25 Years Ago Today: James Toney Scores One Of The Most Memorable KO’s Of His Career…

Post Reply
Ruthless-RKO
Welterweight
Posts: 101746
Joined: 24 Apr 2016, 11:59

25 Years Ago Today: James Toney Scores One Of The Most Memorable KO’s Of His Career…

Post by Ruthless-RKO »



James Toney really was a sensational fighter. Back in his prime, and even a good few years later, when Toney was still a genuine force, the naturally gifted but also exquisitely trained boxer from Ann Arbour – coached as he was by Bill Miller and later Freddie Roach, really two of the very best in the history of the game – delighted the purists along with those who love a war and a nasty KO.

One of Toney’s real masterpieces came on this day in July a quarter of a century ago, in a terrific battle with Prince Charles Williams. The two met in Las Vegas (with superstar Oscar De La Hoya topping the bill, if not providing anything like as memorable a fight in crushing a faded Jorge Paez).

Toney, already a two-weight world champ, was making the third defence of his IBF 168 pound title; the one he had brutalized an incredibly game yet woefully outclassed Iran Barkley to win. Williams was a former long-reigning IBF light-heavyweight champ who was dropping down in weight to challenge “Lights Out.”

Never before, or arguably afterwards, would Toney’ s ring moniker prove so apt.

The action was breathtaking right from the start – quite literally. Williams had vowed ahead of the fight to get in close, take the heat to Toney and work him to the point where the defending champ could not breathe. It was a brutal pace and the perhaps underrated challenger (not in any way underrated by Toney, who knew full well he had a tough one on his hands; the kind of fight he truly relished, indeed lived for back then) was winning rounds.

Williams also banged shut Toney’s left eye, as in tight as a fist shut. It was already Toney’s most physically demanding fight. Sure, Toney had been outboxed for long periods by Michael Nunn, before he came on to score the 11th round KO, but Williams was successful in roughing Toney up, he was out-working him and he was busting him up.

But Toney, showing his greatness allong with his ability to pace a fight quite brilliantly, came on in the second half of the fight. Able to make just a little more space between himself and Williams, Toney got his crisper shots going. Williams was fading, as was his punch output, while Toney was enjoying his second wind.

It was close all the way and some wondered who would get the decision. But Toney had a masterstroke to unleash to close the show. A clean right hand to the head that was followed by a jab sent Williams reeling. In absolute highlight reel fashion, Williams crashed, his body arched as he crumbled in almost slow motion

There were just 15-seconds left on the clock. As it turned out, Toney would have won the decision, yet his awesome KO assured many millions of fans that yes, he was the best fighter in the world.

Toney had put it all together in winning a fight that should be remembered for far more than its spectacular ending. Indeed, there was a time when James Nathaniel Toney really was an incredible fighter.
elmersalsa
Heavyweight
Heavyweight
Posts: 15708
Joined: 02 Feb 2003, 03:50

Re: 25 Years Ago Today: James Toney Scores One Of The Most Memorable KO’s Of His Career…

Post by elmersalsa »

He was one of my favorite fighters. He had tremendous boxing skills, will, determination and warrior's mentality...He really loved to fight. He forsake training in most of his main fights, but he was something.
gilgamesh
Cruiserweight
Posts: 46561
Joined: 02 Sep 2010, 16:21

Re: 25 Years Ago Today: James Toney Scores One Of The Most Memorable KO’s Of His Career…

Post by gilgamesh »

That's a fantastic one. The only one of his that I enjoy more is the one over Tim Littles because he HAD to get it or they were gonna stop the fight. He got it. Emphatically.

