Author Topic: Sad Day For Boxing... R.I.P. Diego Corrales  (Read 591 times)

SGV

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Sad Day For Boxing... R.I.P. Diego Corrales
« on: May 07, 2007, 10:59:49 PM »
Corrales dead in motorcycle accident
 
By Kevin Iole, Yahoo! Sports
May 7, 2007
 
 
 
 
LAS VEGAS – Diego Corrales, a former world champion who scored one of the most memorable knockouts in boxing history, was killed in a Las Vegas motorcycle accident, his manager, James Prince said.

A spokesman at the Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department confirmed there was an accident at the intersection of Fort Apache and Russell Roads in southwest Las Vegas, but would not provide any additional details.

Prince, who had just arrived at the scene shortly after 9:50 p.m. PDT, said "It's true, I'm sad to say. I'm looking at the scene now."

Corrales, 29, held world titles at junior lightweight and lightweight. He scored one of the most memorable knockouts in boxing history on May 7, 2005, when he got up after having been knocked down twice in the 10th round by Jose Luis Castillo and stopped Castillo.

Many experts have called it one of the most exciting fights in history. Corrales, who is survived by his wife, Michelle, was 40-5.

 


With all this talk of Boxing is dying and what not, I always thought Corrales would be one of the few faces to keep it alive... Sucks to see him go at only 29 and well before being able to truely prove himself as a great boxer. Dude had tons of potential... R.I.P.
 

Vegasmac25

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Re: Sad Day For Boxing... R.I.P. Diego Corrales
« Reply #1 on: May 07, 2007, 11:15:40 PM »
I just heard about this damn man RIP Corrales.
 

Now_Im_Not_Banned

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Re: Sad Day For Boxing... R.I.P. Diego Corrales
« Reply #2 on: May 08, 2007, 12:43:28 AM »
Fuck...RIP


Was he in Vegas for the fight?
 

BJV

Re: Sad Day For Boxing... R.I.P. Diego Corrales
« Reply #3 on: May 08, 2007, 06:15:33 AM »
RIP. Those fucking motorcycles man every year you hear about something like this.
 

d-nice

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Re: Sad Day For Boxing... R.I.P. Diego Corrales
« Reply #4 on: May 08, 2007, 06:23:07 AM »
Fuck...RIP


Was he in Vegas for the fight?

He lives in Las Vegas.
 

Hatesrats™

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Re: Sad Day For Boxing... R.I.P. Diego Corrales
« Reply #5 on: May 08, 2007, 07:55:53 AM »
 :'(
 

NiCc_FrUm_ThA_nO

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Re: Sad Day For Boxing... R.I.P. Diego Corrales
« Reply #6 on: May 08, 2007, 08:01:09 AM »
R.I.P :'(
 

E. J. Rizo

Re: Sad Day For Boxing... R.I.P. Diego Corrales
« Reply #7 on: May 08, 2007, 08:23:21 AM »
RIP. Those fucking motorcycles man every year you hear about something like this.
man im sure its somthing he loved to do... yeah it may be a danger or whatever... but i think you should live your life... people do stupid shit all the time... people are on drugs... people jump out of planes.... people drive cars reckless.. people have different hobbies... if he got his high from riding his bike... then all power too him. it really sucks that he went out that way... but im sure he didnt just have a GSX-R 1000 for the hell of it... im sure he loved riding it.

R.I.P.

*EDIT*

i just read that he only had the motorcycle for a week... so i guess thats fucked up... but im assuming he was just learning how to ride.... which is something that should be taken slowly... either way it doesnt make a difference RIP
« Last Edit: May 08, 2007, 10:47:31 AM by E. J. Rizo »
 

Now_Im_Not_Banned

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Re: Sad Day For Boxing... R.I.P. Diego Corrales
« Reply #8 on: May 08, 2007, 10:39:38 AM »
RIP. Those fucking motorcycles man every year you hear about something like this.
man im sure its somthing he loved to do... yeah it may be a danger or whatever... but i think you should live your life... people do stupid shit all the time... people are on drugs... people jump out of planes.... people drive cars reckless.. people have different hobbies... if he got his high from riding his bike... then all power too him. it really sucks that he went out that way... but im sure he didnt just have a GSX-R 1000 for the hell of it... im sure he loved riding it.

R.I.P.



I'm sure he woulda' never rode it if he knew it woulda' killed him.
 

rik

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Re: Sad Day For Boxing... R.I.P. Diego Corrales
« Reply #9 on: May 08, 2007, 10:52:17 AM »
Damn, R.I.P. He was in the greatest fight I've ever seen.
 

