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  • Preview of the TYSON Premiere

    TYSON Trailer

    I just got off a plane and am in New York for the first time and excited not only because I’ve never visited the Big Apple, but also because of the special event that I’ve been invited to attend this Monday night.  EA SPORTS is proud to sponsor the premiere screening of the Sony Pictures Classics’ TYSON, a James Toback film looking at the roller coaster life of one of the greatest heavyweight boxers of our generation.  A few weeks ago I was asked to see if I would be interested in blogging and covering the event and, along with Fight Night Round 4 producer Brian Hayes and EA SPORTS forums moderators Demetrius (Poetic) Egerton and Robert (wepeeler) Smith, I enthusiastically jumped at an opportunity of a lifetime to walk down the red-carpet on Broadway at the AMC Loews Cinemas among a star-studded invite-list including Joe Frazier, Al Sharpton, NAS, Moby, Christopher Walken, LL Cool J, Harvey Keitel, Commissioner Ray Kelly, Rosie Perez and many others.

    James Toback and Mike Tyson have been on a whirlwind tour which began last summer at the Cannes Film festival where the film was first viewed.  After the screening, both appeared on stage and received a standing ovation from the crowd, and a humbled Tyson spoke of his gratitude for this film and to those that helped create it along with his appreciation to the crowd for their heart-felt acceptance of the documentary.

    It’s a far-cry from what we’ve come to expect from the off-spoken pugilist whose life brought about fear for his opponents inside the ring, fear for people outside it in the public eye, and as seen in some of the previews of the film, a personal fear that he seems now to be learning to understand, appreciate, and, ultimately, control.  It’s a film that I’ve been anticipating seeing for quite some time and to have the chance to view it with him in the crowd along with very special guests will be quite the honor.

    Hosting the event with Tyson and Toback will be director Bennett Miller, and acclaimed boxing journalists Joyce Carol Oates and Gay Talese.  I’ve read a few of Oates articles following Tyson’s career from his first world championship victory over Trevor Burbick in November 22, 1986 to his fall from grace in the mid to late ‘90s.  Her views on the sports and Tyson in particular go deep into the heart of the sport and more so into the psyche of a boxer that rarely gave interviews to female reporters.  Gay Talese’s penchant for writing about the underdog pushed his articles on the sport back in the 60’s to the forefront, as the sport once dominated and revered by white people, began to see the minority black people at the top of the ranks.  These athletes have definitely helped paved the way for many other minority boxers who have broken racial barriers including the influx of Hispanic and European fighters as well as one of the top pound-for-pound boxer today, and my personal favorite from my home country in the Philippines, Manny Pacquiao.

    Make no bones about it, boxing is a brutal sport.  It cuts to the heart of our society and continues to be challenged by those less understanding of the instinctual battle between man and foe.  Oates put it best when she described the sport in Kid Dynamite: Mike Tyson is the most exciting heavyweight fighter since Muhammad Ali:

    “(Boxing) is the quintessential image of human struggle, masculine or otherwise, against not only other people but one's own divided self. Its kinship with Roman gladiatorial combat—in which defeated men usually died—is not historically accurate but poetically relevant.”  I know Poetic will appreciate me waxing it old skool here.

    Anyway, I’m hoping to get a chance to post some video and pictures from the red-carpet and get some reaction from some of the guests in attendance though being a guest myself, I’m very much looking forward to enjoying the screening and the reception to follow.  I’m told I would be lucky to get some time with Tyson as he’ll be fairly busy with his more esteemed guests in attendance which I can totally appreciate.  For us boxing fans and gamers in attendance, it’s going to be an unreal experience that we’ll be buzzing about for the rest of our lives.

    Visit the official Fight Night Round 4 website for more on one of the most anticipated games of the year.

  • FNR4 - Thrilla in Manila (or why I love Joe Frazier)

    Clash of two titans

    When Smokin’ Joe Frazier and Muhammad Ali first squared off, in 1971, they were fast friends and undefeated fighters. By the time of their third fight, in the Philippines in 1975, they’d been humbled and hardened, and had turned into bitter enemies.

    Ali warmed up for the bout by calling Frazier “gorilla” and “Uncle Tom.” Frazier bit his tongue and fumed. The fight was brutal; the aftermath, ugly: Today, Ali is a shadow of his former self, and just last year, Frazier was living in the back of a Philadelphia gym. The documentary Thrilla in Manila is fiercely partisan on Frazier’s behalf. It’s also disturbing (Frazier claims responsibility for, and revels in, Ali’s physical decline), surprising (Imelda Marcos pops up as one of the interviewees), and riveting. Don’t miss the HBO premiere, on April 11.

