Mark de Mori
Mark de Mori
Anybody know what Big Mark is doing? If he does not fight before the end of this month he drops off the Boxrec active list.
Re: Mark de Mori
He is in Perth at the moment. Hopefully we can see the big fella back in the ring soon, He is the most talented Heavy in this part of the World IMO.
He pops in here from time to time. Who knows mate he might respond himself.
He pops in here from time to time. Who knows mate he might respond himself.
Re: Mark de Mori
Hope he starts fighting again soon. He is good value.
Re: Mark de Mori
wasting his prime years. such a shame.
inactivity at this stage is not good. if its from injuries etc. well nothing u can do about that. i presume he has stayed in shape since his last fight, anybody know?
inactivity at this stage is not good. if its from injuries etc. well nothing u can do about that. i presume he has stayed in shape since his last fight, anybody know?
Re: Mark de Mori
Mark is in excellent shape, He has had a few small injuries I think. I will contact him and see if he wants to come on and tell people what he is up to. I will probably see him at the Green-Briggs weighin tomorrow.buster007 wrote:wasting his prime years. such a shame.
inactivity at this stage is not good. if its from injuries etc. well nothing u can do about that. i presume he has stayed in shape since his last fight, anybody know?
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colin russell
- Heavyweight

- Posts: 765
- Joined: 06 Mar 2008, 05:54
Re: Mark de Mori
Keep us informed please ben k
Re: Mark de Mori
Ok Fellas, Mark sent me this message.
I am basically building a team at the moment, I trained myself since 2008 and my manager Ted allen passed away in December,my new training team looks to be www.worldcrownsports.com who i spent three months with earlier this year.
Lots happening behind the scenes atm including a doco and much more, soon I can unveil new plans.
Last year I was close to fights with Tua,Rahman and signed a contract to fight meehan but all fell through so I need to get my team sorted then attack again.
I will either make it big time or get knocked out trying, so it should be fun to watch!
If anyone wants up to date info on my journey check https://twitter.com/MarkdeMori or my fb page or my site.
Hope to represent Australia on the big stage, long way to go but soon with a proper team and an incredible amount of blood sweat and tears I can get my opportunity.
I am basically building a team at the moment, I trained myself since 2008 and my manager Ted allen passed away in December,my new training team looks to be www.worldcrownsports.com who i spent three months with earlier this year.
Lots happening behind the scenes atm including a doco and much more, soon I can unveil new plans.
Last year I was close to fights with Tua,Rahman and signed a contract to fight meehan but all fell through so I need to get my team sorted then attack again.
I will either make it big time or get knocked out trying, so it should be fun to watch!
If anyone wants up to date info on my journey check https://twitter.com/MarkdeMori or my fb page or my site.
Hope to represent Australia on the big stage, long way to go but soon with a proper team and an incredible amount of blood sweat and tears I can get my opportunity.
Re: Mark de Mori
at least he remains positive and still hungry to test himself.
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Aussiedave
- Heavyweight

- Posts: 102
- Joined: 19 May 2010, 08:02
Re: Mark de Mori
His a great bloke and im sure things will go his way and he will make it to the top.

Re: Mark de Mori
Yep, all the best to the Dominator, he certainly deserves a break.
Re: Mark de Mori
Here is a great article i just Read on Mark
Mark de Mori knocks his naysayers down for the count
by JOSEPH SAPIENZA
WA heavyweight boxer Mark de Mori is on the comeback trail.
Perth boxer Mark de Mori talks to Joseph Sapienza about the arduous journey in aspiring to become the best heavyweight fighter in the world.
When Mark de Mori was just 13 years old, he was at Gloucester Park where his father was working.
A friend of his old man came past for a visit and he asked Mark what he wanted to be when he grows up.
"I'm gonna be a heavyweight boxer in America," was the determined youngster's response, even though he had not yet tried his hand at the sport.