I think this fight was nearly even too so he avoided some potentially too close for comfort scorecards here.
Ambling Alp II
Super Middleweight
Posts: 15182
Joined: 04 Nov 2012, 18:31

Re: 25 Years Ago Today: James Toney Scores One Of The Most Memorable KO’s Of His Career…

Post by Ambling Alp II »

Toney was often a fun guy to watch. Sometimes he would get lazy. However, when he was in the right mind set he was very exciting. The fights with Nunn and Jirov were entertaining well.
gilgamesh
Cruiserweight
Posts: 46561
Joined: 02 Sep 2010, 16:21

Re: 25 Years Ago Today: James Toney Scores One Of The Most Memorable KO’s Of His Career…

Post by gilgamesh »

Ambling Alp II wrote: 06 Aug 2019, 16:03 Toney was often a fun guy to watch. Sometimes he would get lazy. However, when he was in the right mind set he was very exciting. The fights with Nunn and Jirov were entertaining well.
The Jirov fight is probably the single best fight he was ever in, the Nunn fight is highly memorable because of the dramatic turnaround. Anytime a guy is able to overcome being WAY behind on the cards like that, to score a come from behind KO it's memorable for sure. Because it doesn't happen all that often.
overhand_right
Heavyweight
Heavyweight

Re: 25 Years Ago Today: James Toney Scores One Of The Most Memorable KO’s Of His Career…

Post by overhand_right »

It's a shame he had to pull out of the Jameel McCline fight in 2004 with injury. That would have been fascinating to behold.
littlepug
Light Heavyweight
Posts: 5351
Joined: 03 Jul 2012, 07:17

Re: 25 Years Ago Today: James Toney Scores One Of The Most Memorable KO’s Of His Career…

Post by littlepug »

gilgamesh wrote: 06 Aug 2019, 16:07
Ambling Alp II wrote: 06 Aug 2019, 16:03 Toney was often a fun guy to watch. Sometimes he would get lazy. However, when he was in the right mind set he was very exciting. The fights with Nunn and Jirov were entertaining well.
The Jirov fight is probably the single best fight he was ever in, the Nunn fight is highly memorable because of the dramatic turnaround. Anytime a guy is able to overcome being WAY behind on the cards like that, to score a come from behind KO it's memorable for sure. Because it doesn't happen all that often.
Yeah he was behind but Nunn was made to work bloody hard for it and Toney was getting closer and closer towards the end, Toney was behind but always in the fight.
gilgamesh
Cruiserweight
Posts: 46561
Joined: 02 Sep 2010, 16:21

Re: 25 Years Ago Today: James Toney Scores One Of The Most Memorable KO’s Of His Career…

Post by gilgamesh »

littlepug wrote: 06 Aug 2019, 17:32
gilgamesh wrote: 06 Aug 2019, 16:07

The Jirov fight is probably the single best fight he was ever in, the Nunn fight is highly memorable because of the dramatic turnaround. Anytime a guy is able to overcome being WAY behind on the cards like that, to score a come from behind KO it's memorable for sure. Because it doesn't happen all that often.
Yeah he was behind but Nunn was made to work bloody hard for it and Toney was getting closer and closer towards the end, Toney was behind but always in the fight.
I felt like Toney took over and started sweeping the rounds from Round 8 onward. He gradually broke Nunn down, and started finding him more and more and more.
littlepug
Light Heavyweight
Posts: 5351
Joined: 03 Jul 2012, 07:17

Re: 25 Years Ago Today: James Toney Scores One Of The Most Memorable KO’s Of His Career…

Post by littlepug »

gilgamesh wrote: 06 Aug 2019, 17:50
littlepug wrote: 06 Aug 2019, 17:32
Yeah he was behind but Nunn was made to work bloody hard for it and Toney was getting closer and closer towards the end, Toney was behind but always in the fight.
I felt like Toney took over and started sweeping the rounds from Round 8 onward. He gradually broke Nunn down, and started finding him more and more and more.
Yeah, tell you what though, that was the best I’d seen Nunn for years, don’t know if he needed someone like Toney to bring it out of him.
keithmoonhangover
Cruiserweight
Posts: 16895
Joined: 16 Sep 2010, 10:42

Re: 25 Years Ago Today: James Toney Scores One Of The Most Memorable KO’s Of His Career…

Post by keithmoonhangover »

Toney is the most overrated boxer on these boards.

Legends don't lose in their prime to Dave Tiberi.
Post Reply