EASTMAN/ELCOCK FRIDAY
EASTMAN/ELCOCK FRIDAY
Views on this from anyone. Eastman on all known form wins this comforatably so they tell us but I have a hunch this could be much harder than he and others feel. If he relies too much on just bombing out Elcock I can see the brummie nicking rounds here and there and if he is still standing at the end it could be pretty close.
Not sure how much Howard wants it now, still think he is capable of upping his game at times but strangely this may be only when he is under pressure of hurt.
If Wayne is fiddling his way through nicking points and covering well not sure Eastman will be sufficiently threatened to do anything but plod forward and through the jab and odd combo and if this goes 12 that might not be enough.
Now I know we have some Elcock fans on here who can give there view but anyone in general got any thoughts, intriguing fight, shame its not on tv.
Not sure how much Howard wants it now, still think he is capable of upping his game at times but strangely this may be only when he is under pressure of hurt.
If Wayne is fiddling his way through nicking points and covering well not sure Eastman will be sufficiently threatened to do anything but plod forward and through the jab and odd combo and if this goes 12 that might not be enough.
Now I know we have some Elcock fans on here who can give there view but anyone in general got any thoughts, intriguing fight, shame its not on tv.
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DavidPayne
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Old bones Ian
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Eastman hasn't been impressive in his last couple of fights, he seems content to just do enough in fights, which has been a critisism of him for a number of years. He now seems to throw alot of pitter pat punches, plus also he hasn't fought a genuine Middle for a couple of years, both Williams and Ashira were blown up light middles.
Elcock is a genuine middle, and has good skills, but needs to believe in himself more He was well beat when facing Scott Dann the last time he stepped up a level.
If Elcock is on top of his game and Eastman is fighting within himself then Elcock might be able to squeeze a points win. But Eastman will again start favourite, he'll probably do enough to win on points, or if he does decide to impress a stoppage in 10
Elcock is a genuine middle, and has good skills, but needs to believe in himself more He was well beat when facing Scott Dann the last time he stepped up a level.
If Elcock is on top of his game and Eastman is fighting within himself then Elcock might be able to squeeze a points win. But Eastman will again start favourite, he'll probably do enough to win on points, or if he does decide to impress a stoppage in 10
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TerribleTerry
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Brummie Wayne Elcock challenges Londoner Howard Eastman for the British middleweight title at the SkyDome in Coventry on Friday.
Elcock has won three on the spin since he was outscored for the same belt by hard-hitting Scott Dann in Plymouth in September 2005 (the first British title fight scored with three judges). They include a revenge stoppage of Scot Lawrence Murphy in five rounds (a man who once crushed him in 148 seconds) and an eight-round stoppage of perennial contender Steve Bendall for the English middleweight title last time out in December. Stylish Wayne, the mandatory challenger, looks to be hitting hard and needs to show more fire against Eastman than he did against Dann, in what was a dreary encounter.
At 33, this amounts to what could be his last chance.
So to Eastman, a consummate boxer-puncher who won the title (vacated by Dann) with a 12-round stoppage of Stockwell's Richard Williams at York Hall in December, a fight he could probably have won earlier. And he looked poor outscoring Kenyan Evans Ashira for the Commonwealth belt in little Dudley Town Hall four months later.
A former two-time world title challenger and European champ, 36-year-old Howard struggles to get 'up' for lesser fights these days. He cleared a million dollars challenging Bernard Hopkins for the undisputed middleweight crown in February 2005 in Los Angeles (outpointed) and then lost world class match-ups to Arthur Abraham and Edison Miranda, for which he was also paid handsomely. His attitude in the build-up to Ashira was so "Who cares?", Sky Sports (ponces) decided not to screen this fight.
So Elcock will really fancy his chances on his own Midlands turf. The former BT engineer has lost only to Murphy and Dann in 19 fights and proved his character in that rematch with Murphy, who was down three times. Wayne punches well, boxes well, moves well and takes a punch well (Murphy stunner apart, but Dann was no slouch). One of those complete fighters.
It adds up to a difficult assignment for Eastman - a demotivated Eastman. If the Battersea Bomber turns up, there can only be one winner. Howard, who has never been floored, has lost only to William Joppy, Hopkins, Abraham and Miranda in 46 outings (only Miranda stopped him), so he's never lost to a British fighter. Smooth and spiteful-hitting, he stopped respective opponent Dann in three rounds in 2003 and it's hard to ignore his stoppage of Williams nine months ago, a slick, stiff-hitting operator with plenty of experience - just like Elcock. Eastman took his time, broke Williams up and (finally) took him out.
Much the same scenario looks likely on Friday.
Elcock has won three on the spin since he was outscored for the same belt by hard-hitting Scott Dann in Plymouth in September 2005 (the first British title fight scored with three judges). They include a revenge stoppage of Scot Lawrence Murphy in five rounds (a man who once crushed him in 148 seconds) and an eight-round stoppage of perennial contender Steve Bendall for the English middleweight title last time out in December. Stylish Wayne, the mandatory challenger, looks to be hitting hard and needs to show more fire against Eastman than he did against Dann, in what was a dreary encounter.
At 33, this amounts to what could be his last chance.
