By Saqib Khan: I know boxing fans say Floyd Mayweather vs. Manny Pacquiao is the biggest fight, which I agree, but in terms of building up to a fight this would be the mother of all fights. The press conferences the stare downs the tension would be crazy.
Naseem Hamed
Who do you pick, Naseem Hamed vs. Jorge Paez?
By Gerardo Granados: Two of the most entertaining boxers of the last twenty years, perhaps they are not the favorites of the boxing purists but still the favorite of the boxing fans that don’t focus in the skills of a boxer or the technical aspects of a fight.
News – Hamed Retired Because of Bad Hands; Bailey to Move up to Welterweight
By William Mackay: In the latest boxing news, Naseem Hamed (36-1, 31 KO’s) has finally admitted why he stepped away from boxing seven years ago, in 2002, while in the prime of his career and says that it’s because of his bad hands. In an interview with the BBC, Hamed said that his hands would balloon up after he would fight and that his hands “Couldn’t take the power of my punch.”
Brook Wants Jennings; Hamed sees Little In Common With Khan – News
By William Mackay: After an impressive 3rd round TKO defeat of Michal Lomax last Saturday night, British welterweight champion Kell Brook (20-0, 13 KO’s) is now aiming for former BBBofC welterweight champion Michael Jennings (35-2, 17 KO’s) next. A victory over the 31-year-old Jennings would be a good victory for Brook to add to his growing collection of wins since turning pro five years ago in 2004.
The Illusion of Naseem Hamed’s Greatness
By Giancarlo Malinconico: The media tends to praise “punchers” because they are in exciting fights and attract mainstream attention to the sport of boxing such as Mike Tyson did in his day. But many of these punchers are just the proverbial “flash in the pans,” or their star burns out very quickly. Moreover, most of these “punchers” are overhyped and overrated. Naseem Hamed is the perfect example of this phenomenon.
Power, Poise and Posing: The Fistic Legacy of Prince Naseem Hamed
By Steven Pink: It is the uniquely paradoxical nature of boxing that very often the sport’s most skilled practitioners draw the ire and criticism of fans as readily as garnering admiration. Boxing’s iconoclasts from Muhammad Ali to Floyd Mayweather are derided for their idiosyncratic approach to the sport as often as they draw plaudits for their luminous skills. Yet few fighters in recent memory have polarized popular opinion quite so markedly as Naseem Hamed.
Naseem Hamed: Why did the ‘Prince’ Retire?
By Matthew Thomas Potter: For the first time in a decade long career, Naseem Hamed … read more
Comparing Legacies: Hamed and Calzaghe
By Matthew Thomas Potter: Writing in his online blog for The Ring Magazine website, columnist Michael Rosenthal gave his opinions on the ten best British fighters of all time. At number four on the list was Joe Calzaghe (46-0, KO 32). Naseem Hamed (36-1, KO 31) was only granted an honourable mention, essentially a footnote; an afterthought, on the list of the greatest British boxers.
Prince Naseem Hamed: A Career Retrospective
By Matthew Thomas Potter: It has now been over seven years since ‘Prince’ Naseem Hamed’s (37-0-1) supposedly career defining loss to Marco Antonio Barrera. Detractors of the Prince often use this loss to highlight the inadequacies of Hamed’s style, and his lack of the skills that were needed to compete at the highest level, against the toughest opposition.