Advertisement: Story continues belowWith that answer, his father's friend laughed, virtually trampling over the dreams of world domination by a teenager.
But de Mori, now 28, is well and truly used to the jibes and below-the-belt hits from the knockers that are hell-bent on flooring his aspirations to become a heavyweight boxing champion.
In fact, "The Dominator", as he is known, is now more than proficient when it comes to handling the naysayers, and just by talking to him, it seems he has turned that imperative skill into an art form.
"I want to prove people wrong," de Mori tells me outside a Subiaco café before jetting off to Turkey on holiday and then on to the USA to develop his profile.
"I refuse to let people tell me what my worth is (and) I refuse to let people write my scripts.
"I want to invent my own future.
"All these people used to knock me … when I turned amateur, they said 'you're gonna get knocked out'.
"I've had no support, and nothing but ridicule for the majority of my ambitions.
"People try and give you your script, 'this is your level, your worth' they say, but I just nod politely."
To say the quest to becoming a global force in the world of heavyweight boxing has been challenging and laden with more speed humps than a shopping centre carpark for de Mori is a big understatement.
Having signed on with perhaps the biggest boxing promoter in the world in Don King in 2007 and on the verge of securing a new deal with the frizzy-haired mogul, de Mori and his growing band of supporters are starting to see the summit of the jagged mountain through the clouds.
But to succeed in any world class of pugilism, one needs to build a profile that makes you an irresistible proposition for promoters wanting to set up fights in either the lavish casinos of Las Vegas or in 60,000-seat stadiums in the heavyweight stronghold of Germany.
"My ability is better than my profile," de Mori admits. "I'm in a high-risk, low-reward category.
"I can fight but no one's heard of me. I'm an exciting young contender, trying to promote myself and it's starting to happen (with spots on TV, newspapers and magazines).
"I've had to work so incredibly hard and make so many sacrifices year after year, so it's a slap in the face when people say I have got good genetics.
"It's like an insult, rather than accept the fact that I just worked hard."
De Mori has not fought since knocking out Kevin Karusa at the WA Italian Club in July last year, but he doesn’t envisage a major fight being held in his hometown just yet.
Besides the exploits of Danny Green and Anthony Mundine in the ring and in front of the camera away from it, de Mori says the sport still does not have a high profile down under and is religiously followed by the passionate – and educated – few on the margins.
"… There are a lot of successful fighters in Australia that nobody has heard of," de Mori says.
"My only goal now is to promote myself as much as possible, so people can be aware of my career and what I'm doing, and maybe one day I can have the luxury of fighting in my hometown without having to travel all the way across the world and go into other peoples' backyards."
Not unlike other professional boxers in Australia, de Mori becomes livid when rugby league players "masquerading as boxers", such as Sonny Bill Williams and John Hopoate, can just walk into a ring and get the kind of mass publicity "real" boxers can only dream of.
It probably explains why Mark de Mori is not yet a household name among West Australians.
"In Perth, Troy Barbagallo is probably a famous boxer," he says.
"People here don't know anything about boxing, the Australian media know nothing about boxing, they're very gullible in being taken for a ride.
"When I'm doing something legit and travelling the world and really testing myself and people don't recognise it, it can get frustrating but I also understand (that) it's a footy town.
De Mori has not had a competitive fight for about a year, which is not ideal for a fighter wanting to boost his image across the Pacific and into Europe.
The boxing gods refused to give him a break when two proposed fights were cruelly snatched from his clenched fists late last year.
Battles with the likes of Fijian-born boxer Kali Meehan and New Zealand's David Tua collapsed, while a possible match-up with Hasim "The Rock" Rahman did not eventuate.
"Last year I signed a contract to fight Kali Meehan in a WBA title eliminator," de Mori recalled.
"Now the fight didn't come through but it was a sign that I was willing to take that fight right now.
"It was going to be in Las Vegas, and they said late November early December last year.