So to Eastman, a consummate boxer-puncher who won the title (vacated by Dann) with a 12-round stoppage of Stockwell's Richard Williams at York Hall in December, a fight he could probably have won earlier. And he looked poor outscoring Kenyan Evans Ashira for the Commonwealth belt in little Dudley Town Hall four months later.
A former two-time world title challenger and European champ, 36-year-old Howard struggles to get 'up' for lesser fights these days. He cleared a million dollars challenging Bernard Hopkins for the undisputed middleweight crown in February 2005 in Los Angeles (outpointed) and then lost world class match-ups to Arthur Abraham and Edison Miranda, for which he was also paid handsomely. His attitude in the build-up to Ashira was so "Who cares?", Sky Sports (ponces) decided not to screen this fight.
So Elcock will really fancy his chances on his own Midlands turf. The former BT engineer has lost only to Murphy and Dann in 19 fights and proved his character in that rematch with Murphy, who was down three times. Wayne punches well, boxes well, moves well and takes a punch well (Murphy stunner apart, but Dann was no slouch). One of those complete fighters.
It adds up to a difficult assignment for Eastman - a demotivated Eastman. If the Battersea Bomber turns up, there can only be one winner. Howard, who has never been floored, has lost only to William Joppy, Hopkins, Abraham and Miranda in 46 outings (only Miranda stopped him), so he's never lost to a British fighter. Smooth and spiteful-hitting, he stopped respective opponent Dann in three rounds in 2003 and it's hard to ignore his stoppage of Williams nine months ago, a slick, stiff-hitting operator with plenty of experience - just like Elcock. Eastman took his time, broke Williams up and (finally) took him out.
Much the same scenario looks likely on Friday.
Last edited by bennie on 25 Sep 2007, 04:17, edited 1 time in total.
I hope that Elcock turns up for a scrap - this could be a good war for a few rounds, but i suspect Elcock will try to play some chess match and just get turned over by Eastman.
It seems that this bout was announced years ago - i had totally forgotten about it!
On the same weekend as Pavlik v Taylor, Eastman could have potentially been there... if only..
It seems that this bout was announced years ago - i had totally forgotten about it!
On the same weekend as Pavlik v Taylor, Eastman could have potentially been there... if only..
Re: EASTMAN/ELCOCK FRIDAY
You're shitting me? I was looking forward to this one!GLOBALBOX wrote:...shame its not on tv.
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Max Molyneux
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oliverfennell
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I think they're showing the Arce fight on Friday instead. Wtf! Week and a half old tape of a Mexican bantamweight Vs a journeyman, or a big domestic fight, live. What would you rather watch?Wales wrote:Shit you not, Sky knocked it back. They also allegedly knocked back Vuma Moore, instead opting for Facey Moore. Makes you wonder doesnt it.
No, jamie was injured in the week before the contest, Thompson took the fight at 6 days notice first time round. The fight was due to be for the WBC international title and Im pretty sure the WBC said they'd sanction Moore Vuma (this time) as a title eliminator eliminator (if that makes sense). Sky refused and instead agreed Facey Moore.oliverfennell wrote:Wasn't it that they knocked back Vuma-Morre, leading to Vuma-Thompson?Wales wrote:Shit you not, Sky knocked it back. They also allegedly knocked back Vuma Moore, instead opting for Facey Moore. Makes you wonder doesnt it.
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Old bones Ian
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DG.
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Podmore_Birmingham
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Old bones Ian
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DG.
- Heavyweight

I don't thnk Elcock will last, I think Howard will be stung by the NO TV thing and 'try' and put on a different knid of performance..Podmore_Birmingham wrote:I think Eastman wins on points, probably takes over in commanding fashion after six or seven rounds. Like Bennie pointed out, its likely to be a similar scenario to that of the Richard Williams fight.
Tom Podmore
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TerribleTerry
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Is he really that ar5ed at this stage in his career by things like the TV snub?DG. wrote:I don't thnk Elcock will last, I think Howard will be stung by the NO TV thing and 'try' and put on a different knid of performance..Podmore_Birmingham wrote:I think Eastman wins on points, probably takes over in commanding fashion after six or seven rounds. Like Bennie pointed out, its likely to be a similar scenario to that of the Richard Williams fight.
Tom Podmore
Its a shame that the fans have been robbed of the chance to see this fight on TV by Howard's no show in Dudley, but I am hoping Elcock is gonna catch him demotivated and on the slide..
C'mon you Brummie!
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DG.
- Heavyweight

TerribleTerry wrote:Is he really that ar5ed at this stage in his career by things like the TV snub?DG. wrote:I don't thnk Elcock will last, I think Howard will be stung by the NO TV thing and 'try' and put on a different knid of performance..Podmore_Birmingham wrote:I think Eastman wins on points, probably takes over in commanding fashion after six or seven rounds. Like Bennie pointed out, its likely to be a similar scenario to that of the Richard Williams fight.
Tom Podmore
Its a shame that the fans have been robbed of the chance to see this fight on TV by Howard's no show in Dudley, but I am hoping Elcock is gonna catch him demotivated and on the slide..
C'mon you Brummie!
I think Howard will realise that he is never going to get anywhere oif tv do not show him.
He could even get a voluntary shot at the world title (doubtful) but without tv, rival promoters will not offer him shit!
He better be bothered or he will not earn good money!
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Mr Gunn
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Twinkle Toes
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