncher, I come forward all the time plus I got a good jab and use my jab effectively, I like to throw powerful shots, I’d consider myself as far as professional boxing goe’s has a bit of a mix between like a Eubank, obviously he’s my hero but I don’t try and emulate him but that’s how I saw boxing as a kid and that’s just how I box now and maybe a bit like a David Haye, just sit outside and search for the right shot and throw the right shot and hopefully it connects.

M S: So what did you weigh for the Wilcox fight {Woodgate’s pro debut}
D W: It was down at thirteen stone, but I was twelve twelve.

M S: So what will you be from now on, super middle or light heavy from now on?
D W: Well it’s something I got to discuss with Mike Aldiss, whether he thinks it’ll be worth me making super middle or if light heavy will be the right weight for my style, if I can make super middle strong then I’ll be massively dangerous because I’ll be a big super middle, not tall but I’m quite big and strong if not light heavy has I’m more than capable of holding my own against light heavy’s.

Michael Angelo Serra reporting from home




Hennessy promotions present professional boxing.

On Friday September 10th at the mecca of East End boxing, at the York Hall in London’s East End, Mick Hennessy makes a welcome return to boxing has he promotes a eight fight card.

Topping the bill is talented former Commonwealth welterweight champ, John O’Donnell a transplanted Irishman who bases himself out of West London taking on over twelve experienced American Terrance Cauthen, a former Olympian in an interesting international match up, O’Donnell is hoping that victory here could propel him into a British title challenge by the end of the year providing he comes through this.

Also booked for action is Lee Purdy, the first ever professional boxing champion from Colchester, England’s oldest recorded town!

Purdy last time out fought beyond the call of duty in possibly the fight of the year against Manchester’s Denton Vassell for the then vacant Commonwealth title, Purdy is scheduled to defend his Southern Area bauble against an opponent to yet be announced.

Further up the scales is gigantic Tyson Fury who at 6’9 has lofty ambitions himself has he hopes for a showdown with British champion Derek Chisora, last time out Fury disposed of one time nemesis John Mcdermott in crushing fashion in a much eagerly awaited rematch due to controversial scoring in there first meeting, Tyson showed there was no need for mathematics this time around, only for the ref to be able to count to ten!
Fury however takes on American Donnell Holmes over 8×3 minute rounds, and is the first time Tyson has met an American during his professional career.

Also featured is Greek hero Chris Evangelou from Enfield at light welter, has is Tyler Goodjohn who also debuts at 10st in his first pro outing, as does middleweight John Ryder whom is trained by ex pro Colin Lake, all face selected opposition.
Plus two more added to the card see’s improving Bradley Evan’s and Phill Fury, cousin of heavyweight Tyson who are appearing against select opposition.
For tickets please visit www.hennessysports.com




Goodwin promotions present championship boxing Sept 11th, York Hall, Bethnal Green, London

On Saturday September 11th at London’s York Hall, Goodwin promotions put on a interesting show, featuring no fewer than eleven fights in an almost marathon show, however topping the bill are two title fights featuring Pat McAleese who takes on over ten at light middle, Lee Noble.

Also another title fight between Ryan Barrett and Hackney’s Mark Alexander look’s like it could be rather interesting if the pre fight insults have been anything to go by, has Barrett has promised to humiliate and stop Alexander in there clash for the international masters super featherweight title.
“I will destroy and knock Alexander out to win the title!” the former Amir Khan opponent has promised, has both have hurled insults at eachother, even Barrett called Alexander ‘Minnie Mouse’!

But hey talking of cartoon charachter’s, or in true Warner Bros idiom ‘that’s not all folks’, there’s more…..

Also featured on the undercard is big punching Tony Conquest at cruiser who takes on much travelled Hastings Rasani, also booked for action is Erick Ochieng at middle against Alex Spitko, a true warrior.
Also featured are Darryl Setterfield against solid journeyman Matt Scriven, plus exciting light welter sensation Phil ‘the Phil Gill experience’ Gill against Damien Turner, in Gill’s sixth outing in the pro ranks, Gill is hoping sometime in the near future for a title chance.

At super middle Eder Kurti meets Danny Goode over four, while feather George Jupp takes on oft beaten Pavels Senkovs again over four while at middle Michael Norgrove takes on one time prospect Ian Eldridge.

Also making there professional debuts are Jamie Arlain at light welter and also Joel Mcintyre at light heavy.

For ticket information please visit www.goodwinpromotions.co.uk or alternatively phone 01525 851150.




World Boxing Council gala awards dinner

Cardiff International Arena, Cardiff, Wales

So it was on a Summer’s day that myself and Frank Warren corner man and good friend Lennie Lee, made the two hundred or so miles journey to Cardiff, in Wales in my trusty old scrap heap from my home in Colchester in Essex.

Driving down to the Welsh capital, we passed the green belt by the motorway, but where we were going there were going to be plenty more green belt’s of the W.B.C variety, so getting there we made how way in and was greeted by Alex Payne, Len however informed me he’d been here many times before, working the corner with the likes of Naseem Hamed, Joe Calzaghe amongst a hundred others etc….etc….

The place was rather plush to look at, a boxing ring was erected in the main hall used just as a background piece and nothing more as all boxers past and present were in tuxedo on this evening in celebrating the World Boxing Council’s annual awards, on a huge screen and a few smaller ones the guests were treat to various fight film excerpts of fights involving W.B.C title fights from yesteryear as the likes of Carlos Monzon, Oscar De la hoya etc….played out in front of the diners who’d paid good dollar for the honor of being present at this most prestigious of award nights, you could call it the boxing oscar’s almost.

Sitting there at the press table, I remembered my manners despite one or two who hadn’t, {to think they call us guy’s the gentlemen of the press, a joke surely}, I enthused as did Len on the various pieces of fine memorabilia on offer in this a silent auction, did I bid? no, and has it was a silent auction I didn’t say a word either!

Muhammad Ali’s dressing gown, shorts and boots all signed were framed nicely, has were Carmen Basilio’s and Jake Lamotta’s Ring championship belts replicated in respective frames and were an affordable £2,200 each and for such a cheap price weren’t bought, as were some of the organization’s green and gold bauble’s, the revered W.B.C’s trophy the championship belt framed and mounted professionally.

While waiting for the awards to get underway, an old face Alan Minter came over and greeted Len, and it was Len who traveled much further than he had done today with yours truly, way back in March 1980 as he flew to Vegas to see Alan lift the undisputed World middleweight championship when he outpointed the rugged bull like Vito Antuofermo over the championship course of fifteen rounds {they were the days}.

I had a few words with Minter myself, asking the former champ where his old nemesis Antuofermo was today has Vito had been expected to attend this event, “he missed the plane” Minter told me, to which I joked “maybe he didn’t fancy the trilogy!” in reference to Minter’s two championship fights with Antuofermo.

Before things got underway, the paying public got to mingle with the fighters, getting autographs and chatting away to the ringmasters was an awesome experience to behold, I myself had a chin wag with the likes of Robin Reid, John H Stracey, Alan Minter, Jeff Harding and Enzo Maccarinelli all former W.B.C champions with the exception of Maccarinelli who was a W.B.O king at cruiser, still though the likeable Welshman told me he hopes to be getting a crack at the W.B.C crown sometime soon if all goes well in his next fight on September 18th.

Also in attendance were former World heavyweight champions, James ‘Bonecrusher’ Smith and Tim Witherspoon, they knew each other pretty good though and even more so as fighters as they shared a ring twice and a version of the World crown as recognized by the W.B.A when Smith relieved ‘Terrible’ Tim inside of a round back in December 1986 for the title.

