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Terry Norris vs. Donald Curry
Boxing match From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Terry Norris vs. Donald Curry was a professional boxing match contested on June 1, 1991, for the WBC super welterweight title.[1]
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Background
After defeating the legendary Sugar Ray Leonard in February 1991, reigning WBC super welterweight champion Terry Norris entered negotiations the following month to face former welterweight and super welterweight champion Donald Curry, ultimately coming to an agreement to face each other on June 1 in Palm Springs, California.[2] Though he was only 29-years old and had been one of boxing's top fighters in the mid to late 80s, Curry had gone 1–3 in his previous four title fights, including being knocked out by Michael Nunn in his previous fight, and was looked upon as being past his prime with the Norris fight being perceived as being his final opportunity to turn his career around. Curry accepted the criticism and hinted that he would retire should he lose, calling the fight "do or die."[3]
The Norris–Curry fight co–main evented a boxing card along with a Meldrick Taylor vs. Luis Garcia fight. Taylor was making the first defense of his WBA welterweight title he had won in his previous fight against Aaron Davis. Garcia was the WBA's number-one ranked welterweight contender and Taylor's mandatory challenger.[4]
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Card Details
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Taylor vs. Garcia
Taylor would defeat Garcia by split decision, with two judges having it for the champion 115–113 and 118–112 while another had it 117–114 for Garcia.[5]
Main Event
Though Curry entered the fight as a sizable underdog who's best days appeared behind him, the fight was competitive through the first seven rounds as both fighters landed heavy shots against one another. Curry found success fighting Norris at long range, using his jab and blocking Norris' punches, though Norris often attacked Curry's body and landed often when he was able to get inside, however, Curry held his own and was able to hurt Norris with a big left hook in the sixth that Norris admitted stunned him but he was able to shake it off. The fight came to a head in the seventh round, Norris and Curry traded blows early on with Norris knocking out Curry's mouthpiece which resulted in a brief timeout that allowed Curry time to recover. After the round resumed, Curry fought well, hurting Norris again with a right hand that forced Norris to clinch Curry. However, Norris came on strong in the final 30 seconds and scored a questionable knockdown when he appeared to push Curry which resulted in Curry slipping to the canvas, though referee Chuck Hassett did not see the infraction and ruled it a knockdown, giving Curry a standing-eight count just as the round ended. Norris and Curry continued to trade heavy blows in the eighth when with around 30 seconds remaining, Norris countered a Curry left with an overhand right that landed flush and hurt Curry. A clearly dazed Curry attempted to clinch Norris but failed to do so as Norris continued to strike Curry, ultimately sending him down to his knees with consecutive right hands. Curry remained seated on the canvas as Hassett counted to 10, giving Norris the knockout victory with six seconds left in the round.[6][7]
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Aftermath
Immediately following the fight, Curry announced his retirement stating "I did the best job I could possibly do. I’m closing it out. That’s it for me."[8]
Fight card
Confirmed bouts:[9]
^Note 1 For WBC Super Welterweight Title
^Note 2 For WBA Welterweight Title
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Broadcasting
References
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