Undefeated Calzaghe Quits Boxing

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Peter Parka

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Undefeated Calzaghe quits boxing
Undefeated world super-middleweight and light-heavyweight boxing champion Joe Calzaghe has announced his retirement.
The 36-year-old Welshman, who reigned as a world champion for more than 11 years, quits the ring with a glittering record of 46 wins from 46 fights.
"It was a difficult decision but I have achieved everything I wanted to achieve in boxing," he told BBC Sport.
"I've been world champion for 11 years. I've got no other goals to go for. That's why I am calling it a day."
In an exclusive interview with BBC sports editor Mihir Bose, Calzaghe, who held the WBO, WBA, WBC and IBF super-middleweight belts during his 16-year professional career, said he had thought "long and hard" about retiring but insisted it was the right move.

"I had a long think with my family," he said. "My children wanted me to give up, plus my mum. That's why I called it a day and will go on to do something else."
Asked if he could ever be tempted back into the ring in the future, the Newbridge fighter replied: "My decision is to retire. I've been boxing for 25 years and, like I said, I've achieved everything I want to achieve.
"You can never say never in this game, but I can't see myself boxing again. There's loads of things I want to do. I'm proud to be one of only a few fighters in history to retire undefeated."
Calzaghe, who was born in London but moved to Wales when he was two, chalked up an impressive record as an amateur, winning 110 of his 120 contests after taking up the sport at the age of nine.
He began his professional career with a first-round stoppage of Paul Hanlon on 1 October, 1993, going on to win seven of his first nine bouts in round one.
Trained by his father, Enzo, he became British super-middleweight champion in 1995 before capturing his first world title in 1997, outpointing Chris Eubank to claim the WBO crown.


Despite suffering from several hand injuries, Calzaghe defended the title a total of 21 times, adding the IBF version to his trophy cabinet with a stunning victory over American Jeff Lacy in March 2006. He then claimed the WBA and WBC belts with what he feels is his most satisfying fight, a unanimous points win over Denmark's Mikkel Kessler at the Millennium Stadium in Cardiff on 4 November, 2007.
"Unifying the super-middleweight division in front of 50,000 fans was a dream come true for me," he told BBC Sport.
"I was fighting a younger fighter than me, I was the underdog. A lot of people thought I was going to lose that fight. It was a great night."
Just a few weeks later, he was named BBC Sports Personality of the Year, collecting a CBE soon afterwards, which went nicely along the MBE he received in 2003.
Calzaghe's final two fights cemented his reputation as one of Britain's greatest ever boxers.
Stepping up to light-heavyweight and fighting in America for the first time, he won a split decision against Bernard Hopkins in Las Vegas to become 'The Ring' light-heavyweight champion.

He then finished his career with a comprehensive points victory over the legendary Roy Jones Jr at New York's Madison Square Garden on 8 November.
Calzaghe, who will be 37 on 23 March, hinted before the fight with Jones that it would be his last, despite talk of a re-match with Hopkins.
Fellow Briton Carl Froch, who took possession of Calzaghe's old WBC super-middleweight belt by beating Canadian Jean Pascal in December, was also eager to take him on.
But Calzaghe resisted the lure of another big pay day and the chance to inch closer to Rocky Marciano's record of 49 wins from 49 fights.
Calzaghe, who has two sons, Connor and Joe, from his marriage to Mandy, says he now plans to concentrate on his charity work and becoming a boxing promoter.
Now divorced and living with model girlfriend Jo-Emma, he also revealed he had several TV projects lined up.
Heavyweight champion Rocky Marciano with 49 wins in 49 fights and strawweight and light-flyweight Ricardo Lopez of Mexico, with 51 wins in 51 fights also retired undefeated.

Story from BBC SPORT:

What a fucking legend and one of the greatest boxers of all times! The Americans can winge all they want about him not fighting their major guys but that's their fault. He was champion for a decade and they were expecting him to jump when they said to fight their guys. Sorry, it dosen't work like that. Definately the greatest boxer in my time, I've seen! :clap
 
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Wookiegirl

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I loved Joe.....he'll be missed and boxing is really going to feel the loss I think. With the latest from Margarito, the sport keeps taking these low blows and I just don't know how much longer it can hold up to MMA, however ridiculous I think that is.
 

dkwrtw

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lol, MMA is not going to kill Boxing, Boxing will always be around and it's actually starting to get it's shit together, MMA is far more likely to die out than Boxing.
 

