Tony is the God of Boxing...................all you bitches fall to your knees and thank him for being born
Here is a guy that won one of the heavyweights belts. But you have to love him as he was stripped because he tested positive for STEROIDS.
GO JAMES Y BOY
Tony is the God of Boxing...................all you bitches fall to your knees and thank him for being born
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Is this a gay thread?![]()
and thats why you are posting on itOriginally Posted by min0 lee
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remember if you were young enough that everyone hated Geoge Foreman. 15 years ago everyone hated James Toney.
I must say now that there old like MinO lee everyone loves them
James Toney Win
01.10.05 - By Frank Gonzalez Jr., Photo: Tom Casino /Showtime: Saturday night in Nevada, Dominic “Southern Disaster” Guinn (25-3-1-18 KO’s) faced James “Lights Out” Toney (69-4-2-1-43 KO’s) in the Main Event that almost saved the show after the under card of Chris Byrd vs. DaVarryl “Touch of Sleep” Williamson had the crowd counting sheep. Early in the fight, Guinn started by showing some of the spirit that gave him his lift in boxing a few years ago as they both scored in turns but it ended with James Toney waltzing his way to a Unanimous Decision victory. No ‘lights out’ but definitely a ‘Southern Disaster.’
Toney pressed the action and Guinn looked to counter. They both scored in spots and the first round was fairly even. Toney landed the better punches in the second round, notably a sneaky uppercut in close but nothing with much conviction. In the third, Toney landed a nice, straight right to the face of Guinn, who came alive and scored with left, right, left combination. There was a lot of infighting, initiated by Toney, the ring general, who easily lured Guinn to the ropes to fight in close quarters, where his offense was less effective.
It was a back and fourth affair in the fourth round until Guinn was lured back near the ropes, to fight at close quarters, where Toney didn’t have to worry about the jabs Guinn wasn’t throwing or the combinations that might have followed. Toney happily capitalized on Guinn’s compliance.
Though Guinn’s corner instructed him to use distance and work his jab, Guinn was more inclined to follow Toney’s lead into a phone booth than the advice of his trainer, Joe Goossen. Though Guinn was landing the stronger shots, Toney was getting all the attention.
Guinn came alive with a string of five left hooks in the sixth, all of which connected. Toney again seemed to land more during the infighting. Even when Toney missed, the crowd got excited and Bernstein and Alberts exploded with adjectives. Guinn won that round for doing more damage with the initial string of left hooks that left Toney with a bloody mouth. Toney landed a lot of arm punches that did little harm.
From the seventh round on, Toney was busier and more effective, as Guinn faded steadily, throwing ever fewer punches and cruised to a Loss by Unanimous Decision.
Kudos to James Toney, who retains the IBA Heavyweight Title for beating a fighter who has fallen from grace and probably never realized what an omen his nickname, “Southern Disaster” turned out to be. Guinn’s string of poor performances should signal the end of his noticeably reluctant career as a pro boxer.
I wonder how this fight might’ve turned out if Guinn had thrown as many punches per round as he allegedly trained to do. But Guinn did show that he did wanted to fight—after the final bell sounded and he suddenly went to work, throwing combinations and trying to take Toney’s head off. Too little, too late? Not really. Referee Jay Nady stepped between them and reminded Guinn that the fight was over.
Never at a loss for words during a post fight interview, James Toney praised himself and called out the short list of the big names in a division best described as, uninspiring. In a flash of humility, he rated his performance against Guinn as a, ‘B minus.’
Toney said he wants to fight everybody, Vitali Klitschko, Lamon Brewster, Wladimir Klitschko and even mentioned, unenthusiastically, Chris Byrd. Toney can probably beat Brewster by out boxing him for 12 rounds. I can see him rattling the shaky Wladimir Klitschko and winning a points decision but I can’t even imagine him in the ring with Vitali Klitschko, who’s too big, too strong and too confident a boxer/puncher to let Toney get away with his pitty-pat punches in a phone booth act. The best match up of the lot has to be against Chris Byrd. Toney would probably beat Byrd to the punch and win a decision regardless of what happens since the ‘powers that be’ are not happy with the marketability of Chris Byrd wearing a Title belt.
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