And talking of heavyweights, possibly the hardest puncher ever was here in attendance, the Acorn himself Earnie Shavers who hit so hard he split his glove against James ‘Quick’ Tillis back in 82 on the Holmes-Cooney card, but please don’t tell that to some big hairy curly haired Texan ‘with a gap in his grin, but plenty of iron in his chin’ the Texan being Tex Cobb the affable quick witted colorful heavyweight contender from the 80’s who defied logic and gravity against Larry Holmes in a title try in 1982 when he took a pasting over fifteen rounds which was severely inhumane, but Tex being Tex asked Holmes at the final bell ‘Let’s party’

Okay enough of a history lesson and back to the convention, so here goes the list of champions in attendance, now not all were of the W.B.C’s affiliation, like for example James ‘Bonecrusher’ Smith who was a W.B.A champ, but hey he was here, also was former W.B.C kings Paul Hodkinson, Witherspoon, John H Stracey, Robin Reid, Carl Froch, Calzaghe, Humberto ‘chiquita’ Gonzalez, John Mugabi, Iran Barkley and the legendary Roberto Duran, Zab Judah, Miguel Angel Gonzales and Rafael Herrera plus two fighters that had a memorable battle or two the ‘Z’ boy’s Carlos Zarate and Alfonso Zamora whose fights were billed as ‘the battle of the Z boys back in the 70’s, but there were plenty more here and far too many too mention, also amongst them were current W.B.C king’s Vitali Klitschko and Mikkel Kessler, as well as non World champions in Nicky Piper and Scott Welch, but they were champion’s at Commonwealth level, and also challengers for various versions of the W.B.C title, Piper having fought Nigel Benn for the full W.B.C World crown at super middle back in 92 and Welch up at heavy failing to dethrone the late Jame’s Oyebola for the W.B.C international bauble back in 1994, Welch gained revenge the year later and the British title but not the W.B.C international crown.

On the stage the champions were invited and they made there way as master of ceremonies Steve Holdsworth a useful pro himself and fight film collector, check out his site at www.steveholdsworth.com for his list of privately filmed fights from Britain, announced each champion as he and she made there way to the stage for the press to take there shots, each champion was presented with a single glove before leaving the stage.

Then a selected few were called to the stage to be presented with W.B.C medal’s as they were honored individually, but it wasn’t only the boys who got in on the act and the accolades, some of the ladies did also, one being Jane Couch M.B.E, a lovely lady so Len tells me, Len got a kiss from Ms Couch {lucky bloke}

However it was Brendan Ingle who was awarded a special W.B.C award from the one and only Joe Calzaghe for services to boxing, has did Frank Maloney as promoter of the year who spoke of his joy of landing his two fighters Rendall Munroe and Jason Booth World title shots, Munroe is boxing soon for the W.B.C super bantam title in October in of all places Japan, and it was Munroe who was awarded the W.B.C’s European fighter of the year also!

Fight and ko of the year belonged to Carl Froch, the kayo of Jermain Taylor proved the winning punch of the year, Vitali Klitschko was named the fighter of the year of the year 2009 a.d {please don’t tell David!}

Also receiving awards were John Mugabi and Enzo Calzaghe, Calzaghe for services to boxing, Terry Marsh was in the roll of honors also though he was I.B.F champ, and it was nice to have under one roof, Britain’s only two undefeated World champions in Marsh and Calzaghe, though Marsh was pretty upset when Joe retired undefeated after licking Roy Jones, Terry can always say he still remains as England’s only undefeated World champion, though Joe may argue as he was born in London, but has no English blood coursing through his veins, if that makes any sense, confused? don’t be!

And then here he was……..on the big screen the daddy of the W.B.C Jose Sulaiman who was too ill to attend and gave a message from his hospital bed which was very interesting to watch.

Then after all the awards were given out, the free booze was passed around the press table, not that I drank as I was driving!

So I got then the chance to interview the likes of Alan Minter, Robin Reid, Jeff Harding, John H Stracey and my mate Lennie Lee, {I have an interesting interview with Len to be put on here soon, so watch out for that one chaps} the aforementioned interviews also will be appearing fairly soon starting with Alan Minter, so keep a look out for those.

And so there it was a good evening spent in the company of many a World champion or ten, and as the night was no longer young me and Len decided to make the journey back from Wales to North London where Len lives as we left the venue, two hundred or more miles later and were home and safe, mind you its dawn as we get home, whoever she is!

A champion show full of champions, and a night that will live long in the memory, thank you Alex and Roy Payne for letting us come, it sure was a honor to be here!!!!

Michael Angelo Serra with Lennie Lee reporting from the World Boxing Council’s convention in Cardiff, Wales.




Doors could be opening for Daws!

Morden’s Lenny Daws showed great ring generalship as he made a second successful title defence of his British light welterweight title has he turned back bloody but brave challenger Steve Williams after ten rounds.
Williams last time out had beaten Tottenham’s Michael Grant for the vacant English bauble back here at the York Hall in Febraury on the undercard to Daws first defence which ended in a draw against Welshman Jason Cook.
However to begin with it was Williams who got off to a rip roaring start as he outfought the notoriously slow starting champion, who did very little compared to the challenger whom kept in close banging away with both hands on the inside as Daws could’nt match the workrate being metered out by the determined Liverpudlian.
In the second Lenny did seem to pick things up a bit more and when he did he showed the better accuracy of the two if not the determination of Williams, it seemed to myself that Daws was mearly saving something for later on, Williams though seemed to skate the first three rounds with ease.
Fourth round action saw things pace wise dip a little, but when both did spring into action Daws found himself backed up, but it was the champion who now and again showed some nice combinations as he found his range, and was it seemed to be testing the water as he fought mostly in spurts as if he was testing his man skill wise and obviously conceded the early rounds though Williams was missing more than Daws, it was with greater conviction and overall workrate that Williams was applying himself, throwing four punches he was landing two or three, but they were two more than Daws was throwing!
The fifth saw a turn in the tide as Daws, true to form started to ease his way in as he started to land with flurrys, even one burst of shots opened a cut over Williams right eye as Daws took control of the fight from the ring’s centre and it was the challenger who was looking rather disorientated due to Daws better accuracy, the blood from the afforementioned cut did’nt help matters as Daws notched up the fifth.
From thereon it was all Daws has he blocked most of Williams attacks and countered nicely, it was more than evident that Lenny was doing a job, however in the Seventh Williams workrate dropped, Daws was now controlling the destiny of the bout and it seemed it was a matter of time until the fight was eventually awarded in favour of the champion, but in boxing it ain’t over ’til the fat lady sings’ and though there seemed from here on that Williams was’nt going to pull out a miracle punch, it was his right hand that did land now and again on Daws unprotected chin, but it seemed unlikely to say the least that Williams could turn the tide, Daws himself had his signature punch, a left hook that kept landing as Williams had defeat written on his face at times.
In the next stanza the eighth Williams was drinking in the last chance saloon as the blood flowed from the cut over his right eye, coming out throwing himself at the champion with a fusilade of leather, but Daws had his number as early as the second it seemed before moving up the gears, in the ninth Williams again kept trying gallantly and found the target on the odd occasion, but still Lenny evaded most of the attacks coming his way and counter punched effectively on the open target that was Williams!
At the start of the tenth Williams had a little more success as he landed twice with combinations, but has he came on the inside, it was there that Lenny tied up his man in the clinches before again finding his range and outboxing his man, at the end of the round third man Ian John Lewis was called over to the challenger’s corner where Williams remonstrated as he was over ruled by his corner and Ian John Lewis waved it over with the challenger on his stool.
So what next for the champion, Daws who a brilliant tactician and technician could be in line for a shot at Northern Ireland’s European champion Paul McCloskey in a battle for the British and European titles.
{For the record, the judges officiating had thing’s almost level at the end, I wonder what fight these so called professional’s were watching?, I has a few other observant ringsider’s had Daws leading}
***************************************************************************************************************************