"Unfortunately it didn't come off, and Kali Meehan ended up getting a fight for the interim title (against Ruslan Chagaev in Germany in May) and I got left behind so it could have been but wasn’t."
Tua's manager rejected de Mori as an opponent while Rahman's crew did not call him back after agreeing to fight the champion from Baltimore.
But these hard-luck episodes simply illustrate the fickle nature of negotiations in the boxing world.
"I'm trying to put myself out there and I want those big fights," de Mori said.
"There's a lot more to it than me just wanting it.
"I've learnt the hard way that until the bell goes 'ding ding' and the other guy starts throwing punches at you, it's probably not going to happen.
"I've been promised everything a million times over and ended up with nothing. It's an industry where they will shake your hand and tell you how great you are while they are taking your wallet from your back pocket so ... ".
Naturally, de Mori started off his career as an amateur at a time when there was no professional boxing in Perth.
Nobody believed he could be a professional boxer, so de Mori took a couple of years off before shifting to the Gold Coast at 21 years of age.
Since then he has mainly traversed between Perth and the United States.
"I took a few years off and really thought it was all over," he said. "I got a little bit older and started to realise that life is pretty damn boring unless you do what you love.
"So I refused to listen to people who told me it was a ridiculous and bad idea it was to become a professional boxer and did what I thought I wanted so I moved across the country.
"I've broken my hands, been knocked out, fought in horrible arenas, stayed in crappy hotels, lived in a houseboat that was sinking, I've lived on a potato farm, I've done everything I can to achieve my goal and now there's starting to get a bit of light at the end of the tunnel."
And who better to have in your corner than King, who de Mori was introduced to by his former manager, Ted Allen, who died in December.
De Mori has always wanted to break into the big time in the United States and King – of all people – can make it happen.
It was all because of Allen, who before managing de Mori was looking after Meehan's affairs.
"He (Allen) had a good relationship with Don King and really that was my goal from the start," he said.
"I've always been fascinated about fighting in America, I've no interest in fighting small time, I've always wanted to be as big as possible, and to me as a kid growing up, Las Vegas, Madison Square Garden, those sort of places if you want to be a genuine contender or a champion that's where you have to prove yourself."
De Mori is extremely grateful King took the punt and offered him a contract, which gave him unique opportunities to spar with some of the best in the business including middleweight champion Sergio Martinez and Cory Spinks – whose father Leon beat Muhammad Ali in a heavyweight title fight in Las Vegas in 1978.
The former John XXIII student's contract ends shortly and after his holiday Europe, he will fly to America to meet with King at his Florida headquarters to nut out a new deal and discuss the road ahead.
And this will all be in between boxing, and possibly even wrestling, in Mexico, while being based in Oxnard - a predominantly Hispanic area in southern California with a population of just under 200,000.
He expects to be in North America for several months before coming home to freshen up.
"Everyone’s contract (with King) is different," he explains. "The one I signed guarantees me a minimum amount of fights per year that he promotes, he guarantees me he will give me a certain amount of fights and a minimum amount of money he can give me for those fights.
"I've had two fights with Don King in America (both were wins against Robert Kooser and Jason Barnett in 2008 and 2009) and while I would have liked to have more, no one else was willing to take a chance on me.
"Everyone else said 'you're not good enough, you can't do this, you can't do that', but with King I ended up getting as high as 17 in the world.
"So far, I've managed to fight in front of huge crowds, I've managed to get shown on TV in all sorts of obscure countries that I never even knew existed, and I've been able to train and meet some of my heroes.
"I would like to renegotiate with him because I believe King in the heavyweight division in America is still one of the major players."
And unlike many people he's encountered along the journey, de Mori cherishes one thing that King has given him: opportunity for the big fights.
" ... Casinos and sporting arenas, they go to Don King asking to put on fights so he has access to these big shows," he said.
