The worst year for Cuban boxing ?
The worst year for Cuban boxing ?
Rigo, Dorticos, Barrera, Ortiz, Barthelemy..............
What do you think ?
I have to mention T. Stevenson, the best boxer I have ever seen (in his time, amateur boxing has not been senseless as nowadays).
What do you think ?
I have to mention T. Stevenson, the best boxer I have ever seen (in his time, amateur boxing has not been senseless as nowadays).
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Ruthless-RKO
- Welterweight
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- Joined: 24 Apr 2016, 11:59
Re: The worst year for Cuban boxing ?
Well, Lara is next..
Technically Rigo was last year.. But Yeh, it's still last 12 months.
Technically Rigo was last year.. But Yeh, it's still last 12 months.
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asdfjkl
- Heavyweight

Re: The worst year for Cuban boxing ?
People now dare to fight them, now they are a milion year old
Re: The worst year for Cuban boxing ?
Actually a good post. Cuba's best have been losing. Lara next would be devastating for them.
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lookingaround87
- Light Heavyweight
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Re: The worst year for Cuban boxing ?
Last time I checked Luis Ortiz was involved in the highest profile Heavyweight fight and did good.
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Ilya Muromets
- Heavyweight

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Re: The worst year for Cuban boxing ?
Actually all of them are boxers who no longer live in Cuba. Professional boxing is still illegal in Cuba. Bad year for Cuban ex-pat boxers maybe, but not really Cuban boxing.
Re: The worst year for Cuban boxing ?
They're not really American. It's like some of the Mexican fighters, I think LSC, who is a Mexican. He trains in California, I think, but he's still classified as Mexcian. Same with Abner Mares. Really, it's splitting hairs not calling them Cubans.
Re: The worst year for Cuban boxing ?
bad year in terms of number lossess for top cubans, although dorticos and ortiz were in great fights with honourable losses and i like them more now
but rigo and barthlemy lost pretty much every round and looked really not good or with much fighting spirit at all.
barrera got dominated and ko'd but i felt he gave a respectable effort, bivol was simply too good for him
also the opposition level was very high for the losing cubans, i mean: loma, wilder, gassiev, bivol, , and then relikh. thats like a p4p top 3 fighter, three powerful beasts, and a pretty solid light welter who imo should be undefeated and had the wba title since the burns fight.
but rigo and barthlemy lost pretty much every round and looked really not good or with much fighting spirit at all.
barrera got dominated and ko'd but i felt he gave a respectable effort, bivol was simply too good for him
also the opposition level was very high for the losing cubans, i mean: loma, wilder, gassiev, bivol, , and then relikh. thats like a p4p top 3 fighter, three powerful beasts, and a pretty solid light welter who imo should be undefeated and had the wba title since the burns fight.
Re: The worst year for Cuban boxing ?
Nothing will ever top 1976 for Cuban disappointment.
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Deleted_Scenes
- Middleweight
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Re: The worst year for Cuban boxing ?
Good points mentioned above. The Cubans have pretty much fought a murderers row. Dorticos and Ortiz gave very good accounts of themselves too. 2 rare occasions where a fighter's stock rises in defeat.
I don't see Lara losing to Hurd either - too basic. Maybe Charlo, not Hurd.
I don't see Lara losing to Hurd either - too basic. Maybe Charlo, not Hurd.
Re: The worst year for Cuban boxing ?
It sucks Ortiz started so late. I'm convinced he's in his Mid 40's. Either way, I feel like if he turned pro several years earlier he really could've had a glorious career. He was schooling Wilder before fatigue got the best of him. It looks like Lara is the last one standing. I went to a lot of local boxing matches in south Florida from 2008-2012, Cubans were on all of the cards. And you knew it was gonna be a blowout. Really surprising to see them all get picked off like this
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Best Coast
- Welterweight
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Re: The worst year for Cuban boxing ?
Great point!! The legendary US team really steamrolled them that year in the Olympics
2012 was not a very good year for them either. Not only was 2012 Olympics their lowest medal haul in boxing since 1968, but a month before the London Games, Teofilo Stevenson died a premature death at age 60. That's phenomenally young, especially for a guy who never fought a round of pro boxing.
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Best Coast
- Welterweight
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Re: The worst year for Cuban boxing ?
You make some good points but your claim that Ortiz is in his mid-40s is ridiculous!! Cuban record-keeping for their amateur boxers is generally meticulous because boxers (& baseball players) are taken from their families at a young age and placed in sports "academies" where they are strictly supervised and groomed for their specific sport.Ron C wrote: ↑12 Mar 2018, 18:04 It sucks Ortiz started so late. I'm convinced he's in his Mid 40's. Either way, I feel like if he turned pro several years earlier he really could've had a glorious career. He was schooling Wilder before fatigue got the best of him. It looks like Lara is the last one standing. I went to a lot of local boxing matches in south Florida from 2008-2012, Cubans were on all of the cards. And you knew it was gonna be a blowout. Really surprising to see them all get picked off like this
Ortiz was born in March 1979 and was 19 when he competed in his first Cuban National Championships (not counting Youth or Junior Championships) in January 1999 (losing by stoppage to Felix Savon in his Prelims bout). If your claim of him being in his mid-40s was true, why would they hold him out of the Nationals until he was 25?!?
http://amateur-boxing.strefa.pl/Nationa ... a1999.html
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asdfjkl
- Heavyweight