The undercard featured the comeback of Matt Skelton the former British and Commonwealth heavyweight champion and former W.B.A title challenger, opposing the Bedford man was Lee Swaby a durable veteran type in a rather labourous six rounder, things were a little messy through out until the finish, when Skelton landed an over hand right that dumped Swaby to the deck, on arising referee Ken Curtis waved things over as Swaby bravely got to his feet at the 1:00 mark of the fifth.
***************************************************************************************************************************

Bradley Pryce former Commonwealth light middle king looked impressive in dismantling Brixton’s ‘Dangerous’ Ted Bami in just two rounds.
Things looked like they were shaping up nicely in the opener as Bami pressured the taller Pryce, who worked nicely off of the left jab before whipping in some spiteful looking left hooks and doing enough to take the opener, things in the second were of a similar veign to that of the opener, however just before the end of the session Pryce smashed in a big right just before the bell that had Bami over before getting up where Ref Jeff Hinds waved it over, though some felt the stoppage a little premature, it obviously was’nt the case as Bami almost seemingly collapsed in a heap after the bouts conclusion, ref Hinds decision was spot on and he should be commended for his timely intervention.

***************************************************************************************************************************

Canning Town’s George Hillyard coming back from a the disapointment of last Febraury’s Prizefighter to eventual winner Prince Arron who also featured on the undercard here tonight.
Hillyard looking strong and in tremendous shape kept up the pressure through out the six rounds has he banged in good body shots to Keiron Gray’s midsection, chasing the Telford man for the best part of the contest, one big left hook from the Canning Town man staggered Gray towards the end of the opener but Hillyard could’nt follow up.
From here on Gray got on the move and did little but survive to the bell though he did try in the third Hillyard shook off the effects with out any trouble has he continued to dominate his man, in the fourth Hillyard’s work fell by the wayside as Gray did manage to pick it up a little has he picked off the Londoner, who finished the fight a little sluggish but who’s earlier work had easily clinched it, a he claimed a fairly conclusive 59-57, I had it by a far wider margin myself.

***************************************************************************************************************************

Enfield’s Chris Evangelou got off to a fairly impressive start to begin with has his army of adoring Greek fans in the hall showed there support for there man.
Evangelou coming off an easy thirty second blast out back in April, came out landing nicely with two handed attacks, however despite his early success the bout took on a rather scrappy sloppy look as both got in close, at the fights conclusion Evangelou was awarded a charitable 40-36, I had it closer despite Chris taking the opener comfortably from there on Fox hardly sly himself, hence his surname showed a good work rate when in close, though things were has I mentioned earlier decidely messy I had it 39-37 myself.

***************************************************************************************************************************

Bradley Evans from Hertfordshire closed the show, but had to settle for a easy four round points decision over Sheffield’s Jason Carr, who could’nt get out of first gear {sorry for the pun guys}
Evans got inside of the gangly looking Carr and put his foot on the gas as he drove Carr backwards, the taller Sheffield man kept on the move and was never in the contest as Bradley won everything with better workrate throughout and was deservedly awarded a decision.

***************************************************************************************************************************

On getting to the venue late, thanks to the fifty or so mile journey from Work, I got in for the Matt Skelton v Lee Swaby fight, however before I made my way in Barry Morrison a former British light welter champion who had succumbed to bill topper and current British 10st boss Lenny Daws last year for the then vacant British light welter title, had a fairly easy time of it has he over came Worcester’s Billy Smith inside of a round, with a few more good performances Morrison could feature in another tilt at Daws in what would prove to be a rubber match, has Morrison won there first encounter a few years ago, before Daws exacted revenge to annex the British title.

********************************************************************
Also featured was Prizefighter champion at light middle, Prince Arron who dropped Birmingham’s Tony Randell twice throughout there six rounder at light middle, the last knockdown prompting the third man to step in a save Randell from further punishment in the sixth and final session, and while on the subject of Prizefighter champion’s, Michael Lomax the inaugural winner of the welterweights in Barry Hearn’s tournament chalked up a victory has he beat Ghana’s Stephen Okine at welter in a scheduled six three’s.

********************************************************************

Poland’s Gregorsz Proksa boxing out of Redhill, Surrey beat and back in Febraury won something called the European Union title at light middle, as if there is’nt enough titles in boxing, we now have two European champions per each division, please don’t laugh but one’s called the European Boxing Union, and the bastard child the European Union, confused? try not to be!

Michael Angelo Serra




Tyson show’s his fury, senior that is!!!!–WATCH ON GFL


CLICK TO WATCH
It was a case of repeat or revenge since last year’s controversial points decision in favour of the giant Manchester heavyweight Tyson Fury, local lad John Mcdermott was hoping to avenge a loss that he and many in the fight game felt belonged rightfully to himself in a controversy that had shades of Henry Cooper -Joe Bugner from 1971.

Entering the ring Mcdermott was hyped up just a little as he hammed it up to the crowd, bent on destruction it seemed more than anything, while Fury remained calm and collected and awaiting the opening bell.

In my preview you will have read that I favored Mcdermott to win and do so far more easily than the first meeting.

I could not have been more wrong and if Fury a fighter who looked green a little at times, then he did prove otherwise, as he certainly did turn the form book on it’s head, ripped it up and chucked the aforementioned in the waste paper basket!

In the opener Fury looked like a changed man from there first meeting, as he found his range and the target with nice swift combination’s behind the left jab, before connecting with some decent right hands over the top, Mcdermott could only take what was coming his way and I found it rather surprising considering that going into this Fury had hardly sparred much as he showed plenty of the aforementioned.

Mcdermott pressured as Fury circled his much shorter opponent, one right that Mcdermott did land spurred Fury into action as he cleverly turned John before unloading with a flurry, but Mcdermott a durable type brushed off any of the effects, later on a little showboating from Fury in the form of an half decent Ali shuffle almost cost him his footing a few seconds later as he almost tripped over more off balance than anything.

Mcdermott kept plodding in trying to get inside the long reach of Fury, however if Fury was impersonating Ali doing the shuffle than Mcdermott was Tyson’s Frazier, and what with the heat it could have been Manila all over again!

Mcdermott again caught Fury with a solid right, but it was yet again Fury who kept Mcdermott on the end of the jab, Fury was almost using it like a tape measure via a battering ram naturally, has he boxed finding his range, Mcdermott could’nt for some reason find his or Tyson.

In the third Fury started to fight more as he dug in close, electing to box when he decided to stand off, just keeping in reach of his subject, even at one time holding the rope and jabbing ala Muhammad Ali v Alfredo Evangelista back in 1977, however a short burst of shots seemed to hurt Mcdermott just before the bell as he fell into the ropes, a right uppercut proving the decisive punch in that last little combination.

Fury in the fourth began to stand his ground and get in the trenches, a battle of the Somme was being fought as both soldiered in close and banged away, Fury noticeably was tiring more so in this round and things did get rather a bit messy as both continuously clinched.

Sitting there at ringside was British heavyweight champion Derek Chisora, taking in his next possible challenger, though my good friend and corner man Lennie Lee reckons Chisora’s next assignment should be against Commonwealth champ Sam Sexton in a rematch of there thriller from 2007! watch out for both as one will surely happen soon, a interview I did with Len on these pages coming real soon my friends!

