Here's how Steve Bunce (BIGDADDYBUNCE) described the Benn-Douglas fights:
First And Last Fight Nigel Lost In The Amateurs Was Rod Douglas In His First Fight As A Middleweight, Before That Nigel Was Always A Welterweight In The Army Tourneys. Rod Was The Best Light-middle At The 1984 Olympics. Douglas Was Half A Stone Heavier Than Nigel On The Day Of The Fight And Just As Ripped. Now Douglas Was A Really Powerful Guy And Could **** Really Hard. Benn Got Shaked Up And Spent Most Of The Fight On The Ropes. But He Came Back The Following Year And That Rematch With Douglas A Year Later Was A Real Barn Burner Of A Fight, He Decked Rod A Few Times In The Last Round And Got The Decision. That Was A Hell Of A Fight.
and when asked what was the best Benn fight he'd seen, Bunce replied:
My Favourite Nigel Benn Fight? The Second Douglas Fight.
link- http://jeetwin188.com/forums/sh...ad.php?t=59104
Here's what John Scully (ICEMAN JOHN SCULLY) says about the McClellan-Jones fight in his book:
Later on in 1988, at the National Golden Gloves, Roy won his first three matches. The first one was a decision over Thomas Tate. He also scored a 3rd. round stoppage over defending National 165 pound Champion and Future NABF Champion Fabian Williams. Those victories set up a fight that someone should have taped for obvious reasons. The semifinal match was Roy Jones taking on Gerald McClellan. You would expect this fight to be very exciting. It was more than that. It was a WAR. One of the greatest examples of speed and power that I have seen in an amateur Boxing match. I remember that Roy was forced back to the ropes often in the fight but that what made the fight so thrilling was the way Roy would FURIOUSLY fight off the ropes with flurries. It was like watching two Olympic athletes fight for the Gold Medal or two guys going for the world professional championship.
Omaha World-Herald: "Two 1987 Champs, 156 pounder Roy L. Jones of Knoxville and 132 pound Donald Stokes of Louisiana, were eliminated last night.
Gerald McClellan of Milwaukee crowded Jones most of the first two rounds in pounding out a decision triumph. The 156 pound McClellan was there to slug with Jones from the opening bell, and carried the first round. Jones spent a lot of that time along the ropes.
Jones showed some movement in a fairly close second and then scored well in the early part of the third. McClellan was stronger at the finish when he again pounded Jones along the ropes and in a corner."
I saw Gerald a month later at Sugar Ray's training Camp in Maryland and he told me he wouldn't be able to spar for a while longer because his jaw was still hurting from the fight with Roy.
link- http://jeetwin188.com/forums/sh...7&page=1&pp=10
Now, my question is.. has anybody ****ing seen any of these fights? Is there any footage at all anywhere, and any other accounts of these fights anywhere?? I'm interested. Rod Douglas was a very exciting prospect in his early pro career and commentators were saying how he decided to just turn pro rather than go for an Olympic Gold in Seoul, Douglas was a hot young lion but his people put him in with Bomber Graham far too soon
and I think we know enough about the other boys (Benn, McClellan and Roy Jones Jr).
First And Last Fight Nigel Lost In The Amateurs Was Rod Douglas In His First Fight As A Middleweight, Before That Nigel Was Always A Welterweight In The Army Tourneys. Rod Was The Best Light-middle At The 1984 Olympics. Douglas Was Half A Stone Heavier Than Nigel On The Day Of The Fight And Just As Ripped. Now Douglas Was A Really Powerful Guy And Could **** Really Hard. Benn Got Shaked Up And Spent Most Of The Fight On The Ropes. But He Came Back The Following Year And That Rematch With Douglas A Year Later Was A Real Barn Burner Of A Fight, He Decked Rod A Few Times In The Last Round And Got The Decision. That Was A Hell Of A Fight.
and when asked what was the best Benn fight he'd seen, Bunce replied:
My Favourite Nigel Benn Fight? The Second Douglas Fight.
link- http://jeetwin188.com/forums/sh...ad.php?t=59104
Here's what John Scully (ICEMAN JOHN SCULLY) says about the McClellan-Jones fight in his book:
Later on in 1988, at the National Golden Gloves, Roy won his first three matches. The first one was a decision over Thomas Tate. He also scored a 3rd. round stoppage over defending National 165 pound Champion and Future NABF Champion Fabian Williams. Those victories set up a fight that someone should have taped for obvious reasons. The semifinal match was Roy Jones taking on Gerald McClellan. You would expect this fight to be very exciting. It was more than that. It was a WAR. One of the greatest examples of speed and power that I have seen in an amateur Boxing match. I remember that Roy was forced back to the ropes often in the fight but that what made the fight so thrilling was the way Roy would FURIOUSLY fight off the ropes with flurries. It was like watching two Olympic athletes fight for the Gold Medal or two guys going for the world professional championship.
Omaha World-Herald: "Two 1987 Champs, 156 pounder Roy L. Jones of Knoxville and 132 pound Donald Stokes of Louisiana, were eliminated last night.
Gerald McClellan of Milwaukee crowded Jones most of the first two rounds in pounding out a decision triumph. The 156 pound McClellan was there to slug with Jones from the opening bell, and carried the first round. Jones spent a lot of that time along the ropes.
Jones showed some movement in a fairly close second and then scored well in the early part of the third. McClellan was stronger at the finish when he again pounded Jones along the ropes and in a corner."
I saw Gerald a month later at Sugar Ray's training Camp in Maryland and he told me he wouldn't be able to spar for a while longer because his jaw was still hurting from the fight with Roy.
link- http://jeetwin188.com/forums/sh...7&page=1&pp=10
Now, my question is.. has anybody ****ing seen any of these fights? Is there any footage at all anywhere, and any other accounts of these fights anywhere?? I'm interested. Rod Douglas was a very exciting prospect in his early pro career and commentators were saying how he decided to just turn pro rather than go for an Olympic Gold in Seoul, Douglas was a hot young lion but his people put him in with Bomber Graham far too soon

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