On this segment of “Real Talk”, The Ring Gang crew review the newest album from Jadakiss titled “Ignatius”
Real Talk Music: Jay Electronica – A Written Testimony Review
On this segment of “Real Talk”, the Ring Gang crew discuss and give their review on the debut album by Jay Electronica, “A Written Testimony”.
Real Talk Boxing: Ring Gang Radio vs Corona Virus
On this segment of “Real Talk”, the Ring Gang crew talk about the Corona Virus and how it affects their daily lives and the disruption it has caused in boxing and the rest of the sports world.
Nightly Knockouts
In honor of the late great Roger Mayweather.
Roger Mayweather passes away at 58
The Ring Gang family offers its condolences to the family and friends of the legendary boxer and trainer Roger Mayweather.
The Career Mode Glitch
Let’s take a little trip down memory lane. Its 2011 and you’re a hardcore boxing fan probably still in your twenties. It’s the weekend and boxing After Dark on HBO just ended. The fights weren’t great, but they weren’t bad either. You don’t have to work the next day, so you don’t have to go to bed any time soon. These are simpler times my friend. Boxing is over, but that blood lust for compelling fights is still nagging at you. Before you know it, you’re turning on your PS3 or Xbox gaming console.
If you were a boxing fan during this era that indulged in video games, you knew there was only one game that could quench your thirst for more boxing. This masterpiece was Fight Night Champion, the last great boxing video game to exist in the free world. It goes without saying that this game is already in your system so once it’s fired up you proceed to get that boxing monkey off your back. You start out playing a few bullshit random matches before finally loading up the highly coveted career mode. Career Mode was everyone’s little pet project in Fight Night Champion. You created your boxer and controlled his attributes, training, and career trajectory.
Now you’ve had steady progression with your created boxer’s career and see that a title shot is only a few fights away. You’re faced with a few options. You can take the slightly more challenging step-up fight that would prepare you for the champion or you can take the same type of fight that’s gotten you to this position. You won’t improve your stats much, but the odds are in your favor and another win won’t hurt. It’s getting late and you’re starting to get a little sleepy, but you don’t want to shut the game off just yet. With that in mind, you don’t want the stress of having a tough fight now, so you go for the easy match up.
You start out dominating the infamous “Jobber Magee”, but for some reason you can’t put him away like all the others in the past. He weathers the early storm and manages to land a punch that causes a bad cut on your eye. The blood seems to reinvigorate your opponent and he begins to increase the pressure. Now you’re thinking to yourself that you should have just taken the tougher fight if it was going to be this much trouble. Your early onslaught has your stamina looking funny in the light and before you know it, Jobber Magee lands a heavy shot that sits you down on the canvas. You try to get up, but its no use. Your head is cloudy, and you have noodle legs. The ref counts you out and the rest is history. You’re the latest victim of the Career Mode Glitch.
Fast forward to the present and you’ll see art imitate life more often than it should. Boxers allow themselves to spoil on the vine, by facing sub par competition as soon as they’re on the verge of being world class. Challenging character-building fights are scoffed at an ignored for easier opposition. To be fair, not every boxer operates this way, but its certainly becoming the majority. Super fights die on the negotiation table and potential meaningful fights fall to the wayside due to cannon fodder fighting above their level causing upsets. As a boxer you should always want to improve and take fights that can add to your foundation or legacy. Hoping to get rewarded while on the path of least resistance can come back to haunt you. There are no shortcuts in boxing and sitting on your lead whether in a fight or in the rankings can be detrimental to the result you seek.
Unlike Fight Night Champion, real life boxing has certain consequences. You can get injured or seriously hurt. Certain performances will catapult you to the top of the world while some will make you plummet to the nether realm of boxing social media. It’s better to face these boxing challenges with pride and determination than to prolong the inevitable hoping to build your confidence with inferior opponents. Cherry picking competition and fighting infrequently are a recipe for disaster. These career journeymen know what’s at stake and one good performance on a night where you have a bad performance can be the difference in propelling or stagnating your career. Father Time is undefeated, but the Career Mode Glitch will always be the biggest risk a boxer takes before Father Time get a chance to lace up his gloves. Proceed wisely.