Back to the fight, and Fury {19st 4lbs} continued to dominate with good solid combination’s, Mcdermott seemed to be having problems getting going and for the best part of the first four rounds Fury was taking a considerable lead, though it seemed he started to breathe a little from the second onwards his work proved the fresher of the two.

However it was in the sixth that Mcdermott {18st 2lbs} found his way back into the contest, Frank Maloney one of the old school, and the only promoter I’ve ever seen who stands by the ring like an Army officer giving his troop his orders was there taking every punch his man was, even ducking some and then between the ropes during one particular interval between rounds, it resembled something out of a Rocky film or one of those much older black and white films from the forties or earlier when the promoter is telling his charge ‘now listen real good kid’ Hollywood it might not have been, but we were in Brentwood!

Mcdermott seemingly was fighting on memory at times, but though outweighed by a good couple of stone it was showing as Mcdermott was just plodding forwards though landing it seemed like Fury was not being troubled.

It was at the start of the sixth corner man Jim Mcdonell slapped his charge Mcdermott on the money {chin} and tried to instill some much needed enthusiasm into his man, it seemed to work as Mcdermott came to life, a big right slammed into Fury’s chin, but things became messy, even some fans booed which I felt was wrong, obviously just fans and not connoisseurs of boxing.

Fury was looking tired even more so, gum shield knocked out, Tyson found himself backed to the ropes as the Essex man threw himself forwards, getting into a clinch or four ref Parris had to part the two for persistent holding and gave Fury a ticking off, when the two did part though it was Mcdermott who drew first blood, a short double left hook inside opening a cut over Fury’s right eye that coursed down the side of his handsome countenance, distress signals seemed to show a little on the gigantic northener’s face but despite the cut he battled through to the bell.

Round seven saw Mcdermott try a little more as he seemed a little like a bull to a red rag, the red rag being the aforementioned laceration on his opposing protagonist, as he as he started to throw more punches coming forwards, though tired his resistance and determination were dogged, just like the guy who he facially resembles a little Don Cockell from the 1950’s who fought, the great Rocky Marciano for the World’s title back in 1955, and in true British bulldog spirit kept coming, Fury himself grunted as he let go with a flurry of leather, and with both tired Fury seemed to hold some more and ref Parris took off a point for his only crime, which the pro Mcdermott crowd cheered.

In the eighth both locked horns to begin with, soon after Fury got on his bike, as Mcdermott dug in as Fury missed with a wild uppercut that would have knocked out the guy in the fourth row had it landed, lucky I was ringside!

Both kept in close, and obviously tired it was a case of who wanted it more, and there it was in that square of all squares where titles are won and lost, where men come of age, it was here that Tyson a twenty one year old finally did so, a short flurry dredged up from his fighting soul followed by a short right hand to Mcdermott’s chin deposited the Essex man to the floor in his own corner towards the end of the round, the legitimacy of the punch was questionable as it was possibly more exhaustion than anything that paid a contributing factor in the actual knockdown, however Mcdermott showed the fighting heart of a champion as he got up at ‘six’ with ref Parris holding his gloved fists, the bell rang, was this another twist in the tale of the Fury-Mcdermott saga?

The ninth saw Mcdermott bravely get stuck in, as if to take away the psychological edge off of Tyson’s previous success, however there was no questioning each man’s desire, as both came in landing big rights to each other’s chins, Fury’s punch had more telling power and Mcdermott paid a second visit to the canvas as he rolled on to his back, battling to get to his haunches Mcdermott again got to his feet at ‘six’ where third man Parris gave him a standing eight before allowing him to continue, unbelievably showing a true grit and determination of any fighter I’ve seen Mcdermott ploughed forwards into his tormentor even throwing caution to the wind, however the likes of John Mcdermott don’t know when there beat and going beyond the call of duty he got involved, however a short right from Fury sent John down a third time, sitting there taking the count Mcdermott arose at nine and has he did tottered unsteadily on tired legs, prompting Parris to wave it over at the 1:08 second mark as Fury celebrated, Fury had shut up the critics it seemed but still there remain questions about Fury’s stamina.

Fury embraced his father, former pro Gypsy John Mcdermott as both father and son celebrated, it was an emotional Fury at the post fight interview who despite complaining of the seering heat, it was this heat that could’nt dry the tears in the giant’s eyes as he paid tribute to his father and also dedicating the belt to his father who was as proud as punch of his sibling.

Mcdermott it seems will be remembered sadly as the nearly man of the heavyweight division of the last couple of years, with out a doubt he beat Danny Williams and was jobbed first time around, and then the heartbreak of the first fight with Fury, even Stevie Wonder would have given it to Mcdermott that night last September, in essence Mcdermott was more than just an English champion he was an uncrowned one unofficially! {if that makes any sense}

Has Fury’s hand was raised Derek Chisora left the building to escape any post fight banter, or comments, but I was keeping an eye on Chisora through out the fight and I noticed a concerned look on his face, more so when Fury was on top of Mcdermott, as Chisora left for a safer passage it seemed the Danny Williams that Mcdermott got turned back by in two unsuccessful attempts was clearly not the man from those nights that Chisora took the title from at Upton Park last month, a new face has come onto the heavyweight championship scene domestically, though many are still doubting Tyson’s true championship credentials if he were to eventually square off with the brash Chisora, I sure ain’t one of them.

And one who would echo my very thoughts was at ringside afterwards almost causing a scene of his own, it was Fury senior long after Tyson had gone to get the wash and brush up treatment, Gypsy John was at ringside shouting aloud ‘who did Chisora beat? Danny Williams was past his best, I’d fight Derek Chisora, his running from my boy I’ll fight him myself” before further adding “Get behind your boxers more than your footballers, Chisora won’t fight my boy” I did butt in myself as I exclaimed “here, here!” the house was listening, no it weren’t the house of commons, though Gypsy John ranted like an M.P would as he spoke up for his son and his right about one thing and the way the England football team have disappointed us, maybe Gypsy John has a valid point, well I ain’t gonna argue with him am I?, for the record Chisora bought his Lonsdale belt earlier to the ringside in a silver case that the fictional character of the much loved comedy series ‘only fools and horses’ ‘Del boy’ would have been proud of surely, though this was no case of knocked off watches, I wonder though is time running out for the real life ‘Del boy’ if Tyson get’s his shot that is?

And talking earlier of Hollywood, Brentwood and the record, or has the lyrics go to the ‘Only fools and Horses’ theme it could be more a matter of in your mush Del boy, than Shepherd’s Bush mush!
Or in the words of Boycie, ‘evening Del boy’ or could that be good night Derek?

***************************************************************************************************************************

Also featured on the undercard was a exciting tussle between Crawley lightweight prospect Ben Jones and Welshman Lee Selby over six rounds.

Selby bearing a slight resemblance to former British super featherweight king of the 1980’s, the late Najib Daho, boxed nicely in the opener as he got on the move scoring with nice combination’s on the advancing Jones, however in the second both got involved in some good give and take sessions, both sported bloody noses from the aforementioned exchanges.

In the third Jones started off quickly and begun to find the target as Selby started to look tired as the Crawley man continued to pressure the Welshman, as he did in the next stanza, the fourth.

In between rounds former decent pro and manager Chris Sanigar gave Selby a wake up call in the form of a slap, it was one that would have bought back memories to that of the night’s Sky commentator Johnny Nelson when Brendan Ingle did a similar thing when Nelson was performing below par against one Arthur ‘stormy’ Weathers back in 1990, now if only he’d done that several months earlier that year in Nelson’s no show against the then W.B.C cruiser king Carlos Deleon!

