#boxing hall of fame
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Mickey Walker was an American professional boxer who held both the world welterweight and world middleweight championships at different points in his career. Walker is widely considered one of the greatest fighters ever, with ESPN ranking him 17th on their list of the 50 Greatest Boxers of All-Time and boxing historian Bert Sugar placing him 11th in his Top 100 Fighters catalog.
Statistical website BoxRec rates Walker as the 6th best middleweight ever, while The Ring Magazine founder Nat Fleischer placed him at No. 4. The International Boxing Research Organization ranked Walker as the No. 4 middleweight and the No. 16 pound-for-pound fighter of all-time. Walker was inducted into the Ring magazine Hall of Fame in 1957 and the International Boxing Hall of Fame as a first-class member in 1990.
Boxing record- Total fights: 164, Wins: 131, Wins by KO: 60, Losses: 25, Draws: 6, No contests: 2
Born Edward Patrick Walker on July 13, 1901 and died on April 28, 1991 at the age of 79.
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This is a very basic RNG manipulation, but it's kind of funny I managed to do this in about 20 minutes? I think if I did it on actual cart, it'd take a lot longer because I'd reset every time Groudon KO'ed my breloom...
#i'll work on more advance manips once i get some save files in the hall of fame#i'll also be messing around with ace too#but for now#i have a funny groudon sitting in my box and looking pretty#pure rambling#i'll try to update my rng manip adventures here but i feel like i'll blog about it elsewhere#tentative...
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peep the inbox 🔥🔥 (slimecicle slimecicle slimecicle slimecicle slimecicle slimecicle slimecicle slimecicle slimecicle cayden slimecicle slimecicle slimecicle slimecicle slimecicle slimecicle slimecicle)
#i make yet anothet post just for me 👍#we have mail :]#ask box hall of fame#<- congratulations cayden. im scared of you <3#could not stress enough how hard i just laughed btw. The Giggler oh mh god#THE PIXILATED TO NORMAL TOOK ME OUTTTTT THAT ANIHILATED ME
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#adult collectors#adult collectibles#collectables#toys#action figures#mcu#figures#toy biz#multi packs#marvel#marvel comics#X-Men#exclusives#bishop#iceman II#card art#box art#feature apocalypse#battle ravaged wolverine#trading cards#danger room set#special collectors edition#captured sabertooth#gambit#nimrod#the uncanny X-Men#mutant hall of fame#professor x#magneto#archangel
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Little Mac was greatly based off a famous boxer who suffered from toxic masculinity🥊
#history#little mac#jake lamotta#punch out#the bronx bull#video game history#boxing#united states#toxic masculinity#nintendo#new york city#sports history#professional boxing#middleweight#bronx#mental health issues#video games#nintendo history#professional athletes#bully#nyc#super smash bros#super smash bros ultimate#gaming icons#mental health#international boxing hall of fame#sports#american history#nickys facts
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she diedrichs on my knickerbocker till bard union says I have to take a four hour break every thirty minutes
im dying
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"Mike Tyson", black and green ink on paper, 21 x 29,7 cm
#illustration#desenho#dessin#drawing#dibujo#zeichnung#ilustração#caricature#karikatur#portrait#portret#porträt#retrato#ritratto#kunst#moderne kunst#contemporary art#artists on tumblr#my art#mike tyson#iron mike#tyson#pascal kirchmair#ink drawing#boxing#boxer#heavyweight#champion#hall of fame#hall of legends
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Joe Louis and Jackie Robinson two of America's greatest athletes.