Written by Shutterworth for Ring Gang Radio.
Nightly Knockouts
If you’re having trouble sleeping, let Tim Witterspoon help you out with this edition of Nightly Knockouts.
Real Talk Boxing: Adam Kownacki and The Legend of the Career Mode Glitch
On this segment of Real Talk, the Ring Gang crew discuss the legend of the “Career Mode Glitch” following Adam Kownacki’s upset loss to Robert Helenius.
Real Talk Boxing – No Rematch for J Rock & Shakur Stevenson vs Miguel Marriaga Preview
On this segment of Real Talk, the Ring Gang crew talks about the decision of Julian J Rock williams to not pursue a rematch with Jeison Rosario plus preview of the upcoming fight between Shakur Stevenson and Miguel Marriaga
Real Talk Boxing: James Kirkland vs Marcos Hernandez Preview
On this segment of Real Talk, The Ring Gang crew preview the upcoming fight between James Kirkland and Marcos Hernandez
Nightly Knockouts
Let one of Kirkland’s best performances put you to sleep tonight with our Nightly Knockout segment.
Forgotten Fades – Clifford Etienne vs Lawrence Clay-Bey
The spirit of the forgotten fade is finding that one fight that delivers above and beyond expectation where there are little to no expectations. As a bonus, the fight may sometime surpass every other fight on the card it’s on, including the main event. The fight that I am about to reminisce on is one of those that fit the above criteria. An unexpected war between then rising Heavyweight prospects/contenders. The fight I am referring to is Clifford Etienne vs Lawrence Clay Bey. This fight was scheduled on the undercard of Lennox Lewis defending the undisputed heavyweight championship against David Tua. Unfortunately, that fight is the opposite of a forgotten fade to put it lightly. That is where Etienne and Clay-Bey would come in.
Clifford Etienne would learn how to box in prison, where he was sent to serve a 40-year sentence for armed robbery. While in prison, he would win the boxing championship in there and keep an undefeated record. Paroled after serving 10 years, he would turn pro in 1998 and would jump out to an 18-0 record. The most notable of the wins was over then undefeated Lamon Brewster in a barnburner of a fight, which saw him beat the future WBO Heavyweight Champion by a comfortable unanimous decision. Lawrence Clay Bey is a name I knew for a while as he was from my home state of Connecticut. He was a big amateur star here. He made it on to the 1996 US Olympic boxing team and was its captain. Unfortunately, he did not medal. He would eventually lose a controversial decision to Wladimir Klitschko. Following the Olympics, he decided to turn pro at a relatively late age of 32 in 1997 to see how far he would go. He would go 12-0 shedding another 30 lbs along the way. The stage was set for the 2 undefeated heavyweight prospects.
I know most people only know Etienne for his fight with Tyson which admittedly he didn’t look like anything special. But this fight showed you why HBO had their eye on him back then. Etienne’s buzzsaw style of fighting was something to see when he got going. In this fight, it took only a minute in the first round for him let off a vicious assault to Clay Bey. In the second round it looked Etienne was going to have an early night as he trapped Clay Bey in the ropes and let off like a dozen body shots mixed with uppercuts that were breaking through his guard. The ref, Jay Nady, I was surprised to see that he didn’t step in to stop the fight. With about 12 secs left in that round, Clay-Bey exploded and rocked Etienne to his core that left him dazed and bleeding from the nose at the bell. Clay-Bey going into round 3 tried to employ a “Rope a Dope” strategy, where he would go to the ropes and let Etienne just wail on him and then try to steal the round by letting off combinations. When the fight was taken to the center of the ring, it was “Rock’em Sock’em Robots” where Clay-Bey got the best of it. So why Clay-Bey kept taking it to the ropes is beyond me. He did however make an adjustment seen in the 7th and 8th rounds. Clay-Bey would go to the ropes and then as Etienne would come in, he met him with right cross counters. Etienne was badly stunned by these shots. It was a miracle he did not go down. Clay-Bey continued habit on laying on the ropes was a tactical mistake. Etienne got his second wind and his legs back. In round 9, he was getting the best of Clay-Bey now in the middle of the ring and started beating the crap of out of him. Step around and hitting Clay-Bey with left hooks. It was beautiful stuff to watch. Clay-Bey looked tired at this point and seemingly had enough. In the 10th and final round, both men went all out. Unbelievable ebb and flow. First it was Clay-Bey who came out swinging and landing right hands. Then Etienne managed to get him into the ropes and proceeded to land hooks and uppercuts flush. Some of those punches Clay-Bey took flush on the chin with his hands down. It was an extremely brutal stuff to watch. In the waning moments of the fight, Clay Bey again managed to rock and badly hurt Etienne with a left hook. Etienne managed to weather the storm to the bell. What a fight this was!!!Clifford Etienne would win by unanimous decision with scores of 98-92, 99-91, 97-93. The scores don’t accurately tell the story of the fight in which the action and punishment dealt out was two way. Unfortunately, neither fighter would go on to higher heights from this.
