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Becoming the Fulcrum for Your Fists
Breaking Down the Best: George Foreman versus Jerry Cooney
© 2015 James LaFond
MAR/6/15
This fight was infamous at the time and served to continue the myth that boxing was a genetic superiority test that favored black men, as well as build suspicion that the comeback of Big George Foreman was ‘fixed’.
In a way George’s comeback was fixed, in that it was well-managed with him building demand for his more lucrative pay-per-view appearances with one-sided beatings of cruiserweights. Eventually George recreated himself as more than a match for the biggest and best young men of his second era. Most of this was accomplished through the use of a peek-a-boo guard that invited the younger faster men to open themselves up and shift their weight into the pocket so that the slower George could chop them down.
Note George’s power jab that put all of his 260 pounds on opposing chins and sapped their leg strength, setting them up for a power combination. George has the keen balance of a gymnast though it is not apparent. He has a feel for using the balls of his feet to engage his hips and for using his hips to transfer his considerable weight and strength back and forth. The shovel hook to overhand right combo that ends this human sacrifice of the rusty Cooney is a perfect—and conveniently slow motion—example of a boxer using his body as the fulcrum for his fists, shifting weight through the target zone in brutal syncopation.
George Foreman understood better than most boxers that his art was in essence a broken dance; musical chairs without a seat in sight.
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Charles Meisling     Mar 6, 2015

Started by watching the video, found 2 clumsy heavyweights. Then I read your description, which beckoned me to rewatch. Totally enjoyed it the second run. Thanks for breaking it down.
James     Mar 6, 2015

Part of the art of being a good big fighter is looking clumsy, but not being clumsy. Foreman had that in spades. Cooney was rusty and his mind was not right.
Kuhn Tewk     Mar 6, 2015

Foreman has stated that Cooney was one of the top three hardest hitting boxers that he had fought. And his lefts do look brutal.
James     Mar 7, 2015

Kuhn, thank you so much for checking in.

I am also of the opinion that a prominent jaw such as Cooney has enhances the effect of chin punches as its a bigger lever to apply to shocking the nervous system.
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