"Not only in America but also in Germany, where boxing right now is huge and the best heavyweights in the world are all fighting out of Germany, so without him I don't have access to these big time fights and I'm stuck in small arenas where exposure is minimal and so is the money."
De Mori, who has no trainer, prefers to study the moves of his favourite fighters such as Floyd Mayweather, Roy Jones jnr and James Toney among others via YouTube before heading down to the gym and "mimicking them as best as I can".
Training yourself is uncommon, rather "it's unheard of" at the high level according to de Mori, but he is willing to run the risk and go it alone to cement himself in the big time and make the big bucks.
"I'm at the point in my boxing career where I'm starting to make some money so I really have to treat it as a business," he said.
"I don't fight for free and I won't fight for peanuts, I have promoters ringing me up saying 'we want you to fight', that's fantastic but for the amount of money they're offering, it's not even worth me going.
"I'm not going to risk my brain for peanuts. Unless I'm excited by the fight and it's paying me well, it's just a whole lot of risk for no reward."
WA has embraced Danny Green, and de Mori hopes his home state can get behind him as well.
"The only message I'll put out there is that Perth's got a home-grown talent that is willing to throw his hat into the ring and fight the best heavyweights from around the world," he says.
"And I'll either become the heavyweight champion or get knocked out spectacularly. (So) when I'm fighting, tune in because it's going to be fun to watch.
"Come along for the journey, it's gonna be exciting."
Mark de Mori knocks his naysayers down for the count
by JOSEPH SAPIENZA
WA heavyweight boxer Mark de Mori is on the comeback trail.
Perth boxer Mark de Mori talks to Joseph Sapienza about the arduous journey in aspiring to become the best heavyweight fighter in the world.
When Mark de Mori was just 13 years old, he was at Gloucester Park where his father was working.
A friend of his old man came past for a visit and he asked Mark what he wanted to be when he grows up.
"I'm gonna be a heavyweight boxer in America," was the determined youngster's response, even though he had not yet tried his hand at the sport.
Advertisement: Story continues belowWith that answer, his father's friend laughed, virtually trampling over the dreams of world domination by a teenager.
But de Mori, now 28, is well and truly used to the jibes and below-the-belt hits from the knockers that are hell-bent on flooring his aspirations to become a heavyweight boxing champion.
In fact, "The Dominator", as he is known, is now more than proficient when it comes to handling the naysayers, and just by talking to him, it seems he has turned that imperative skill into an art form.
"I want to prove people wrong," de Mori tells me outside a Subiaco café before jetting off to Turkey on holiday and then on to the USA to develop his profile.
"I refuse to let people tell me what my worth is (and) I refuse to let people write my scripts.
"I want to invent my own future.
"All these people used to knock me … when I turned amateur, they said 'you're gonna get knocked out'.
"I've had no support, and nothing but ridicule for the majority of my ambitions.
"People try and give you your script, 'this is your level, your worth' they say, but I just nod politely."
To say the quest to becoming a global force in the world of heavyweight boxing has been challenging and laden with more speed humps than a shopping centre carpark for de Mori is a big understatement.
Having signed on with perhaps the biggest boxing promoter in the world in Don King in 2007 and on the verge of securing a new deal with the frizzy-haired mogul, de Mori and his growing band of supporters are starting to see the summit of the jagged mountain through the clouds.
But to succeed in any world class of pugilism, one needs to build a profile that makes you an irresistible proposition for promoters wanting to set up fights in either the lavish casinos of Las Vegas or in 60,000-seat stadiums in the heavyweight stronghold of Germany.
"My ability is better than my profile," de Mori admits. "I'm in a high-risk, low-reward category.
"I can fight but no one's heard of me. I'm an exciting young contender, trying to promote myself and it's starting to happen (with spots on TV, newspapers and magazines).
"I've had to work so incredibly hard and make so many sacrifices year after year, so it's a slap in the face when people say I have got good genetics.
"It's like an insult, rather than accept the fact that I just worked hard."
