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Fight night ps3 trailer12/17/2022 He had been arrested 38 times before the age of 13. You measured Tyson fights in minutes and seconds, not rounds. he would throw a punch with the speed, power and violence of a shuttle launch. "Iron" Mike Tyson would waddle into his opponent with both gloves chin high, bend left or right at the waste and then. Watching Tyson fight you knew he was going to explode and someone was going to get hurt when he did. He was dangerous like an unstable stick of dynamite with a short fuse. Where Ali was smooth and cool, Tyson was just dangerous. No one had ever seen anything like Mike Tyson not before or since. That kid from New York who spoke like a child, was raised by a boxing trainer (Cus D'Amato) and who obliterated opponents with casual brutality. That is what I picture when I think of Mike Tyson. A towel with a cut through the middle for his head. I can drown the drink of water, and kill a dead tree. I can run through a hurricane and don't get wet. I've injured a stone, and hospitalized a brick. Like the eight rounds against George Foreman in the "Rumble in the Jungle", Ali used the "Rope-a Dope" and took every punch that brutal time had to throw only to come-alive in the end, when it mattered most, and win.ĭo you really want to know why Ali was "The Greatest"? Just read what he said before that Championship fight with George Foreman in what was then Zaire, Africa: To a lot of people from that era he captured uniquely the edge on political, social, cultural, and religious issues and under that microscope and the intense pressure of being at the epicenter of these issues he did something truly great: he remained. The Greatest never varied from his game-plan in or out of the ring. For so many athletes that have followed since most have forgotten that Ali earned that right because he was in fact "the greatest of all time." Sure they were self-indulgent but he had a right to be because "THE CHAMP IS HERE!" He was the first to make it okay to celebrate being great. His bravado made the sport come alive and his interviews were merely a stage for rhymes that were cocky, scathing, poetic, and humorous all at once. He was mentally tougher than anyone in the game and had more style in the snap of one of his jabs than most athletes will see in their entire career. Was there ever a smoother more exciting boxer than Muhammad Ali? If you are thinking about it you can stop. What do I think of Muhammad Ali? I think he may be the only boxer that ever really did earn his nickname: "The Greatest". In Ali and Tyson, FNR4 has the best two boxers the sport has ever seen on the cover. My first reaction as a Fight Night fan who has waited 3 ½ years for this game was: "perfect choice". Muhammad Ali and Mike Tyson are the cover athletes for Fight Night Round 4 (FNR4).
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