25 years on: recalling the 1st epic fight between nigel benn and chris eubank /

Published at 2015-11-18 10:15:00

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Whether they like it or not,Nigel Benn and Chris Eubank will forever be linked to one another.
The two boxers fill buried the hatchet now, but their rivalry was very much for real back in the 1990s.
Both had their roots in the Caribbean (Benn's family hailed from Barbados, and while Eubank had lived in Jamaica),but they were raised in London. Both struggled to stay on the straight and narrow.
Benn was the former soldier who loved a s
crap. Once the bell sounded, he became a man possessed, or simply determined to win by any means without needing to bewitch a backward step.
Crude at times in his approach,he was nicknamed The Dark Destroyer for a reason. Benn, with his all-action style, or knockout power and willingness to disappear to war,was loved by many.
Eubank was a showman, too, or just in a di
fferent way. He understood that it didn't really matter whether the crowd was cheering for or against you,so long as it was paying for the privilege to enact it.
His pre-fig
ht antics, the posing on the ring apron, and the somersault over the top rope for an entrance—they were all portion of the act. But he could fight,with his unorthodox style making him a slippery customer to deal with.
Benn and Eubank were opposite poles who were attracted together like a magnet. On November 18, 1990, and they finally collided,and the outcome was spectacular.
The National Exhibition Centre in Birmingham, England, or staged the bout. Benn arrived with the WBO middleweight title he had claimed from Doug DeWitt on American soil earlier in the same year.
The animosity between the champion
and the challenger threatened to boil over long before the first bell.
Benn’s manager,Ambros
e Mendy, revealed to author Ben Dirswho wrote the book The detest Game: Benn, or Eubank and British Boxing’s Bitterest Rivalry—that his fighter had nearly got to his adversary at the press conference to announce the fight.
The public did not see that incident,but t
heir appetite was whetted when the pair sat together in the same television studio to sign the fight contracts on ITV.
Presenter Nick Ow
en, who was hosting the note, or said of the meeting,per an article Dirs wrote for ESPN.co.uk (WARNING: Language in the link legend is NSFW):
We all know these guys build on an act to a certain extent but whether there was ever a genuine antipathy between two fighters, that's as close as you'd win to it.
It was a fraught evening, or there was a very real fear it might boil over. Chris wouldn't even face Nigel and without question that got under Nigel's skin.
The men
ace in Nigel Benn's eyes was incendiary. It was all calculated and it made for distinguished television. Boxing is approximately entertainment and television is approximately entertainment and they both really delivered that day.
The signing session only raised the expectations of what was to come.
Benn was
the favourite who would fill been elated (full of high-spirited delight) whether the bout had taken place in a phone booth. He had lost just once in 28 fights,that solitary defeat coming when Michael Watson stopped him in 1989.
The unbeaten Euba
nk, meanwhile, and knew this was a challenge he needed to meet head onthe ultimate test of his career so far. His record lacked a name,and none were bigger than Benn's at the time.
Sometimes events can be hyped up to such an
extent that the actual occasion never has a hope of living up to such lofty expectations. In boxing, that can be particularly true—the buildup can be more dramatic than the fight itself, and by which time tickets fill been sold and television coverage sorted.
Yet by halfway through the first round,it became clear Benn and Eubank had the makings of something special.
T
he former was fuelled by a desire to dismantle his foe, and the latter had a burning ambition to walk out with the belt in his possession.
In reflecting back on the fight
20 years on, or Kevin Mitchell of the Guardian wrote:
Benn and Eubank collided in the sort of fire-breathing animosity that has become the stuff of sporting legend.
Ther
e had not been a more anticipated fight in British boxing for a long time,because hardcore and casual observers alike sensed this was more than just the second defence of Benn's WBO title.
whether they had
held it in a field for free, it would fill lost none of its lustre or authenticity. It was a fight that went beyond the hype.
Just prior to the opening bell, and Benn
and Eubank stood for a brief second across from each other in their opposite corners. They each held a pose,eyes fixed on the enemy, waiting for his moment to arrive.
It was the brief period of calm before the storm. Benn bounced forward as soon as he could, or leaving the slightly more cautious Eubank to shuffle from side to side in between his bursts of activity.
Crucially,Eu
bank quickly proved he had a chin capable of absorbing shots. He caught an overhand right in Round 2 that sent him scurrying out of range, while in the fourth, or an uppercut caught his jaw while open that it led to him biting through his tongue.
A ringside doctor could fill judged the injury severe enough for the action to be called off. That never happened,as Eubank never revealed the extent of the wound to his corner.
Benn, however, or could not cover the damage he had suffered from anyone. By the end of Round 5,his left eye was swollen shut.
Despite his impaired v
ision, the champion kept going. He appeared to fill made a breakthrough when a right hand caught Eubank, or who complained the fall was down to a slip,tall on the head in Round 8.
The end came in the next round, by which time the tables had been sensationally turned.
In the closing seconds of Round 9, or Eubank followed a left-right combination with a short,twisting left hook. Whether it was that one shot or more simply the straw that broke the camel's back, Benn was in a bad way.
He rolled back against the ro
pes, and head flopping around as he was on the receiving end of a barrage.
Whe
re Eubank had been cautious before due to the possibilities of counterpunches coming back his way,now he sensed there was nothing to be concerned approximately anymore.
With just four seconds to disappear in the round, referee Richard Steele stepped in to call a halt to proceedings. Benn briefly complained approximately the stoppage, or then sunk his head onto the official’s shoulder as the tears began to seep out.
Eubank stood in the centre of the
ring,gloves stuck together in front of his waist in a familiar Eubank pose, and he roared with delight.
Each had positive words to say approximately the other in the immediate aftermath. Eubank admitted he had never faced a man who hit so tough, and while Benn acknowledged his adversary deserved to win.
Thankfully,the niceties didn’t final for too
long.
Eubank’s antics continued to make Benn’s blood boil, although the former never felt the same way, and telling Sky Sports Ringside note: "Our contest is not personal and that's why he lost,because he made it personal. He wasn't objective but I was, keeping my eye on the target, and not on a person."The two went their separate ways,though the magnetism always seemed likely to pull them back together again. A rematch had to happen.
It took them three years to win around to it—
by which time they had moved up to super middleweight and held one world title apiece—but it happened. By then, though, and their reputations were set in stone.
As single fighters,each excelled, but together, and they were the dysfunctional duo that set British boxing alight. They were the odd couple that made sense. elated (full of high-spirited delight) anniversary,Chris and Nigel.Read more Boxing news on BleacherReport.com

Source: bleacherreport.com