To certain extent, he let his disdain of Leonard take the better of him. He truly belived that he would walk through Ray and mess his "pretty face".silkov wrote:It was a close fight but the fact is Leonard outboxed a very sluggish and ringworn looking Hagler... many people forget that Leonard won just about all the first 6 rounds and then had the better finish... at the end of the day it was never the robbery that manay have cliamed and really Hagler only has himself and his management to blame for all the concessions they made to Ray in order to get the fight....
Who won? Hagler or Leonard?
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ringsider
- Heavyweight

Hagler was a plodding slower than molasses southpaw, who took his only advantage and chance he had...his goofy ass slapsy patsy south paw stance, and gave it away by fighting like a man (right handed) the first 4 rounds. Leonard took full advantage of the slower stupid over rated Hagler and gave him a boxing lesson in quickness and foot work...HAGLER WAS EXPOSED FOR THE CHUMP HE WAS!!!

A rematch would have been worse because Leonard had Hagler figured out. Hagler was one dimensional. Leonard would have made him look more ridiculous a 2nd time around......

A rematch would have been worse because Leonard had Hagler figured out. Hagler was one dimensional. Leonard would have made him look more ridiculous a 2nd time around......
Last edited by ringsider on 06 Oct 2006, 14:36, edited 3 times in total.
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pundit
- Heavyweight

Most memorable thing about the fight for me, was how my best friend (who hated Leonard) told me that only Hollywood celebrities wanted Leonard to win, and real boxing fans were for Hagler. When the fighters were announced, around two thirds of the crowd at Caesar's Palace were very vocally supporting Hagler, by the end of the 4th round, about a third of them had gone over to cheering for Leonard, because he was doing what few believed was possible. Personally I'll never understand how anyone could think Hagler won, Leonard swept the first 4 rounds easily, and after that Hagler would have needed 6 of the last 8 just to gain a draw. As I've said before, Jose Guerra's having Leonard ahead by 8 was way out, but Dave Moretti having Hagler up by 2 was pretty silly as well.
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Eric the Viking
- Heavyweight

- Posts: 1354
- Joined: 03 Apr 2003, 21:40
Bottom line is, Hagler started much too slow and allowed Leonard to steal too many rounds - you can't just give away the first 4 or 5 rounds and expect to win a decision. I've heard someone describe it nicely as "Hagler fought a 15-round pace in a 12-round fight." Unfortunately for the Hagler fans (including me) it's not who lands the better shots, it's who wins the most rounds.
I don't begrudge SRL his win, but I disrespect him for not giving a rematch.
I don't begrudge SRL his win, but I disrespect him for not giving a rematch.
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Ambling Alp
- Heavyweight

- Posts: 3627
- Joined: 15 Jul 2005, 22:31
I pretty much agree with Seamus and others who think Hagler got too far behind and that Leonard won.
Hagler did almost nothing in the first 4 rounds. You don't deserve to win rounds simply by standing around looking tough.
If you just score each round individually (like a judge does) and objectively (like a judge is supposed to) there is no way that Hagler won more than 5 rounds.
Hagler did almost nothing in the first 4 rounds. You don't deserve to win rounds simply by standing around looking tough.
If you just score each round individually (like a judge does) and objectively (like a judge is supposed to) there is no way that Hagler won more than 5 rounds.
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thunderfromdownunder
- Heavyweight

- Posts: 1789
- Joined: 15 May 2005, 06:55
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Syntax Error
- Heavyweight

- Posts: 9009
- Joined: 22 Apr 2005, 08:00
Good call about Hagler walking away.Slapsie Maxie wrote:Very Very close
At the time, I gave it to SRL. However, on a recent re-watch, I have to say, Hagler won it. He threw the better punches while SRL caught the judges' eye with the flurrys of punches at the end of each round
Hagler's ability to walk away from the sport makes him a real great in my eyes
Slapsie
I wish more fighters would take his lead.
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Syntax Error
- Heavyweight