Selby seemed to react to the warning administered by his charge and boxed better over the next couple of rounds, but Jones continuously pressured and at the bell it was Selby who was awarded a decision that I felt Jones had done more than enough to have taken, as referee Jeff Hinds scored it 59-57, I had it a similar margin but in the adjudged losers favor, no one in the crowd seemed to share in my disbelief, maybe I’m a lousy judge {please don’t read my preview to the main event}
***************************************************************************************************************************

Up at heavy, Olympic bronze medalist David Price kept on track with a easy one round demolition job of flabby and rather rotund looking Paval Polokovic who tipped the scales at 17st 10lbs, five pounds heavier than the much taller better built Price, whom looked in absolutely fabulous condition.
Both took it easy to begin with, but Price once he did get started was looking at the obvious target, the flabby midsection of the bull necked but inept Paval Polokovic, shortly after wards Price switched the attack to the head, a big left hook over the top sent the visitor to the canvas for a count, though despite beating the count Polokovic was not even in the argument, though he gamely tried to make a fight of it, he attacked Price but came unstuck again as a flurry of hard short shots inside reintroduced Polokovic to the canvas, on arising yet again he seemed to nod his head almost in surrender, but when ref Richie Davies waved it over, it was then he seemed to remonstrate a little, as Price chalked up another win at 1:42 of the opener.

For the record at the time of the stoppage Polokovic’s purse was withheld, it seemed fitting enough what with the mugging I had just witnessed in the minute and forty odd seconds of boxing!
***************************************************************************************************************************

Another heavyweight hope Tom Dallas who sported a slight growth of beard looked in good shape at 16st 10lbs, and looked a million dollars in the opening couple of rounds against that warhorse of warhorse’s Daniel Peret the rotund but very durable Norwegian who has given many a heavy from these shores an interesting nights work.

Dallas threw some lovely fast combination’s as he used a nice solid left jab before whipping in right hands, on the bull like Peret, Dallas even managing to hurt the Norwegian with a big right hand as he almost sagged into the ropes as he started to mix his punches to both head and then body effectively, another big right later on in the opener had Peret all at sea and almost on the next boat home, but that wily old fox from way of Norway found a way to the bell.

In the second Peret did try but was finding it an almost impossible task to catch the much taller leaner Dallas with anything of any real note, over the rest of the duration of the bout things became a little tedious in all fairness as Dallas and Peret started to maul and hold and despite some nice boxing in the early rounds, things did become a little ragged and Peret as he ussually doe’s made it to the final gong but went down a points loser by 60-54.
***************************************************************************************************************************

Newly crowned Southern Area champ Larry Olubamiwo didn’t hang around himself in his English title eliminator with Dave Ferguson, this match naturally was for the the winner of Fury-Mcdermott, strangely enough the latter match up was also an eliminator for the British title held by the flash, cocky Derek Chisora, more on him later, take your pick as to who fight’s who and when, now that’s anyones guess?

Larry a big puncher whom promoter Frank Maloney has likened to the legendary ko artist Earnie Shavers {praise indeed} for his power came out looking to fight his fight and pressure the taller bald headed Ferguson who threw some wild right hands that missed by the proverbial mile or ten, Larry a whopping 18st 10lbs looked in good shape and even more so that bit more polished with his shots, though he does keep that chin a little too high when attacking, in the past as I did mention in my preview of the show, Larry does ‘wing em’ for my liking and doe’s look just a tad too crude, however the crudeness was’nt as evident this time around and has he pressured the tall geordie Larry caught Ferguson with a series big overhand right’s that felled Dave for full count as he as good as sat out the count until getting up, but it was too late as the ref counted ‘ten’ although Ferguson had the misfortune of getting counted out at just 1:52 of the first round, one would feel if he had gotten up and continued such misfortune would have been metered out more so by the Hackney based Olubamiwo.
***************************************************************************************************************************

Down at fly Lewis Pettitt looked an easy winner over veteran centurian Delroy Spencer who was easily outfought and out thought over four rounds.

Pettitt got in close to begin with and made Delroy hold before backing up the veteran with a good flurry of leather.

In the second things livened up more so as both got involved in some good exchanges, but it was Pettitt who was that bit more accurate and seemed better in every department and was the rightful winner of a clear easy 40-36.
***************************************************************************************************************************

The show’s opener proved a fairly decent encounter as Crayford’s Menay Edwards took on Carl Wild from Sheffield over six rounds at super middle.

To begin with funnily enough both fighters were sent to different corners after the announcements before the opening bell, it’s okay guy’s there was no infringement by either protagonist, both were in the wrong corners of the ring apparently, but strangely enough each and every respective bout from there on, there was no changing of the corner let alone the guard, well not until the main event that is!!!!

Edwards mixed in a good array of shots to start with as he backed Wild to the ropes, a mixture of uppercuts and hooks thrown in quick bursts had the Sheffield man covering, before Wild tried with some hooks of his own, but for the best part it was Edwards who was the busier throwing an assortment of punches on the inside, every now and then allowing Wild to come forward as he countered with hooks and a stiff left jab, Wild did now and again throw a burst but Edwards was that far more imaginative and much, much busier throughout the eighteen minutes of pugilism and deservedly took an well earned points verdict on ref Jeff Hinds card of

At the bell Edwards wore a fake crown on his head, eerie you may ask as Frank Maloney’s first World champion was also from Crayford, don’t worry guy’s I think it’s safe to say it’s there that the similarities end, but hey you never know….watch this space!
***************************************************************************************************************************

Also at super middle, Tony Hills took on Philip Townley, looking confident throughout Hills from Southampton used a decent southpaw jab as he took control from the center ring as Townley soaked everything coming his way.

Straight lefts were banged in also for good measure behind the left jab that hit home like a form of Chinese water torture as each jab thudded in with accuracy, before switching more so in the second round with swift southpaw rights to Philip’s midsection.

One arcing southpaw right had Townley over, but he was up straight away and more off balance than anything as ref Hinds wiped his gloves and ruled a slip, however later on Hills begun to back up Townley with accurate shots as the latter threw the odd shot back mostly hitting thin air, each round replicitated the previous one as Hills was far too gifted for Townley who was in survival mode for the best part of the fight although he did attack briefly in the final session, it was rather short lived as he resumed the role of surivor as he moved around as Hills punctuated his dominance as he had done from the start.

Hills could be one to look out for, time will tell naturally!
***************************************************************************************************************************

Also meeting up before and after with Maloney’s behind the scenes team it really was a pleasure to meet James J Russell and Andy Scott, myself and Russell started trying to out do each other with boxing questions, the final score was a resounding one in favour of…….hey buy my book when it comes out and if you enjoyed this little trip down to Brentwood with yours truly, you’ll love the book oh yeah and it’s there that you’ll find out the score and I’m not talking about the one between England and West Germany though it’s nearer to that mathematically.

Michael Angelo Serra




Conspiracy Fury? who they kidding John!

So it’s a case of repeat or revenge, Manchester’s Tyson Fury fights for his old title this Friday at the Brentwood International centre just off the A12 against the man he won it from John Mcdermott last September in a highly controversial decision that the fight fraternity deemed a robbery that lent in favour of the Mancunian beanpole!