De Mori has not fought since knocking out Kevin Karusa at the WA Italian Club in July last year, but he doesn’t envisage a major fight being held in his hometown just yet.
Besides the exploits of Danny Green and Anthony Mundine in the ring and in front of the camera away from it, de Mori says the sport still does not have a high profile down under and is religiously followed by the passionate – and educated – few on the margins.
"… There are a lot of successful fighters in Australia that nobody has heard of," de Mori says.
"My only goal now is to promote myself as much as possible, so people can be aware of my career and what I'm doing, and maybe one day I can have the luxury of fighting in my hometown without having to travel all the way across the world and go into other peoples' backyards."
Not unlike other professional boxers in Australia, de Mori becomes livid when rugby league players "masquerading as boxers", such as Sonny Bill Williams and John Hopoate, can just walk into a ring and get the kind of mass publicity "real" boxers can only dream of.
It probably explains why Mark de Mori is not yet a household name among West Australians.
"In Perth, Troy Barbagallo is probably a famous boxer," he says.
"People here don't know anything about boxing, the Australian media know nothing about boxing, they're very gullible in being taken for a ride.
"When I'm doing something legit and travelling the world and really testing myself and people don't recognise it, it can get frustrating but I also understand (that) it's a footy town.
De Mori has not had a competitive fight for about a year, which is not ideal for a fighter wanting to boost his image across the Pacific and into Europe.
The boxing gods refused to give him a break when two proposed fights were cruelly snatched from his clenched fists late last year.
Battles with the likes of Fijian-born boxer Kali Meehan and New Zealand's David Tua collapsed, while a possible match-up with Hasim "The Rock" Rahman did not eventuate.
"Last year I signed a contract to fight Kali Meehan in a WBA title eliminator," de Mori recalled.
"Now the fight didn't come through but it was a sign that I was willing to take that fight right now.
"It was going to be in Las Vegas, and they said late November early December last year.
"Unfortunately it didn't come off, and Kali Meehan ended up getting a fight for the interim title (against Ruslan Chagaev in Germany in May) and I got left behind so it could have been but wasn’t."
Tua's manager rejected de Mori as an opponent while Rahman's crew did not call him back after agreeing to fight the champion from Baltimore.
But these hard-luck episodes simply illustrate the fickle nature of negotiations in the boxing world.
"I'm trying to put myself out there and I want those big fights," de Mori said.
"There's a lot more to it than me just wanting it.
"I've learnt the hard way that until the bell goes 'ding ding' and the other guy starts throwing punches at you, it's probably not going to happen.
"I've been promised everything a million times over and ended up with nothing. It's an industry where they will shake your hand and tell you how great you are while they are taking your wallet from your back pocket so ... ".
Naturally, de Mori started off his career as an amateur at a time when there was no professional boxing in Perth.
Nobody believed he could be a professional boxer, so de Mori took a couple of years off before shifting to the Gold Coast at 21 years of age.
Since then he has mainly traversed between Perth and the United States.
"I took a few years off and really thought it was all over," he said. "I got a little bit older and started to realise that life is pretty damn boring unless you do what you love.
"So I refused to listen to people who told me it was a ridiculous and bad idea it was to become a professional boxer and did what I thought I wanted so I moved across the country.
"I've broken my hands, been knocked out, fought in horrible arenas, stayed in crappy hotels, lived in a houseboat that was sinking, I've lived on a potato farm, I've done everything I can to achieve my goal and now there's starting to get a bit of light at the end of the tunnel."
And who better to have in your corner than King, who de Mori was introduced to by his former manager, Ted Allen, who died in December.
De Mori has always wanted to break into the big time in the United States and King – of all people – can make it happen.
It was all because of Allen, who before managing de Mori was looking after Meehan's affairs.
"He (Allen) had a good relationship with Don King and really that was my goal from the start," he said.