Peter Parka

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The HW division certainly needs a kick up the arse right now! Since Lennox Lewis retired its been as bad if not worse than it was in the pre Tyson days.
 

dkwrtw

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look, NEITHER sport is going to die out, I think it's sad that so many fans on both sides have this "Us Vs Them" mentality, it doesn't need to be that way, there is no reason why both sports can't live and grow together peacefully the same way Boxing and Professional Wrestling have. Boxing is a beautiful sport, and I was a fan of it before MMA came around.
 

SammyStephens

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I hope and pray you are correct :p


Boxing is responsible for boxing's problems. It has been suffering since long before MMA became popular.

They only promote their top fighters, so they wonder why they can't get people to spend $65 on a card were generally people only know 2-3 fighters on it? Not to mention so many promotions wirh talent split apart. They have made it very difficult to bring in new fans.

It is getting better, but boxing has a long way to go, they need to make a move and quit waiting for the next Ali or Tyson to pull their ass out of the fire.
 

SammyStephens

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look, NEITHER sport is going to die out, I think it's sad that so many fans on both sides have this "Us Vs Them" mentality, it doesn't need to be that way, there is no reason why both sports can't live and grow together peacefully the same way Boxing and Professional Wrestling have. Boxing is a beautiful sport, and I was a fan of it before MMA came around.


Agreed and well said!! :thumbup
 

Wookiegirl

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Boxing is responsible for boxing's problems. It has been suffering since long before MMA became popular.

They only promote their top fighters, so they wonder why they can't get people to spend $65 on a card were generally people only know 2-3 fighters on it? Not to mention so many promotions wirh talent split apart. They have made it very difficult to bring in new fans.

It is getting better, but boxing has a long way to go, they need to make a move and quit waiting for the next Ali or Tyson to pull their ass out of the fire.
Boxing isn't going to gain the respect and fans back until they start unifying the belts....
 

Peter Parka

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Personally, I dont see the similarities other than fighting. MMA reminds me more on the unlisenced boxing. Hell, that used to be great. Lenny McClean and Roy Shaw, two true nutters, in and out of the ring!:eek You probably remember McClean from the film Lock Stock and two smoking barrels, just before he died, the film was dedicated to his memory. Shaw spent years in Broadmoor and now lives down the road from me in Waltham Abbey.

YouTube - lenny mclean vs roy shaw
 

SammyStephens

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Personally, I dont see the similarities other than fighting. MMA reminds me more on the unlisenced boxing. Hell, that used to be great. Lenny McClean and Roy Shaw, two true nutters, in and out of the ring!:eek You probably remember McClean from the film Lock Stock and two smoking barrels, just before he died, the film was dedicated to his memory. Shaw spent years in Broadmoor and now lives down the road from me in Waltham Abbey.

YouTube - lenny mclean vs roy shaw


That is more like tough man competitions then MMA.
 

SammyStephens

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they do need to lose the Gladiator opening though, it's been like that for so long it'd be nice if they changed things up a little.

They need to drop the whole x-treme sport intro altogether. It is hard enough for some people to overlook the cage itself already. LOL, it's hard enopugh to get people to watch long enough to understand ground techniques!!

How many shows or bars have you've been to were you heard some fat fuck yell "get em off each other, what are they gooing to do next? Kiss?"

It's pretty hard on beer 5 to not want to go over there and slap on a kimura
 

dkwrtw

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They need to drop the whole x-treme sport intro altogether. It is hard enough for some people to overlook the cage itself already. LOL, it's hard enopugh to get people to watch long enough to understand ground techniques!!

How many shows or bars have you've been to were you heard some fat fuck yell "get em off each other, what are they gooing to do next? Kiss?"

It's pretty hard on beer 5 to not want to go over there and slap on a kimura

FUCK man I know, I order events or stream them, I refuse to watch with ignorant people like that, nothing is more annoying than some moron screaming "Stand it up!" the second it hits the ground.
 

SammyStephens

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FUCK man I know, I order events or stream them, I refuse to watch with ignorant people like that, nothing is more annoying than some moron screaming "Stand it up!" the second it hits the ground.


Same here, but I still always run across that when I go to live events. I went to the IFL up here and so wanted to knee the guy in front of me in the back of the head. My brother saw it and grabbed my arm and told me the next beer was on him. That kid yelled something dumb every round that event, and there was 11 fights.
 

dkwrtw

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Same here, but I still always run across that when I go to live events. I went to the IFL up here and so wanted to knee the guy in front of me in the back of the head. My brother saw it and grabbed my arm and told me the next beer was on him. That kid yelled something dumb every round that event, and there was 11 fights.

there is always people like that, I wouldn't even want to go to an event, I'd rather watch it live from the comfort of my home, I'm very anti social and wouldn't want to be around that many people anyways.
 
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