Frank Warren
Frank Warren, Britain’s premier and longest-serving boxing promoter, has been building champions in the professional sport for nearly 45 years and was acknowledged for his work across the industry in 2008 with his entrance into the International Hall of Fame.
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Why Wilder Is Such A Big Hit Among World Heavyweight Champs
By Queensberry Promotions
HUBBARD’S CUPBOARD
By Alan Hubbard
Is Deontay Wilder the biggest hitter ever among world heavyweight champions?
It is a question I have been asked frequently of late. My answer is that his record (39 ko’s in 40 bouts) suggests that the Bronze Bomber is right up there with the Brown Bomber (Joe Louis, 52 ko’s in 66 bouts)) in the pantheon of punchers.
It is even arguable that the spindly-legged jawbone crusher from Tuscaloosa, Alabama, not far from where Louis was born in the same Deep South US state, is the most awesome puncher of them all.
He can put opponents to sleep quicker than a fistful of Mogadon.
All of which does not seem like good news for champion-at-large Tyson Fury, who challenges for Wilder’s WBC belt in only his third comeback fight at the Staples Center in Los Angeles on December 1.
But as Fury says, ”he’ll have to catch me first.” And that certainly won’t be easy if the garrulous Gypsy Giant slips, slides and shimmies as effectively as he did to evade the renowned artillery of Wladimir Klitschko in Dusseldorf three years back. Then he proved as elusive as Sir Percy Blakeney, aka The Scarlet Pimpernel.
Wilder by name, wilder by nature. Devastating Deontay may swing his arms like a windmill in a storm but when he connects it is Goodnight Nurse. Ask Fury’s fellow Brit Audley Harrison and a host of others he has left stricken on the canvas.
I would certainly put him high up my personal list of the biggest hitters in heavyweight history.