Re: The worst year for Cuban boxing ?
I don't know who they are, but Ortiz and Rigo sure would have done a better job 5 years ago.lookingaround87 wrote: ↑11 Mar 2018, 16:59Barthelamy is 31 and Dorticos is 32. Barrera could have fought Bivol 5 years ago and it wouldn't have made any difference. He also ducked Kovalev who is hardly a spring chicken.
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lookingaround87
- Light Heavyweight
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Re: The worst year for Cuban boxing ?
You don't know who they are? Read the original post in this thread. And Rigo wouldn't have done anything against Loma at any point in his career.asdfjkl wrote: ↑13 Mar 2018, 02:19I don't know who they are, but Ortiz and Rigo sure would have done a better job 5 years ago.lookingaround87 wrote: ↑11 Mar 2018, 16:59Barthelamy is 31 and Dorticos is 32. Barrera could have fought Bivol 5 years ago and it wouldn't have made any difference. He also ducked Kovalev who is hardly a spring chicken.
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asdfjkl
- Heavyweight

Re: The worst year for Cuban boxing ?
Lollookingaround87 wrote: ↑13 Mar 2018, 03:57You don't know who they are? Read the original post in this thread. And Rigo wouldn't have done anything against Loma at any point in his career.asdfjkl wrote: ↑13 Mar 2018, 02:19I don't know who they are, but Ortiz and Rigo sure would have done a better job 5 years ago.lookingaround87 wrote: ↑11 Mar 2018, 16:59
Barthelamy is 31 and Dorticos is 32. Barrera could have fought Bivol 5 years ago and it wouldn't have made any difference. He also ducked Kovalev who is hardly a spring chicken.
Re: The worst year for Cuban boxing ?
Thanks Best! Regarding Teofilo, I couldn't believe that lack of coverage (respect) for him when he passed. He was a monster. I was lucky to see live the Bobick massacre a year after Bobick beat him at the pan-am games. Bobick...disappointing.Best Coast wrote: ↑12 Mar 2018, 23:01Great point!! The legendary US team really steamrolled them that year in the Olympics
2012 was not a very good year for them either. Not only was 2012 Olympics their lowest medal haul in boxing since 1968, but a month before the London Games, Teofilo Stevenson died a premature death at age 60. That's phenomenally young, especially for a guy who never fought a round of pro boxing.![]()
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danconnollyeire
- Light Heavyweight
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Re: The worst year for Cuban boxing ?
So, now Lara joins the list.
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Ruthless-RKO
- Welterweight
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Re: The worst year for Cuban boxing ?
whose the best cuban pro not coming off a loss
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Ruthless-RKO
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Thomastearns
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Re: The worst year for Cuban boxing ?
danconnollyeire wrote: ↑16 Mar 2018, 11:27Nah, Cuba's best have been winning medal after medal. Their best rarely turn pro
The entire landscape of 1970s HW boxing might have been different if Stevenson had turned pro. His style still looks uncannily modern all these decades later.
Good for him that he stuck to his principles, but an enormous missed opportunity for pro boxing.