#major league baseball#hall of fame#baseball#mlb#jackie robinson#negro league baseball#joe louis#boxing#world war 2
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Just put half of my vinyl collection into discogs and its valuing it at $2.5k HA
Excuse the shitty display pic, this is from months ago but it goes to show ya, what exactly it goes to show ya i dont know but now if i tried to lay all my records out in a dog shit manner like this it would take up my whole living room
(Tags are important on this one)
#vinyl#records#i need to put in the other half#i have over 100 records though so it takes awhile#and fucking damn near none of them are scana le so ihave to manually do it#gotta love vintage records#the only reason my estimated value is so high is bc i have fucking half the beatles gd discography in mint condition orginial pressings#and ya know the funny thing is i DO NOT LIKE THE BEATLES ANS HAVE NEVER LISTENED TO THE RECORDS#bought a box of random vintage records and fucking half of them were original vintage bestles records#fuck the beatles#all my other records though are fucking perfection and i cherish them with my whole heart#i just keep the beatles records so 1) i have a cash cow if i so need it#and 2) so no one else gets these records. im doing people a favor#you shouldnt like the beatles. you dont want their records.#id have an even bigger collection but MY OLD BOSS STOLE HALF MY FUCKING RECORDS#my greta records are my babies#gvf vinyl#my ‘hall of fame’ records actually hung up make me chuckle
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John Henry Lewis started boxing professionally at the age of 14 and he managed to put together a spectacular career and leave the game while still a young man. Lewis was a hall of fame American boxer who held the World Light Heavyweight Boxing Title from 1935 to 1938. He had a total of 117 fights of which he won 103 with 60 by knockout. He lost 11 times and Joe Louis was the only man to stop him. He also had five draws. On the way up he fought Light Heavyweight Champion Maxie Rosenbloom five times, winning two and losing three. In their third fight Lewis dropped Rosenbloom five times.
John Henry Lewis was born on May 1, 1914 in Los Angeles, California and died on April 18, 1974 in Berkeley, California at the age of 59.
#john lewis Henry#love#boxing#hall of fame#light heavyweight#joe louis#maxie rosenbloom#california#boxing legend#black lives
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You are exactly the opposite of deranged for this. Possibly the most hinged one can be. Akin to shivering and shaking over admitting to having a hankering for plain white bread. The crux of this self-crucifixion is a 1 millisecond featured side character whose entire purpose is being an unreachable standard of conventional attractiveness you poor craven beast. Say it with your whole chest Ghost. You want to do /what/ precisely with this set of lines.
… i’ve stared at this for 5 minutes.
anon ur words speak miles to me but alas… i am Not saying what i want to do to Atsushi… perhaps we can open that book another time
#ghost's asks#hankering for plain white bread… DONT CALL ME OUT LIKE THAT </3#im a wuss i can’t say it… i would be mortified come morning if i were to#BUT I GENUINELY HAD TO REREAD THIS ASK FOR LIKE 5 MINUTES I WAS IN AWE#this is going in the ask box hall of fame along with glue anon <3
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youtube
#blockchain#black sissy#gay black boy#gayboy#submisive sissy#feminine sissy#food#thai boys love#boxing#donald trump#horror movie#black movies#gay movies#burger king#mcdonalds#kfc#thailand#bangkok#jesus christ#the lord of the rings#harry potter#viralpost#trending#asian movies#love money fame#football hall of fame#hell is a teenage girl#japan travel#50 likes#sexy bitch
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Phil Lesh, Founding Bassist of Grateful Dead, Dies at 84
Phil Lesh, Pioneering Bassist of the Grateful Dead, Passes Away at 84 Phil Lesh, the innovative bassist and a founding member of the legendary Grateful Dead, has passed away at the age of 84. His death was confirmed on his official Instagram account on Friday, though no additional details have been provided. Renowned for his creative approach to the bass guitar, Lesh redefined the role of the…
#bassist#Box of Rain#Dark Star#Grateful Dead#improvisation#Jerry Garcia#music history#music legend#obituary#Phil Lesh#Phil Lesh and Friends#Rock & Roll Hall of Fame#rock music#St. Stephen#Truckin&039;
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INTERVIEW: From Ring to Glory: Ivan Calderon Honored at Boxing Hall of Fame
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By Hector Franco
Follow @MrHector_Franco !function(d,s,id){var js,fjs=d.getElementsByTagName(s)[0],p=/^http:/.test(d.location)?'http':'https';if(!d.getElementById(id))(document, 'script', 'twitter-wjs'); Follow @Frontproofmedia!function(d,s,id){var js,fjs=d.getElementsByTagName(s)[0],p=/^http:/.test(d.location)?'http':'https';if(!d.getElementById(id))(document, 'script', 'twitter-wjs');
Published: June 09, 2024
The views and opinions expressed on this website are solely those of the original authors and other contributors. They do not necessarily represent those of Frontproof Media, the Frontproofmedia.com staff, and/or any/all contributors to this site.