The villain of the peice was referee Terry O’Connor who awarded the decison along with the vacant belt to Fury, and it caused outrage let alone fury amongst many a fan let alone those in boxing.
It was almost Henry Cooper v Joe Bugner revisited, as the much younger Fury was adjudged the winner, clearly through out the contest Fury seemed to run out of ideas has Mcdermott was clearly outfighting and out hustling his far more inexperienced fellow protagonist through the ten rounds, but Fury unlike Bugner has’nt been on the end of the public’s disgust and rightfully so, then again neither should have Joe in the first place.

It was even believed that the ref O’Connor had a long running grudge with Mcdermott’s father Stan whom O’Connor boxed when he was a pro heavyweight himself and this was possibly the reason behind the ridiculous scoring, {for the record I gave Mcdermott the decision by six rounds}.
None the less Fury was stripped of the belt due to the nature of the decision and now finds himself challenging again for the vacant crown against his old nemesis, the decision even warranted a meeting with the British Boing Board of Control and they made a rematch compulsory.

In the post fight interview Mcdermott said “what do I have to do to win” well now he has the chance to get justice, at a earlier press conference Fury failed to show much to the annoyance of promoter Frank Maloney, but now the press conference has been rescheduled for the Wednesday before the actual fight and should be interesting to say the least.

So to the fight and to tell the truth I see Mcdermott exact revenge and the fight flow in a similar vein to there first meeting, Fury has boxed twice since then and injured his hand in doing in his next fight that caused a postponement of the rematch that should have taken place before Christmas last year, Mcdermott has not boxed since but should’nt be too rusty despite the lay off, I see Mcdermott being that too experienced and winning as wide if not a wider points decision this time around, and if we have a similar kind of decision, just like the billing of there first fight ‘collosal’ and the billing of this the rematch ‘conspiracy Fury’ look for it too be a collosal conspiracy and a lot of fury chucked in for good measure!

Despite my view Lenny Lee one of the most famous faces in British boxing, {you’d know his face, his the old chap on the apron in the corner of many a big fight and many a small fight, okay literally any fight on t.v and not on t.v}, Lenny thinks it’ll go in favour of Tyson, and while on the subject of old timers and Tyson, remember it was Cus D’amato Mike Tyson’s former guardian and trainer that once said it took ten years to make a good ten round fighter, that’s why I’m going for Tyson to lose, Fury that is not Mike!!!!!!!!!!

Also featured on the undercard is Dave Ferguson going up against Larry Olubamiwo the Southern Area heavyweight champ, in what is a final eliminator for the Fury-Mcdermott rematch, though it was reported it was a final eliminator for the British title, this is obviously nonsense as neither man is out of the novice stage yet, despite Larry becoming Southern Area champ in his last fight when he beat Southampton’s Colin Kenna inside of a round on the Shinny Baayar- Ashley Sexton card at Dagenham, and talking of Sexton, he will also be appearing on this show since that disapointment against Bayaar that ended in a draw, hoping to get a rematch with the Mongolian, Sexton’s the grandson of former West Ham footballer and Manchester United manager Dave Sexton and also the great grandson of former pro light heavy Archie, dad of Dave naturally.

Also featured are light heavy Menay Edwards, Olympic bronze medalist David Price who hopes to one day challenge for the richest one.

Also featured are heavyweights Damian Campbell making his debut and prospect Tom Dallas, lower down the scales you have Tony Hill at middle, Lewis Pettitt at super bantam and Ben Jones at super feather

Tickets available are £40, if you’d like to purchase then go to www.frankmaloney.com for more details.

I hope to see you there

I’ve been Michael Angelo Serra and you’ve been reading for the last couple of minutes!

any comments to micksnice@aol.com




The Beckham of boxing? Introducing Jack ’13’ Morris, boxing’s new golden boy.


Boxer’s as a rule have always been known as having rather ugly faces, for example the boxers nose, the cauliflower ear, scar tissue, the high cheek bones, are what are usually remarked about of the boxers face.

However contrary to popular belief, there comes along the pretty boy, or better known as the golden boy whose handsome countenance makes a mockery of the trade he plies and clearly dispel’s such stereotypical views of the boxer’s boat, {cockney slang for someone’s face} and talking of boat’s don’t worry guy’s we’ll be taking a trip to the seaside soon, in the literary sense of course!

Through the years, there have been plenty of good looking men who have traded leather but have dismissed the old adage about ‘he looks a bit banged up’ let’s start with Jack Dempsey, the first million dollar fighter, who also had a short career on the silver screen with actress wife Estelle Taylor, then came boxing’s first golden boy Art Aragon, then Sugar’s Robinson and Leonard, both pretty boy’s, Muhammad Ali, Bobby Czyz, Donnie “Golden Boy” Lalonde the former W.B.C 175lb king, who ring magazine stated as ‘diabolically good looking’ to Britain’s own Robin Reid, who in his spare time posed for girly mags in erotic poses, Calzaghe is another one, both former World super middleweight champions respectively.

However it’s with the super middle’s and Britain where we’ll stay, shall we?, see down in the South coast there’s a super middle coming up the rankings, and from Margate actually, look I’ll explain a little later!

However though only boxing six times and winning his last five in a row as a pro, he sure looks impressive inside the confines of a boxing ring, but talking of looks it’s on the outside his been causing waves, well he is from Margate ain’t he!

So without further a due, let me introduce boxing’s latest golden boy……Jack Morris.

See Jack does’nt look like your average boxer as I once stated in a previous article on the super middleweight prospect, with his boy next door good looks and much, much further away girls, in your wildest dreams!

Morris a native of Margate, the place of kiss me quick hats, though I’m sure ladies you’d opt to kiss Jack slowly!

Jack who stands six foot tall has been dubbed by many of the local lasses down there in Southwark as the Beckham of boxing, oh sorry guy’s I did’nt mention when Jack’s not at home weekend’s in Margate, he stay’s in London as this is where he trains down at the City Boxer gym, a personal trainer during the day, Jack also doe’s a bit of modeling naturally.

Having modeled in his teens, it was’nt long before bigger names came knocking at the afforementioned City Boxer gym, one time Jack modeled in Holborn in London and was paid for a measly two hours work the grand sum of 00!

Modelling anything from Suits to Boxing wear, Jack is at the moment in talks with GQ magazine and Men’s Health involving more work, only last year Jack was offered a week’s work in Milan, the fashion capital of the World for 000, as one of the top people from the late Alexander McQueen’s company felt Jack had the right look and build, however due to there not being enough model’s with the right look, the shoot was canceled.

However despite that initial setback of sorts, the offers weren’t far away from big name modeling agency’s, has Jack was picked up by Dominic Barratt Evans who himself is good friends with Jason Joyce {take a look at www.jasonjoyce.com to see for yourself} who shoots some of the most famous people in the World, U2, Oasis, Cheryl Cole, amongst some of the World’s top models amongst others….so Jack is certainly mixing with the big boys in the photogenic sense, say no more!
Has I mentioned earlier Jack who stand’s an imposing six feet tall, his twelve stone is distributed nicely over his manly frame, wide sloping shoulders with a good six pack chucked in for good measure, and with bulging biceps and unlike most muscle men he doesn’t suffer from what I term ‘lolly pop legs’ as his pin’s are more shapely and well muscled, more like that of a footballer.

It amazes me that a guy that get’s punched in the face for a living is in my totally unbiased opinion a lot better looking than most footballers and for that matter film stars, so I told you quite a bit about Jack, so what’s his face like?, well….. if you could imagine a guy that looks across between Pierce Brosnan and Roger Moore, you might know where I’m coming from, this guy is so handsome, and please let me go on record as one writer once did in Ring magazine back in 1993 when doing an article on Billy Conn, who was former light heavy champ, “he was the most handsome man I ever saw in my life” and where Jack’s concerned I echo that very sentence, drop dead gorgeous he sure is, nice friendly blue eyes, shine from his pale complexion, with a nicely shaped nose, also his lovely smile that’s harbored by wait for it girls…..his squarish manly jaw and more importantly Jack when he speaks, it’s with a nice quiet baritone, see there’s nothing flash or cocky with this guy, he is one of the quietest people I have had the pleasure of meeting in my life.