"I've always been fascinated about fighting in America, I've no interest in fighting small time, I've always wanted to be as big as possible, and to me as a kid growing up, Las Vegas, Madison Square Garden, those sort of places if you want to be a genuine contender or a champion that's where you have to prove yourself."
De Mori is extremely grateful King took the punt and offered him a contract, which gave him unique opportunities to spar with some of the best in the business including middleweight champion Sergio Martinez and Cory Spinks – whose father Leon beat Muhammad Ali in a heavyweight title fight in Las Vegas in 1978.
The former John XXIII student's contract ends shortly and after his holiday Europe, he will fly to America to meet with King at his Florida headquarters to nut out a new deal and discuss the road ahead.
And this will all be in between boxing, and possibly even wrestling, in Mexico, while being based in Oxnard - a predominantly Hispanic area in southern California with a population of just under 200,000.
He expects to be in North America for several months before coming home to freshen up.
"Everyone’s contract (with King) is different," he explains. "The one I signed guarantees me a minimum amount of fights per year that he promotes, he guarantees me he will give me a certain amount of fights and a minimum amount of money he can give me for those fights.
"I've had two fights with Don King in America (both were wins against Robert Kooser and Jason Barnett in 2008 and 2009) and while I would have liked to have more, no one else was willing to take a chance on me.
"Everyone else said 'you're not good enough, you can't do this, you can't do that', but with King I ended up getting as high as 17 in the world.
"So far, I've managed to fight in front of huge crowds, I've managed to get shown on TV in all sorts of obscure countries that I never even knew existed, and I've been able to train and meet some of my heroes.
"I would like to renegotiate with him because I believe King in the heavyweight division in America is still one of the major players."
And unlike many people he's encountered along the journey, de Mori cherishes one thing that King has given him: opportunity for the big fights.
" ... Casinos and sporting arenas, they go to Don King asking to put on fights so he has access to these big shows," he said.
"Not only in America but also in Germany, where boxing right now is huge and the best heavyweights in the world are all fighting out of Germany, so without him I don't have access to these big time fights and I'm stuck in small arenas where exposure is minimal and so is the money."
De Mori, who has no trainer, prefers to study the moves of his favourite fighters such as Floyd Mayweather, Roy Jones jnr and James Toney among others via YouTube before heading down to the gym and "mimicking them as best as I can".
Training yourself is uncommon, rather "it's unheard of" at the high level according to de Mori, but he is willing to run the risk and go it alone to cement himself in the big time and make the big bucks.
"I'm at the point in my boxing career where I'm starting to make some money so I really have to treat it as a business," he said.
"I don't fight for free and I won't fight for peanuts, I have promoters ringing me up saying 'we want you to fight', that's fantastic but for the amount of money they're offering, it's not even worth me going.
"I'm not going to risk my brain for peanuts. Unless I'm excited by the fight and it's paying me well, it's just a whole lot of risk for no reward."
WA has embraced Danny Green, and de Mori hopes his home state can get behind him as well.
"The only message I'll put out there is that Perth's got a home-grown talent that is willing to throw his hat into the ring and fight the best heavyweights from around the world," he says.
"And I'll either become the heavyweight champion or get knocked out spectacularly. (So) when I'm fighting, tune in because it's going to be fun to watch.
"Come along for the journey, it's gonna be exciting."
Re: Mark de Mori
good insight to how hard a business it is to succeed in.
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iron rhino
- Heavyweight

- Posts: 252
- Joined: 01 Sep 2008, 04:39
Re: Mark de Mori
Look at this mess talk it up,what paper was that interview for?Talking like he wants good money and hasn't even fought for a title,let alone done 10 or 12 rounds,listen to the names he's mentioning,like he would stand a chance and sparring, what! a middleweight,nobody will pay you big money if you haven't fought big names,you talk about risk vs reward WELL if you take a risk and fight a decent fighter you'll get a big reward!simple.If you fight bums and live on promises and don't fight very often all you'll end up as is a waste!good luck with your decision.