Portions of this interview were done in collaboration with Fansided MMA.*
One of Puerto Rico’s most celebrated champions, Ivan Calderon (35-3-1, 6 KOs), will now receive his just due as he will be inducted into the International Boxing Hall-of-Fame as part of the 2024 class. Calderon was a two-division world champion, making 11 defenses of his WBO strawweight championship over a four-year reign from 2003 to 2007. He also won the WBO light flyweight champions and made six title defenses from 2007 to 2020. He is widely considered only second to Mexico’s Ricardo “Finito” Lopez as the greatest strawweight fighter of all time.
In a candid interview with Frontproof Media earlier this year, Calderon opened up about his emotions upon learning of his Hall of Fame induction. He also took the opportunity to reflect on his career, particularly his role as a pioneer in the lower weight classes. Calderon shared some of his most memorable performances and challenging fights, including the one he believes was instrumental in securing his place in the Hall of Fame.
He expresses his thoughts on the attention fighters in the lower weight classes are now receiving, including the increased pay they are getting. Calderon details some of the challenges he faced throughout his career, including the lack of money and marketing.
Calderon shared his thoughts on the current state of boxing in Puerto Rico and the promotional tactics used by promoters and fighters today. He also discussed the importance of connecting with fans in Puerto Rico to become a true star. Lastly, the Iron Boy revealed his dream of training a world champion.
HF: Congratulations on being inducted into the boxing Hall-of-Fame. What was the feeling like when you first heard that news?
IC: So when I first heard it, I didn't believe it. The first time they (IBHOF) called me, they thought I would be in 2017. In the other years, I knew I would not be ready to get in because there were many names, Floyd Mayweather, Miguel Cotto, Pacquiao, and all those kinds of boxers, and I knew I would not make it in those years. And in 2024, they just called me, and I said, "I know this the year, I know this the year. I don't get a lot of competition, so it's the year." And this was the year."
Struggles throughout career and thoughts current era
HF: So, how do you feel about the attention fighters like Chocolatito, Estrada, and Inoue are giving the weight classes now?
IC: I feel pissed. I wanted that moment because I knew I would get good pay, but it was not my time. I feel so happy they are getting good pay now, and they are making them fight in main events.
HF: What was the biggest struggle that you had in your career?
IC: The money. And the thing is that when I used to fight, I used to fight in big events with good names. I was opening the show or opening on TV when I used to fight a lot on Oscar De La Hoya's cards, Pacquiao's cards, and Miguel Cotto's cards. And I didn't really care if I was the main event or not.
Ivan Calderon’s best perfomance
HF: If you were to recommend a fight of Iván Calderón, what do you feel is your best performance or maybe your favorite fight of your career, where you were at your absolute best?
IC: In one of my best fights, I did everything, whatever I wanted, with Nelson Dieppa, the Puerto Rican guy. I think fans like the Hugo Cázares fights because he was the one who was killing all the Puerto Rican guys. He killed Nelson Dieppa and Nene Sánchez.
Puerto Rico was so mad that there were no fighters to beat him, and everybody just started saying, "The only one who could beat him is Iván." And I was like, "Nah, man, don't think about me. Homeboy's going to kill me. I'm a 105, he's a 108. So look at that." I waited a year, and I had to fight him.
HF: You moved up in weight to fight him.
IC: Yeah, because it was a business. They will pay you more, and you will stay a world champion. If you lose, you return to 105 and stay a world champion. You're just going to lose your undefeated record, and you're going to get paid. So that's why I decided to go up and make myself a champion in another weight class.
It helped me with the Hall of Fame. That gave me another push to be where I'm at right now in the Hall of Fame.
The current state of boxing in Puerto Rico
HF: Is boxing as popular on the island now as it was in the past?
IC: For me, fighters don't fight for the love of being a world champion. They don't have that feeling that when Miguel Cotto and I used to fight, we used to fight with our hearts. We used to fight because we wanted to defend our titles. Today, it's only money. "How much are they going to pay me?"