    By Brian Hayes, Producer

    I was just 6 months old when Muhammad Ali and Joe Frazier met for the third time at the Araneta Coliseum in the Philippines on October 1, 1975. As I became enamored with boxing many, many years ago and began purchasing classic fight tapes and DVDs, I purchased an Ali VHS box-set that included, “The Thrilla In Manila”. I have seen several great fights over the years, but Ali-Frazier III will always stand out for me because of the punishment both men exacted upon each other, their tumultuous relationship outside the ropes, the way Ali slumped back on his stool after briefly celebrating the stoppage and, most importantly, the look in Joe Frazier’s eyes when Eddie Futch stopped the fight.

    The first time I watched this fight, it was just another chapter in the legend of Muhammad Ali. When your experience starts with the ring walk and ends with Frazier’s corner throwing in the towel, all you are left with is one of the most brutal back and forth heavyweight contests in history. It’s when you start to learn about the men involved that this fight takes on special meaning. Ali is undoubtedly one of the greatest in boxing history and over the years has become a symbol for sportsmanship. It’s very interesting because unquestionably, on that day, the “bad guy” won. Prior to the fight, Ali belittled and insulted Joe Frazier repeatedly. The same Joe Frazier who financially supported him during his exile and publicly lobbied for the reinstatement of his boxing license. You would be hard-pressed to find a bigger villain or a more venomous heel in today’s professional wrestling than Muhammad Ali before his third fight with Joe Frazier. I’m sorry, but it’s true.

    The first time I watched this fight, Ali was just the aging, but flashy champion who survived a mid-round onslaught by the rough-and-tumble challenger. It was another historic victory for the Greatest Of All Time. The last time I watched this fight, a small part of me wishes Futch would let Frazier go out for the 15th and (maybe) let Ali be the one to quit on his stool. Or maybe, just maybe Joe would get lucky and drop Ali with one last left hook. It’s a very small part of me, because the remainder is always happy that the fight was stopped before either man suffered any more permanent damage.

    This fight was not supposed to go 14 rounds. People thought Frazier was washed-up,  having already lost to Ali in their 2nd fight and having been shockingly stopped by a young George Foreman (“Down Goes Frazier!”) years before. Ali was resurgent, having defeated the same young Foreman only one year earlier.

    It begins with Ali disdainfully firing fast combinations at the bobbing and ducking Frazier in the early rounds, buzzing him more than a few times. But Frazier never stops moving forward. In the 5th and 6th, Ali begins to tire in the heat of the Philippines and Frazier keeps coming forward, raking his body with power punches. Ali tries to rope-a-dope Frazier, to lure him into punching himself out like Foreman did in Zaire, but Joe doesn’t fall for it. He maintains steady pressure. In the 6th rounds he corners Ali and practically folds him in half with a left hook to the body. In the later rounds, Frazier begins to tire himself and Ali begins to find him with punishing combinations that bounce repeatedly of his head. Frazier continues to press forward. In the 13th round, Ali sends Frazier’s mouthguard flying somewhere into downtown Metro Manila. In the 14th round, Frazier is absorbing 5 punches for each one he even throws. After the fight, we will learn that Frazier had a cataract in one eye and with his other eye swelling shut, he was essentially fighting blind.

    After the 14th round, trainer Eddie Futch had seen enough and signaled that he was throwing in the towel. Frazier protested, shouting, “I want him boss.” Meanwhile, in Ali’s corner, Muhammad pleads with trainer Angelo Dundee to cut off his gloves and stop the fight. It’s hard to imagine a more heart-wrenching set of circumstances for Frazier. Spitting blood, blind, battered and broken, but bent on beating his rival; his trainer stopping the fight while the opponent is seconds away from quitting himself. It’s not a happy ending, which is why it had to be altered to serve (in part) as the inspiration for the first meeting between Apollo Creed and Rocky Balboa. That’s how big this was.

    After the fight, Ali sits on a stool, wincing in pain and talking with reporters from around the world. He says it’s the closest to death he’s ever been. Gone is the trash-talk and bravado. It’s been pounded and sweated out in the heat of the Araneta Coliseum. Well, almost, “Joe Frazier is the greatest fighter of all time… next to me.”