- Posts: 9009
- Joined: 22 Apr 2005, 08:00
Absolutely spot on.Eric the Viking wrote:Bottom line is, Hagler started much too slow and allowed Leonard to steal too many rounds - you can't just give away the first 4 or 5 rounds and expect to win a decision. I've heard someone describe it nicely as "Hagler fought a 15-round pace in a 12-round fight." Unfortunately for the Hagler fans (including me) it's not who lands the better shots, it's who wins the most rounds.
I don't begrudge SRL his win, but I disrespect him for not giving a rematch.
Hagler's arrogance cost him that fight.
He seemed more interested in insulting Ray, proving that he couldn't be outboxed & needlessly switching between orthodox & southpaw.
It might have been OK to do that in 1981, but by 1987, he was slower than than an Arthritic tortoise!
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funso banjo baby
- Heavyweight

- Posts: 4417
- Joined: 23 Sep 2005, 11:05
I didn't see it as arrogance on Haglers part to be honest, just poor choice of tactics. As great a fighter as Hagler was he did from time to time make tactical mistakes such as with Duran when he tried to counterpunch the master counterpuncher.Syntax Error wrote:Hagler's arrogance cost him that fight.
I sometimes think this may have been due to Hagler feeling undervalued as a Champion and always feeling he had something to prove and so therefore, sometimes he tried to beat the fighter in front of him at their own game, which to a greater or lesser degree backfired on him sometimes.
In all honesty I think there is a case for either winning. My only question would be about the judges decisions based on events. For instance do we know that the judges that were obviously impressed by with SRL's flurries of pitty pat arm punches, were consistent in all fights they judged, or only when Leonard used that tactic?
Yes, but in the fight vs Hagler, they were nothing but scoring punches. Sugar danced from after the 4th until the last thrity in every round and let off some combos that landed on forearms and elbows. The crowd was insanely pro-Leonard that they went nuts for everything he did. The fact that they were counted as scoring punches was totally BS.Decagon wrote:Leonard stopped a number of people with those "pitty pat arm punches." Leonard wasn't the type of fighter who threw punches just to score. He threw them to hurt, either by the punches themselves, or by using the flurries to create openings for bigger shots.Andy Mac wrote:In all honesty I think there is a case for either winning. My only question would be about the judges decisions based on events. For instance do we know that the judges that were obviously impressed by with SRL's flurries of pitty pat arm punches, were consistent in all fights they judged, or only when Leonard used that tactic?
I don't care what side of the fence you stand on, 118-110 is definitely someone watching a different fight than everyone else saw. Definitely a plant.
I've watched this fight probably 50 times in my life, and the way I've scored it is 1-4 and 6 for Leonard, 5 7-12 for Hagler.
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Eric the Viking
- Heavyweight

- Posts: 1354
- Joined: 03 Apr 2003, 21:40
I have seen many of Leonards fight, not least just moments ago when as an intro to the contender finale they showed him stopping Tommy Hearns 25 yrs ago. At no time in the Hagler fight did he throw punches with the same force or intention.Decagon wrote:Leonard stopped a number of people with those "pitty pat arm punches." Leonard wasn't the type of fighter who threw punches just to score. He threw them to hurt, either by the punches themselves, or by using the flurries to create openings for bigger shots.Andy Mac wrote:In all honesty I think there is a case for either winning. My only question would be about the judges decisions based on events. For instance do we know that the judges that were obviously impressed by with SRL's flurries of pitty pat arm punches, were consistent in all fights they judged, or only when Leonard used that tactic?
No doubt that Leonard was gone at the end. I didn't think he'd make it out of the 12th. Hagler was in control at the end and looked to be walking him down. He ran out of time. Hagler should have insisted on 15 but if my memory serves me correctly wasn't the Mugabi fight scheduled for 12 too???
For a fight that has been talked about endlessly terence has brought an interesting and fresh view on Marvin's performance.
However you score the fight I still think it was ana chievement for Leonard to go the ditance with Hagler.
For a fight that has been talked about endlessly terence has brought an interesting and fresh view on Marvin's performance.
However you score the fight I still think it was ana chievement for Leonard to go the ditance with Hagler.
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Syntax Error
- Heavyweight

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