Today, they defend the title once, and they don't want to protect it until next year because they got a good payday, so they are surviving with that pay. They say, "Nah, don't worry, I'll fight next year." They're giving the boxers many opportunities just because they have an excuse; their hand is messed up, and they can't defend their title. So take the fucking title off of them if they can't defend them. They have to have a good excuse because many boxers are waiting behind that rank, and they wait a lot of years for the opportunity.
HF: Do you think, besides Amanda Serrano, we're probably at a low point in Puerto Rico for boxing's popularity then? It seems to be more about the fighters than the sport itself.
IC: Right now, Serrano is living in Puerto Rico, and she's trying to get boxing back to the popularity of when Tito or Miguel Cotto fought. So, we have five champions, and Serrano is at the top because they love how she fights. But if we get the other four, that is Matías. Everyone is talking about him.
The thing is that when he fights, he stays in his house, and nobody knows anything about him. He doesn't come out; nobody knows him. That's why he's not like Trinidad or Miguel Cotto. He's not helping the promoter to promote himself for people to know who's him, who's Subriel Matías.
CONNECTING WITH THE PEOPLE OF PUERTO RICO
HF: How important is that connection to the people there to make that transition happen, to make you a star over there?
IC: It's very important if you want to be a star and you want to be a boxer who everybody knows.
That's the kind of work that the people who promote boxers do, the way they should work promoting boxing, but because they have Facebook and Instagram, everybody is going to know them.
My mother doesn't get on Instagram. My mother and my father don't go to Facebook. They don't know who the fuck that is who's speaking about.
HF: Shakur Stevenson is a good fighter at lightweight, and Top Rank for some fights is promoting him as a Puerto Rican fighter. Other times in his last fight, they didn't do that. Against Oscar Valdez, they did. Can people on the island see through that? Is it just promotion more so than something legitimate?
IC: They're just trying to get some fans; that's all there is to it. And they know Puerto Rican fans; they're so different because they are 100% real crazy fans and go everywhere. It's not the same fan of the USA, the same fan of Latinos. They're so different. The Mexicans they got their fans, and they go all the way with their fighters; they don't even care if they lose the fight. They support them to the end.
THOUGHTS ON JAKE PAUL
HF: What are your thoughts on Jake Paul? Has he been a positive for boxing in Puerto Rico, or is it another way of using it to make fans and gain money for marketing?
IC: I have to be careful how I talk about that thing. But yeah, maybe it's something that helps them spread a lot, but for real, people don't care because if it's making money in Puerto Rico, if it's making boxing move in front, nobody's going to care.
They're going to say, 'Forget it, he's Puerto Rican. We love him.' They're not going to care. They're not going to care. They want business. They want the sport of boxing to keep on growing. If this man will put back boxing in Puerto Rico to work, he's the man. He's the Puerto Rican for us. Forget it.
Because if you are a Puerto Rican guy, you could excite him or you one of the ones that say, 'Nah, he's not Puerto Rican,' but you are a promoter, whatever. So help us then. You are not doing anything. You're Puerto Rican 100%, and you're not doing anything for us. Homeboys, not Puerto Rican, and he's giving things, helping in the gyms, hooking up the gyms, giving equipment, and all that. And you are from Puerto Rican, and you're not doing any of this stuff. And people from outside got to come and do all this stuff for us.
The beginning of the boxing journey and sparring sessions
HF: You were always relaxed in the ring and really smooth in the ring. Who were some of the people that you watched growing up that helped mold your style? Or was it just something that straight up you came up on your own?
IC: I started watching boxing when I was 17 and saw Mike Tyson lose against Buster Douglas. That was my first time seeing boxing.
It was like me; I started boxing here. I was living in the Bronx, but I started my career boxing in Puerto Rico when I was 17. Then I left when I was 18 or 19, and I did the Golden Gloves in New York. I did ten fights in New York. I was with Zab Judah, the same team. Then, I tried to make it to the Olympics in '96. I lost. Then, I was told to make it here in Puerto Rico, and from then on, I stayed here in Puerto Rico.