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'LIONHEART'
- Cruiserweight
- Posts: 8
- Joined: 26 Jun 2010, 06:54
Re: Mark de Mori
Kirby V Demori..........thats a match i want to see and i'm sure the Aussie public would to....Foxsports for sure.
Re: Mark de Mori
Yeah, bring it on, Kirby v's de Mori, I'd pay to see that.
Re: Mark de Mori
Sapienza writes for WA Today, Fairfax's Perth paper.iron rhino wrote:Look at this mess talk it up,what paper was that interview for?Talking like he wants good money and hasn't even fought for a title,let alone done 10 or 12 rounds,listen to the names he's mentioning,like he would stand a chance and sparring, what! a middleweight,nobody will pay you big money if you haven't fought big names,you talk about risk vs reward WELL if you take a risk and fight a decent fighter you'll get a big reward!simple.If you fight bums and live on promises and don't fight very often all you'll end up as is a waste!good luck with your decision.
Talking up a fight against Mark , Michael?
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iron rhino
- Heavyweight

- Posts: 252
- Joined: 01 Sep 2008, 04:39
Re: Mark de Mori
What have I said there that isn't true.I want mark to do well but if he spends most of his time on promises he will go to waste,it will be a waste of a talented fighter.I wish him luck,but you can't go out there making demands with an empty record,taking some chances will get you title shot,one wont just be given to you,doesn't really work like that.Oh!,and everybody knows I don't care who I fight,I'm here for a good time not a long time!Brute wrote:Sapienza writes for WA Today, Fairfax's Perth paper.iron rhino wrote:Look at this mess talk it up,what paper was that interview for?Talking like he wants good money and hasn't even fought for a title,let alone done 10 or 12 rounds,listen to the names he's mentioning,like he would stand a chance and sparring, what! a middleweight,nobody will pay you big money if you haven't fought big names,you talk about risk vs reward WELL if you take a risk and fight a decent fighter you'll get a big reward!simple.If you fight bums and live on promises and don't fight very often all you'll end up as is a waste!good luck with your decision.
Talking up a fight against Mark , Michael?
Re: Mark de Mori
When are you in the ring next Iron Rhino? It has nearly been a year mate. anything on the horizon? I feel like watching a good heavyweight fight
Re: Mark de Mori
Isnt there something wrong with Mic Kirbys eye?
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iron rhino
- Heavyweight

- Posts: 252
- Joined: 01 Sep 2008, 04:39
Re: Mark de Mori
2-3mnths to go depends how the rehab goes,just waiting,waiting sux bad.One thing I just want to make clear is that I wish the best for all our heavies,i want them all to make a mark on the local scene as well as the world.I want them to ask themselves if they truly gave it their all and had a good go!You dont know what you got till its gone(and times against most of us aswell)Now the mushy shit's out of the way,When I do come back i'm gonna tear assholes out of the lot of em!loldan h wrote:When are you in the ring next Iron Rhino? It has nearly been a year mate. anything on the horizon? I feel like watching a good heavyweight fight
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'LIONHEART'
- Cruiserweight
- Posts: 8
- Joined: 26 Jun 2010, 06:54
Re: Mark de Mori
lmao...........you can start with Danny Greens ass.......lol good luck with the recovery mate hope to see you in the ring sooniron rhino wrote:2-3mnths to go depends how the rehab goes,just waiting,waiting sux bad.One thing I just want to make clear is that I wish the best for all our heavies,i want them all to make a mark on the local scene as well as the world.I want them to ask themselves if they truly gave it their all and had a good go!You dont know what you got till its gone(and times against most of us aswell)Now the mushy poop's out of the way,When I do come back i'm gonna tear assholes out of the lot of em!loldan h wrote:When are you in the ring next Iron Rhino? It has nearly been a year mate. anything on the horizon? I feel like watching a good heavyweight fight