Lawrence Clay-Bey even after losing his zero earned a lot of kudos for his performance. For a man who had many issues plaguing him from the beginning of his career, it provided a brief window into his true potential. However old habits crept back up. He started coming into the ring out of shape again on top of advancing age, he would lose to the likes of Elieser Castillo (by KO) and the late Sinan Samil Sam (by decision). He would retire in 2005 after a draw with Derek Bryant. In his retirement from boxing, he has been working as a corrections officer. For all intents and purposes, he has seemingly adjusted well to life after boxing. The same thing cannot be said for Clifford Etienne. It was a slow decline for the “Black Rhino”. After that fight, he got a very lucrative contract from Showtime. The bad was he would lose his zero to Fres Oquendo who knocked him down 7 times. Etienne would have some fights to rebuild his stature. His fight with Francois Botha yielded a draw which saw him go down twice in a wild affair. This would lead to his most well-known fight, a fight against “Iron” Mike Tyson. A fight that lasted only 49 seconds where a short right hand ended his night. From there his career would go into a tailspin downward losing his final 2 fights to Calvin Brock and Nikolay Valuev. Shortly after that fight, he would be sent back to prison on carjacking, kidnapping and attempted murder charges. A very unfortunate fate for someone who originally found redemption through boxing. However, nothing can take away from Clifford Etienne and Lawrence Clay-Bey’s wonderful fight. Full recommendation to watch.
Written by Patscorpio
Kownacki vs Helenius HIGHLIGHTS: March 7, 2020 – PBC on FOX
It was the night of the heavyweights on PBC on Fox with an upset for the ages in the main event.
Real Talk Movies: IP Man 4 Review (some spoilers)
On this segment of “Real Talk”, the Ring Gang crew review the latest movie in the IP man series, IP Man 4 starring Donnie Yen.
Real Talk Boxing: Mikey Garcia vs Jessie Vargas and undercard Recap
On this segment of Real Talk, the Ring Gang Crew recap the main event fight between Mikey Garcia and Jessie Vargas as well as the supporting undercard fights for Garcia vs Vargas: Julio Cesar Martinez vs Jay Harris & Roman “Chocolatito” Gonzalez vs Kal Yafai.
MAIN CARD HIGHLIGHTS | Mikey Garcia vs. Jessie Vargas
Highlights from possibly the best card of boxing this year so far. Enjoy.
Devin Haney & Eddie Hearn Want Ryan Garcia Fight At End of 2020
Lets keep our fingers crossed for this one.
WEIGH-IN | Mikey Garcia vs. Jessie Vargas
Mikey Garcia weighs in at 145 and Jesse Vargas comes in at the welterweight limit of 147 for their fight tomorrow night on DAZN.
Real Talk Boxing: Mikey Garcia vs Jessie Vargas Preview
On this episode of Real Talk, The Ring Gang Crew preview the upcoming card headlined by Mikey Garcia vs Jessie Vargas. There is also a small discussion of cherry picking myths wedged in the conversation.
Real Talk Boxing: Deontay Wilder Wildin’ – The Costume Saga Continues
On this episode of Real Talk, the Ring Gang crew discuss the aftermath of the Fury vs Wilder 2 Rematch in which Deontay Wilder blames his loss on many different things. Most hilariously, his costume that he wore to the ring that night as the top culprit