I used to fight a lot in school when I used to live in the Bronx, but I never liked boxing. When I came to Puerto Rico, I started looking at boxing because my brother went to a gym. I said, "Let me go with you just to see how it is." And then he stopped going. The next day, I said, "Let me try." And when I started hitting the bag or started moving, the trainer asked me, "You used to box?" I say, "Nah, I never put on a glove before. this this my first time." He says, "You move good. You know how to move?"
That was my vision. I learned from other fighters, looking at them, looking at the fighters, that I know are making the correct move. So I start looking at them and doing a lot of things about them. I used to see fighters in Puerto Rico, like Wilfredo Rivera, who fought Oscar De La Hoya. He was a technical fighter, and I used to spar with him, so I started learning.
I told a lot of people, "How do you learn how to move?" I say, "Because I used to spar with Tito, Miguel Cotto, and Shane Mosley. So I had to learn how to move, how to box because I didn't want to get hit."
HF: What was that experience like sparring with Oscar?
IC: When Oscar came to Puerto Rico, he did it twice, training in my gym where I used to train. The last time he came and Freddie Roach was the trainer, he told me, "Hey, can you help him spar?" I said, "Yeah, sure." And when I helped him spar in the last three rounds, I moved him around. He couldn't hit me, and I was getting him inside. I was outboxing him, and then when Freddie Roach saw that, he said, "Wow, a small powerful person moves a lot quicker."
And that's why he took Manny Pacquiao and Oscar De La Hoya's fight. That's what he says in history. He says, "I decided to take this fight because Iván Calderón show me that Pacquiao got the style, the moment, and to beat Oscar De La Hoya." That's why they took the fight because of my sparring with him.
Future Trainer
HF: What are some of the things that you're doing with your life right now and any projects that you have coming up that you want people to know about or pay attention to?
Right now, I'm a temp scout working for the government. I have already spent 21 years in administration. And like a trainer, the government has given me two gyms here.
I'm working with ESPN Knockout as a Spanish commentator. As a trainer, I have a few boxers, like Kiria Tapia, and a few boxers that are growing right now. So, my dream is to make a world champion out of my hand.
Maybe I could be one of the lucky ones like Freddie Roach. He was not a good boxer, but he's a good trainer, and many names come to his hands. Miguel Cotto, Pacquiao.
And thanks to the fans that have always been behind my career.
(Featured Photo: Laura Rauch/AP Photo)
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quite literally
you should see some of the asks I receive and never post lmao
Can i suckle upon your ankles daddy
Having followers on tumblr is a curse sometimes
#this ask in particular is incredibly cursed though#i’d love to see your unfiltered ask box#I assume it’s wonderfully terrifying#that’s how mine is anyway#hellsite hall of fame#staffs secret blog#asks#hellsite hall of fame curator’s bullshit
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दुनिया का पहला AI सॉफ्टवेयर इंजीनियर 'डेविन' हुआ लॉन्च, जानें क्या है खासियतें
दुनिया का पहला AI सॉफ्टवेयर इंजीनियर 'डेविन' हुआ लॉन्च, जानें क्या है खासियतें
AI Software Engineer: दुनिया के पहले AI सॉफ्टवेयर इंजीनियर को लॉन्च किया गया है। यह एआई टूल इतना स्मार्ट है कि कोड लिख सकता है। यह वेबसाइट और सॉफ्टवेयर बना सकता है। इसे टेक कंपनी कॉग्निशन ने बनाया है। इसे डेविन नाम दिया गया है। डेविन को आप जो कहेंगे करेगा। कॉग्निशन ने बताया है कि डेविन को इस इरादे से नहीं बनाया गया है कि आगे चलकर यह मानव इंजीनियरों की जगह ले। इसे इंसानों के साथ हाथ से हाथ मिलाकर…
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#AI software engineer#andre ward#aprender a programar#artificial intelligence#athletes#boxing#celebrity#copilot#curso de programación#desarrollo de software#dev#Devin#devin haney#fight hub#fight hub tv#fight hub tv youtube#fighthubtv#hall of fame#héctor de león guevara#hdeleon#hdeleon.net#learn to code#machine learning#machine learning python#programación#raw and uncut#remplazo de programadores#ryan garcia#ryan garcia training#ryan garcia training for haney
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