Born on 15th August 1982, I remember the actual day very well as I was a twelve year old at Leigh on sea in Essex, I remember seeing a pretty girl of a similar age, both looking at each other, I felt like I was falling in love at such a young age, it reminded me of that scene from Blake Edward’s film ’10’ where Dudley Moore is imagining his running along the beach meeting up with Bo Derek {a regular at the big fights in the 80’s}, but sadly for me reality struck later that day as she left and I never saw her again, I could have cried but one thing’s for sure someone did that very day, some miles away in Greenwich, it was a newborn baby….it was Jack Morris!

Never mind ’10’, the number ’13’ is a number that Jack seems comfortable with as this is for some reason his nickname, see no one other than the man himself know’s why this is, and in true Bond fashion, it’s top secret simple as, see Jack won’t unleash the reason why he calls himself this until after one of his fights, possibly after he becomes a champion, so you could say ’13’ will one day be number 1!

And in true Patrick Mcgoohan fashion from the hit TV series, The Prisoner, he is not just a number, he is the man!

Jack Morris however is from my knowledge the only boxer ever to call himself ’13’, but by eerie coincidence in the sport of baseball, there was also another Jack Morris who had made history with the number 13, as he scored a record Major League thirteen consecutive straight opening day starts from 1980 through to 1992, but hey it’s the boxing version whose knocking em for six, man and woman alike,See every man want’s to be him, every woman with him!

Jack however is now also a proud father himself, real name Andrew Morris, due to the British boxing board of control deciding that there couldn’t be two Andrew Morris’ as there’s a Andy Morris a super feather from Manchester, so Andrew named himself after his son whose name’s Jack obviously.
The name cunjer’s up that of a old time prizefighter, someone who plied there trade back in the 20’s during the time’s of another Jack, Dempsey that is, however not only that but Morris fights like one also, my first time of watching him was last year at the Troxy, when he defeated the durable Kenroy Lambert who rarely gets stopped, sitting there I felt excited just like when I was a sixteen year old watching for the first time the black and white fights of Dempsey, Marciano and Tunney, it felt as though I was watching a throwback the very way Morris moved and let go with his shots, even managing to score a most impressive stoppage victory over Lambert which is a rarity itself! or has Steve Holdsworth pointed out to me when I was around his house, “that’s a good result, no one hardly stops Kenroy!” enough said!

However at that particular venue on a big screen before the contest, Jack was shown being interviewed by his trainer Mark ” the Burf” Burford, the big screen treatment fitting as Jack is hoping that an acting career will hopefully come to fruition on a much bigger screen after his finished trading punches for punch lines!

Also it is hoped a much bigger stage boxing wise, with the good looks of a James Bond type, and like the nickname of his trainer, the “Burf” it could be the birth indeed of a champion boxer and film star, or like the recent film starring Jim Carey ‘I love Philip Morris’ all I can say is Jack ain’t too bad himself! and while on the subject of celluloid, in true Bond idiom on getting back to that particular March evening last year, it was Lambert who was shaken, myself stirred!

However thus far as a pro Jack has showed progress more so in his last two fights, beating oft beat journeymen in Jamie Ambler and Adam Wilcox, it’s not just beating them, it’s the way he has, more conclusively than that of the other so called prospects, harmed not only with hooks that weaken opponents knee’s, but looks that weaken the ladies knee’s Jack is a winner on both sides of the ropes it seems.

Surely a member of the bored housewife’s club and many a teenage girls fantasy, let me put it into some kind of perspective shall I, after buying the trade paper Boxing news, showing my mate at work Dave Crossley the photo of Jack he remarked ‘good looking boy’ on showing my mum some film I had taken of my subject for this article ‘his not a bad looking bloke is he’, see everyone loves Jack from the young to the old, and it’s with the young that Jack works closely with, as he helps raise money for a children’s charity that helps children with various illnesses, conclusive proof that the saying ‘beauty’s only skin deep’ need not apply to the man from Margate has he is on both counts, last year at Jack’s effort versus Jamie Ambler, the brigade of charity workers holding buckets for Jack around the ringside, to help raise cash for Jack’s designated charity or has I noted in my report, “if only footballers followed by Jack’s fine example, Jack the Beckham of boxing? definitely! his better looking than David’s Beckham and fellow pin up boxer Haye, and with bigger balls and better look’s than Beckham, his more golden than golden balls himself!

So call him what you like, the Bond or the Beckham of boxing, but one things for sure girls, Jack bends it like Beckham if not better and that certainly would be a case of ‘for your eyes only!’




Results from York Hall

York Hall, Bethnal Green, London, England
March 21st 2010

Miranda Carter put on her first show of the year, featuring a good looking card which saw the return of Leon Williams in his first start since losing his unbeaten record to Hastings Rasani.
A good card featured many devastating finishes, one not particuarly pleasing to the eye as you’ll read, other than that a good value for money show all round!

Navid Iran {Brighton} v Steve Timms {West Bromwich}
Result: Iran won KO 1

In the opening fight of the afternoon, Brighton debutant Iran exploded in devastating fashion as he detonated a huge left hook off of the unprotected jaw of poor Steve Timms to send him crashing to the canvas out for the full count, Timm’s who himself was coming back after a six year lay off might well call it a day after such a crushing loss.
To begin with both came out shaping up, both looking to land the left jab, as the two shaped up Timm’s {169lbs} a well muscled type backed off as Navid {167lbs} took the iniative, before darting in and out, shortly after the Brighton man came inside before he connected with a left hook that dumped Timm’s to the canvas, the ref dispensing with the count as the Midlander was out cold, the fight being stopped after only just thirty seconds of the opening gong by third man Ken Curtis!
With that kind of concussive power, Ronnie Davie’s {formerly Chris Eubank’s trainer} trained, Iran could be one to look out for in a year or two’s time, time will tell naturally!
***************************************************************************************************************************
Martin Welsh {Swanley} v Ryan Clark {Waddington}
Result: Welsh won points
In an exciting action packed four rounder, Welsh found the range and pace to beat the tough, competitive Clark from Waddington, who tried to puzzle the Swanley man, {sorry for the pun, do Waddington’s still make puzzles? bung us a email}.
Welsh to begin with did most of the work, on his bike countering off the ropes proving a little too elusive for the never say die Clark, however the second saw Clark {155lbs} come into the contest moreso, asserting himself as Welsh hands high in a shell like guard did little to begin the session, Martin did however try to assume control and was met by a rampaging Clark that produced some lively exchanges, a nice right from the Waddington man landed on the bell and Welsh {154lbs}, it seemed Clark had evened the score mathematically.
However the last two rounds were basically hard fought encounters as each man took there respective turns to back the other up, Welsh did seem to nick the last two session’s with slightly the better accuracy, at the bell something strange happened as the ref could’nt seem to make his mind up whose hand to raise, before opting for Welsh’s glove, and though I had Martin the winner, I certainly did’nt agree with the land slide 40-36 in favour of the Swanley man on ref Kieran McCann’s card, again I’m not the judge but maybe when decision’s like this are announced I should be!!!!
***************************************************************************************************************************

