spkr
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RIP Smokin' Joe
08-11-11, 11:31
#1
Joe Frazier faleceu ontem, 7 de novembro, vítima de um câncer no fígado.
RIP Quote:
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Trooper
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08-11-11, 11:34
#3
RIP
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Trooper
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08-11-11, 11:57
#4
RIP
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Caldas
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08-11-11, 13:45
#5
O cara parecia ser muito foda mesmo! RIP
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Banned
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08-11-11, 16:10
#6
li essa noticia ontem e comecei a ver uns videos de boxe e tal
essa luta é mto fenomo o ali parece uma ARVRE toma porrada igual eu bebo água haehae mohammad ali x george foreman mohammad ali tinha ficado afastado uns anos do boxe, e quando voltou enfrentou o frazier. Foi derrotado. O frazier segurou os cinturões por algum tempo, aí o foreman foi lá e PEI, tomou dele. Depois disso, rolou a 1a revanche ali x frazier, e o ali ganhou. E depois foi lutar contra o foreman pelos cinturões. highlights: The Rumble in the Jungle Main article: The Rumble in the Jungle In one of the biggest upsets in boxing history, Ali regained his title on October 30, 1974 by defeating champion George Foreman in their bout in Kinshasa, Zaire. Hyped as "The Rumble in the Jungle", the fight was promoted by Don King. Almost no one, not even Ali's long-time supporter Howard Cosell, gave the former champion a chance of winning. Analysts pointed out that Joe Frazier and Ken Norton had given Ali four tough battles in the ring and won two of them, while Foreman had knocked out both of them in the second round. As a matter of fact, so total was the domination that, in their bout, Foreman had knocked down Frazier an incredible six times in only four minutes and 25 seconds. During the bout, Ali employed an unexpected strategy. Leading up to the fight, he had declared he was going to "dance" and use his speed to keep away from Foreman and outbox him. However, in the first round, Ali headed straight for the champion and began scoring with a right hand lead, clearly surprising Foreman. Ali caught Foreman nine times in the first round with this technique but failed to knock him out. He then decided to take advantage of the young champion's weakness: staying power. Foreman had won 37 of his 40 bouts by knockout, mostly within three rounds. Eight of his previous bouts did not go past the second round. Ali saw an opportunity to outlast Foreman, and capitalized on it. In the second round, the challenger retreated to the ropes—inviting Foreman to hit him, while counterpunching and verbally taunting the younger man. Ali's plan was to enrage Foreman and absorb his best blows to exhaust him mentally and physically. While Foreman threw wide shots to Ali's body, Ali countered with stinging straight punches to Foreman's head. Foreman threw hundreds of punches in seven rounds, but with decreasing technique and potency. Ali's tactic of leaning on the ropes, covering up, and absorbing ineffective body shots was later termed "The Rope-A-Dope". By the end of the seventh round, Foreman was exhausted. In the eighth round, Ali dropped Foreman with a combination at center ring and Foreman failed to make the count. Against the odds, Ali had regained the title. The "Rumble in the Jungle" was the subject of a 1996 Academy Award winning documentary film, When We Were Kings. The fight and the events leading up to it are extensively depicted in both John Herzfeld's 1997 docudrama Don King: Only in America and Michael Mann's 2001 docudrama, Ali. Last edited by maxcool; 08-11-11 at 16:19.. |
Trooper
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08-11-11, 16:31
#7
PUNCH ON THE RIPS, ON THE RIPS FRAIZER.
RIPS FRAIZER |
Chief Rocka
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08-11-11, 16:34
#8
huhuAEHUEH
RIPS |
Trooper
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09-11-11, 18:46
#9
RIP
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Trooper
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09-11-11, 18:51
#10
boxe é imensamente superior a qualquer outra luta.
discutam. |
The real (1)
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09-11-11, 19:03
#11
RIP JOE!
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