Did he get KO'd in sparring? get injured?
Any info fight fans?
Cooney KO'd Lyle in one, the thread I found on Lyle didn't have much information so I'm 'upping' this in the hope of more information.phil wrote:Can't remember Cooney fighting Lyle.............!!
There is an earlier thread in the archives on LYLE.......have a look there.
Phil
I don't know why Ron Lyle finally gave up but he made a comeback 15 years after losing to Cooney.Vetteguy99 wrote:Jerry Cooney- it was unfair for Ron he was the Ray Mercer of his
day only better. By the time Cooney got to him it was a slaughter.
Thanks for the feedback, that makes a lot of sense, cheers. If Big George does make his comback next year lets hope Lyle, Shavers and Holmes etc don't get any comback urges either.Neil (The Bounty) Hunter wrote:ron lyle made a comeback in 1995 in the hopes of a rematch with world heavyweight champion george foreman.
when advised the fight was not a possibility by the foreman people, ron lyle retired again.
damn ive never been called a mindless shill before!terap wrote:Neil is a shill who parrots the media talking points on the media-created "heroes."
Like all of his kind, Neil is mindless, and can only offer insults which are irrevelant to the subject of boxing.
That is because he has no idea what boxing is.
Neil and his kind are disturbed by anything by does not lick the ground for ttheir sell pathetic and redundant sell of the media talking points they parrot.
All I was saying was Norton 'may' have got chinned early by a big hitter like Cooney. IMO Norton was a better fighter than Cooney but even Norton admitted in a interview I read he was vulnerable early to big punchers. Once Kenny got warmed up he was a hell of a fighter. Foreman has stated many times he knew to beat Norton he had to get him out of there early, because if Kenny got warmed up he could be in troubleterap wrote:I love the comment that
"Norton may have always struggled with Cooney at any time in his career. Norton could be chinned early as we all know and with Cooneys big left hook...... who knows? IF Norton gets through the first three rounds, and gets warmed up he could grind down Cooney for a late stoppage. But for the first three rounds it's a pick em fight."
DO you realize that this same Ken Norton fought Ali a TOTAL OF 49 ROUNDS without getting knocked down once?
Do you realize that Ali fought this same Ken Norton THREE TIMES without ever being able to beat him convincingly?
What kind of comment have you made on Ali's punching power---AND his overall ability as a fighter.
Quite a comment that is on Ali's "abilities."
Fair point Terap, but I started this thread just to ask the question if anybody knew why his comback stopped as it usually takes a brutal KO by a much lesser fighter to mak them stop. I was just curious thats all.terap wrote:How about a thread on Ron Lyle when he was good?
Not when he was a shot "dead body" for others to pad their records with.
Although I didn't like the mocking tone of your reply to my 'Coonet/Norton' post I have to say I agree with most of your points in the above post. I have the Lyle V Shavers fight, and I've read many times that Shavers always believes Lyle got a long count in that one. I'ts been a while since I've wached it so I wont comment at this point, but I do remember that Shavers told me Lyle was the hardest puncher he ever met.terap wrote:What were Ron Lyle's best wins?
His best fights?
Lyle had 51 fights, won 43, with 31 KO's, lost 7, 1 draw
I remember Jimmy Young told me about the Lyle-Shavers fight.
He said Shavers flattened Lyle, Lyle got up went into a corner--put his shoulder in front of his chin--(Young demonstrated)--covered up. Then came back to KO Shavers.
That was a shootout like the Lyle-Foreman fight.
Young said Lyle was a good puncher (others he named were Shavers, Quarry, and Foreman) and had good combinations.
Of course Young was Lyle's nemesis---beating Lyle twice and sidetracking his career.
Lyle of course was robbed in his fight with Ali.
After the fight Lyle cornerman Cickie Ferraro said of the stoppage, "It wasn't kosher."
Lyle himself said after the fight, "I won every round, man."
I saw Lyle fight against Baltimore heavyweight Larry Middleton---a strange fighter who had some characteristics of a top level fighter (a good chin, good infighter, good at creating the right distance between himself and his opponent)
but also had no effective offense.
I never saw a fighter exactly like that.
Lyle had KO'd Middleton (in a surprise---that fight made Lyle noticed for the first time) in an earlier fight.
In the fight I saw Lyle won a decision over Middleton.
I also saw Middleton lose a decision to Bonavena.
When Lyle took off his robe before the fight, a spectator sitting near me said to me, "He's built like King Kong , but he fights like a fag."
I think the guy was referring to Lyle's fight with Quarry.
I have the impression Lyle froze in his fight with Quarry.
Lyle had only fought out west before that (Denver, Colorado).
His fight with Quarry was his first fight in New York--in Madison Square Garden.
Lyle fought in a stiff, wooden way.
Quarry was much looser, more relaxed psychologically.
I think Lyle was a better fighter than Quarry. But he lost that fight.
Lyle beat Jimmy Ellis, Buster Mathis, Gregorio Peralta, Oscar Bonavena, Ernie Shavers, Joe Bugner.
His "fight" with Cooney once he was washed up was garbage--as were the "wins" Cooney had over Norton and Jimmy Young.
Those were for the mindless sheep to swallow.
Terap I've just this minute got it off my shelf, it's from Boxing News 15th August 2003. It's very interesting but quite sad at times when talking about his drink and drug problems. At the time of writting he had been clean for 4 months, I hope he still is. The man seems to have a remarkable memory abouts his career, dates, times etc thats why I'm so interested in the extra fights he claimes to have have had.terap wrote:"I read in a recent Jimmy Young interview that Young thought "Quarry would have given me a lot of problems". "
Where did you see this interview?
What else can you tell about it?
I have no idea wether these extre fights were all at the end of his career or spaced throughout his entire career.terap wrote:I have no interest in Young's later "fights."
I have a great interest in his career up to the Foreman fight--and not beyond.