Laura Saperstein {Australia} v Lana Cooper {Wales}
Result: Saperstein won rsc 2

From the opening bell, it was evident that Saperstein was the boss, as she got off the better with her shots proving just that bit better and faster than her Welsh adversary, Cooper for her part tried but just seemed that bit off par for my liking.
Saperstein {135lbs} clearing taking the opener, came out relaxed looking in the second as she controlled the pace and tempo, keeping the blonde Cooper {137lbs} at bay, however Lana in one attack was cranking a left hook when all of a sudden, a terrible etch of pain crept across her face as she fell to the canvas clutching her left arm, obviously in agony she writhed on the canvas where ref had no alternative but to halt it there and then, medic’s attended to Cooper who also gave her oxygen and had to stretcher her out of the ring after she was attended to for a good several moments, aparently Lana dislocated her shoulder as she was throwing the respective shot, I wish her a speedy recovery and praise the medics who attended to her, they did a great job!
***************************************************************************************************************************

Ryan Toms {Northolt} v John Paul Temple {Brighton}
Result: Toms won rsc 2

In a fight that was billed as Temple’s last engagement, he could’nt have picked a more tastier foe in the shape of Northolt’s Toms.
From the offset it was looking inevitable that Temple was way in over his head, as he could’nt even get near Ryan who basically hardly moved out of first gear, confident, even almost cocky Toms looked relaxed as he took his time before taking apart the hapless Brighton man.
Circling, Toms southpaw stance was proving too much for Temple, one straight left shaking John before the end of the round.
Round two proved no different, as Ryan moving up the gears, backed up Temple with a solid left hook before dropping him with a solid right, doing well to get up and showing some of the Dunkirk, Temple was backed into a corner where Toms unloaded with a blistering fusilade of leather, outpunched and outclassed Temple was rescued and rightfully so, the last shot almost reintroducing the Brighton man to the canvas a second time, luckily the third man Keiran McCann grabbing Temple saving him the embarrassment of another visit stopping it at the 1:06 mark, Tom’s celebrated wildly, he is certainly one to look out for, as he has a composure that certanly belies that of a guy having only his fourth paid fight, watch out for this guy!!!!
Temple retired from the sport, beaten yes, brave? certainly, a great competitor. both weighed 155lbs.
***************************************************************************************************************************

Tony Conquest {Dagenham} v John Anthony {Doncaster}
Result: Conquest won points

In a fight that looked as good as over in the first couple of seconds by way of a short solid right hand from the handsome looking Conquest, it looked like disaster for the man from Doncaster {I know another pun, sorry!!!!}
Thing is Anthony did’nt read the script, he picked himself up from the uncerimoniuos heap he found himself in and battled back, Conquest seemed to keep his man at bay and got the better of things, until just before the bell it was Tony, and not Anthony {201lbs} who was on the deck himself, from a half decent shot to return the dose, a knockdown a piece in the opener, as I mentioned before this John had’nt read the script.
From the second onwards Conquest {193lbs} kept things at range, despite a scrappy second, Conquest piled up the points behind a nice left jab before managing to rock Anthony with another big right.
The fourth proved no different to the previuos session as Tony outboxed the Doncaster man, however in the fifth Anthony had more success as he started to land a little more frequently with rights but Conquest notched up another session.
The final session saw pretty much of the same, until that is Conquest tasted the canvas a second time, looking more embarrassed than hurt Tony got up and continued to outbox his man, and this despite being floored twice reflected in the score of 59-56 which I felt was an accurate assesment of the previous events from the last eighteen minutes boxing.
***************************************************************************************************************************

Leon Williams {Streatham} v Tyrone Wright {Nottingham}
Result: Williams won ko 2

Making a return to the ring was Streatham’s Leon Williams returning to the ring after a points loss to Hastings Rasani in this very ring just before Christmas.
Opposing “solid” was Tyrone Wright {195lbs}, in the opener Williams seemed to be bufuddled a little by the tricky Wright who outboxed the plodding Williams, who could’nt seem to connect with anything of any real note, Wright easily taking the opener, however in the second Williams {194lbs} asserted himself as he continued to push back the taller Wright, then it came the punch that Williams needed a smashing right landed on the back pedalling Nottingham man who took the punch flush on the money and went down heavily on his back, there seemed no need to count and the third man waved it over, Williams was back as Wright was flat on his, several minutes in fact during some anxiuos moments while again the medics attended to Tyrone, it was a relief when he got to his feet, but still due to the nature of the stoppage had to sit on his corner stool almost ring centre where oxygen was administered to him for a good ten minutes, the medics did a great job and proved that how well protected the fighters are, more so especially at Miranda’s show’s
***************************************************************************************************************************

John Wayne Hibbert {Stanford Le Hope} v Ricky Boulter {Lincoln}
Result: Hibbert won rsc 2nd

John Wayne Hibbert showed plenty of idea as he patiently stalked down his opponent grinding out a second round stoppage.
In the opener Boulter {159lbs} looked as though he had the book on Hibbert as he countered effictively off the ropes with nice short bursts of shots, and despite taking some good shots to the body seemed too quick and busy for the Essex man, however come the second Hibbert {158lbs} upped the pace and soon showed he was the boss as Boulter’s work rate dropped significantly, moreso enabling Hibbert to tee off on his man, a series of hard shots blooded Ricky’s nose, battered literally from pillar to post, Boulter was under a lot of pressure and looked on a hiding to nothing, every now and again he tried to fight back but it was a losing battle and at the end of the second session, Boulter’s corner rightfully pulled there man out of what was becoming too one sided for my liking.
***************************************************************************************************************************

Kreshnik Qato {Wembley} v Alex Spitko {Latvia}
Result: Qato won points

It was the usual fan fare that greeted possibly the most well supported boxer in the country, when Qato fights, he ussually as back up in the form of his own army, an army of fans that make it known that our sport, the sport of boxing is far from the final count, now if only more people got behind boxers than they did footballers, we’d all be a lot happier for the experience as boxing fans and the like.
Qato got a rousing reception as he entered the ring, you could have been far away, in the far East as opposed to the East end of London.
However in the opener tough guy Spitko {166lbs} came marching in, punches flailing not taking a backward step, one right hand floored the Albanian to the shock of the Albanian and his contingent, more so to my horror if the unimaginable was to happen and he was to lose, I was preparing for a fight myself, to get out of the place alive.
Luckily Qato got up and more surprised than hurt shook off the effects, Spitko was’nt to be denied as he tried hard to catch Qato again, but Qato survived, the second was basically a carbon copy of the opener, despite there being no repeat of a knockdown, Spitko pressured and was bullying Kreshnik out of his stride and the contest and easily seemed to take the opening two sessions.
However from the third onwards Qato seemed as though he knew fighting with a guy like Spitko might not be such a good idea and so opted to box, and once he did, he seemed to have the measure of the Latvian, even as much as Spitko tried to cut the ring off Qato {163lbs} threw a series of fast accurate flurry’s that reminded me of Sugar Ray Leonard in the Hagler fight, now please for one moment don’t think I’m comparing Qato to a technical genius like Leonard, I’m not but it reminded me as such of back on that fateful night in April 1987.
Each successive flurry from Qato was met by the Latvian’s countanence and a roar of approval from the Qato faithful, the last four rounds were all fought in a similar vein from the third onwards, but outboxed as he was I tipped my hat to Spitko who did’nt stop trying to the bitter end, but the early points lead was a distant memory on the scorecard and I gave it to Qato by a similar margin to that of the official 59-57 on Ken Curtis card, Qato when the mood takes him can box nicely and with a bit more iniative could prove a hard man to beat when his on his game!

Michael Angelo Serra reporting