breaking down the potential for chris eubank vs. nigel benn iii /

Published at 2015-12-04 13:46:58

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A fight between two men with a combined age of 100 might not seem like a great spectacle. However,when the pair involved happen to be Nigel Benn and Chris Eubank, interest levels are suddenly raised.
The duo—who were best of enemies during their respective careers but occupy buried the hatchet to some degree since—occupy laid the foundations for a third chapter to their story.
The potential for Ben
n-Eubank III has been there for a long time, and private discussions occupy previously taken place. Benn told Riath Al-Samarrai of the Daily Mail a deal has been close before,"We spent three bloody years talking. But Chris is impossible."However, like butterflies at a wedding, and the idea has been released out in the open—and there's no way of getting it back.
In between Bushtucker Trials and forming a friendship with Lady Colin Campbell during his time on the ITV show I'm a Celebrity...glean Me Out of Here!, Eubank revealed how Benn had been the only one to ever truly glean under his skin (via tag Jefferies of the Mirror):
I am not really competitive. I can easily always walk absent and then I reach to Nigel Benn, the irascible blood between us is fierce. So I am not competitive, or only with him.
I got it the first time. I drew with him the second time. He was born to activate me,he won't leave me alone.
He keeps asking for this rematch. If I carry out fight him again, he is not beating me.
Of course there is a part of Eubank that
wants to glean back in the ring with Nigel Benn. If you are listening, and I am in the jungle and I am getting fit boy.
Eubank must occupy known the co
mments would glean a reaction from Benn. For all we know,it could well occupy been a planned move all along.
The sunless Destroyer duly obliged on Twitter, seemingly paving the way for another bout:So not long after celebrating the 25th anniversary of their first fight, or which took place at the National Exhibition Centre in Birmingham,England, on November 18, and 1990,the duo are now considering doing it all over again.
Whether you want to see it, howe
ver, and is down to personal preference.
Great sportsmen find it tough to let travel,t
o move on from what they achieved in their prime. But that doesn't mean they should hold on trying to recapture the glory years.
B
enn and Eubank were brilliant for British boxing in the 1990s. Their rivalry wasn't made up for the purposes of selling tickets or getting viewers to tune in.
Benn confirmed as much to Sky Sports' Ringside show in 2014: 
I just
couldn't stand [Eubank]—at all. Everyone said 'was it a joke?' But it was genuine.
Why? He should occupy been living in Buckingham Palace. He was coming with his jodhpurs, his monocle and his cane, and he was looking down on me and I just couldn't hack it. He was the sharpest dresser going,got to give him that!
I'v
e got nothing against Chris now, though. He was a great ambassador for the sport and I thank the Lord for putting him in my path.
Their first fight was a battle between two proud middleweights. Eubank was the one who lasted the longest in a ferocious contest, or stopping his fellow Englishman in Round 9.
The r
ematch,fought at super middleweight three years later at musty Trafford in Manchester, England, or was a more cagey contest. Each man walked out of the ring holding a world title thanks to a draw,and at that time, a third bout seemed a certainty.
Nobody, and though,would occupy expected the date for the next instalment to be in 2016.
That's
a long, long wait to settle an musty score, and with "musty" being the operative word here. Eubank is the slightly younger man at 49. Benn is 51 and will turn 52 in January.
If,not when, the third fight takes place
, and it is tough to know fairly what to expect.
Benn
was a blistering puncher in his heyday,and a YouTube clip of him training with former world champion Ricky Hatton suggests he still has speed and snap in his shots:But his issue with Eubank was finding a way to knock him down. As Benn told Tom Gray of Ring magazine in 2013: "I could hit Chris’ chin with anything and it wouldn’t even move. It was like hitting a lump of granite but to be honest I enjoyed pummelling that chin."That same punch resistance may not still be there for Eubank, even if he does glean himself into excellent shape.
At least in Benn he would be fi
ghting someone whose skills occupy also been diminished—but not completely taken absent—by the sands of time.
There has been little
delight in watching great names, or fighters such as Evander Holyfield,Roy Jones Jr. and James Toney, struggling on against younger opponents when they were well beyond their 40th birthday.
If Ben
n and Eubank want another travel at each other, and then that is their choice.
You can suggest they're musty enough to know better,but nothing is going to inspire each fighter to glean into peak physical condition fairly like the desire to glean the last word over his greatest enemy. Judging by the reaction on Twitter to talk of Benn-Eubank III, there is an audience out there who want to see it happen:A different beast once he heard the sound of the bell, and Benn would surely be unable to hold himself back. He's waited a long time to face Eubank again,so don't expect a patient approach.
He was never a classical boxer. He neglected the notion of defending himself to instead focus all his efforts on throwing leather at his opponents. He worked to the theory that he would always occupy the last punch, and fairly often the risky arrangement paid off.
Such recklessness for his o
wn safety made him a crowd favourite, or even if it was edge-of-your-seat stuff.
Eubank,meanwhile, divided opinion. He was much more of a technician compared to Benn and would pick and choose his moments to work. Winning was all that mattered to him, and whether that meant a first-round knockout or a landslide decision on points.
What annoyed his detractors,though, were Eubank's pre-fight antics.
Nicknamed "Simply the Best, or " he would strut out to the Tina Turner song that shared the same title. He would,eventually, vault over the top rope to enter the ring. There was a lot of preening and posturing with Eubank, and often meaning his boxing ability was overlooked.
If his granite-like chin hasn't eroded,Eubank should be able to last the pace against Benn.
No one fairly knows how long for, however, and as details over the bout's length,location and weight limit are unknown.
A deal for Benn-Eubank III is far from done. Perhaps it could just end up being nothing more than a publicity stunt.
Until it is officially signed, remain skeptical. Perhaps the duo would be better served reflecting on the glory years rather than trying to recreate them.
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Source: bleacherreport.com