Just Another Sunny day in California

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Re: Sad Day For Boxing... R.I.P. Diego Corrales
« Reply #10 on: May 08, 2007, 11:03:09 AM »
crazy shit i was just watching his match against Castillo last week which i would have loved to see another match from them both.

RIP
Oh I like this one... One dog goes one way, the other dog goes the other way, and this guy's sayin', "Whadda ya want from me?

 

Kool Beenz

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Re: Sad Day For Boxing... R.I.P. Diego Corrales
« Reply #11 on: May 08, 2007, 12:11:22 PM »
“Fighting Words” Memorial – Remembering Diego Corrales: Chico, You Were the Man

by David P. Greisman

He always got up.

Thirteen times, Diego Corrales hit the canvas. Thirteen times, he rose, even when he was certain to take more punishment, ready to fight with unsteady legs and ample heart.

No more.

Corrales died Monday night in Las Vegas, a fatal motorcycle accident robbing the sport of one of its true warriors, robbing his friends, robbing his family, robbing us all of a fighter who was the definition of a man.

Corrales died living as he fought – full speed ahead. He was riding north through southwest Las Vegas when his motorcycle hit the back of a Honda Accord, police told Kevin Iole of Yahoo! Sports. His motorcycle went into the opposite lane of Fort Apache Road, where it – and possibly Corrales, who may have already been thrown off his vehicle – was struck by a southbound Mercedes-Benz, authorities said.

He liked the rush, Corrales told Iole in a 2006 article in the Las Vegas Review-Journal. He liked extreme sports – as if one-on-one battle with another man wasn’t thrilling enough.

He gave us a rush, too, whenever he stepped in the ring. In victory, he was breathtaking – his come-from-behind knockout of Jose Luis Castillo remains, two years later, one of the most dramatic conclusions ever, a fitting end to a memorable war.

For ten rounds, Corrales and Castillo traded vicious hooks and power shots, but Castillo was winning the battle of attrition. Castillo floored Corrales twice in the tenth, but Corrales bought himself time, intentionally or otherwise, by losing his mouthpiece. Castillo went in to finish things off, but Corrales caught him and clobbered him against the ropes, stopping the fight, dropping our jaws.

In defeat, Corrales was proud, valiant.

Floyd Mayweather Jr. knocked Corrales down five times in their 2001 collision. Mayweather certainly would have added a sixth, but Corrales’ corner threw in the towel. Corrales protested, just as he would do in his 2003 fight against Joel Casamayor, a match that ended when the ringside physician, concerned over bad bleeding in Corrales’ mouth, halted the bout.

To Corrales, the fight wasn’t over unless he couldn’t continue. If he couldn’t make a comeback, he could at least go out like a man.

Corrales’ last fight was one such affair.

Just one month ago, Corrales jumped two divisions from lightweight to welterweight and challenged tough, skilled contender Joshua Clottey. Corrales had mentioned that he might change strategies and box against the bigger man. But, as usual, he went toe-to-toe, taking hard shots while seeking to land his own. Clottey put Corrales down twice, and the fight, reasonably, could have been stopped. Corrales, though, did everything he could to last the distance the only way he knew – with honor.

It speaks volumes that we hold Corrales with such high esteem, because the man wasn’t without controversy.

Shortly after his loss to Mayweather, Corrales served more than a year in prison for abusing his ex-wife. But he rebuilt his image and earned recognition by repeatedly taking tough fights. In a three-year period from 2003 through 2006, Corrales fought Joel Casamayor three times, Jose Luis Castillo twice and Acelino Freitas once, going 3-3 against top-notch foes.

He avenged his stoppage loss to Casamayor. He made Freitas quit. He made weight when Castillo failed, on two separate occasions, to reach the 135-pound limit.

He stuck around the lightweight division for too long.

Corrales barely made it below junior welterweight for his rubber match against Casamayor. The scales read 139. Casamayor out-boxed his weight-drained opponent, taking his championship and sending him, ashamed, to the welterweight ranks.

Last month’s loss to Clottey showed that 147 would be an uphill battle for Corrales. But while we questioned his ability to beat the best the division had to offer, we never denied the one thing that had always defined him – his heart.

Corrales was 29. He leaves behind his wife, Michelle, with whom he had three children. Michelle is seven months pregnant with their fourth.

Rest in peace, Chico. You were – and always will be – the man.

 

SGV

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Re: Sad Day For Boxing... R.I.P. Diego Corrales
« Reply #12 on: May 08, 2007, 02:43:45 PM »
Dude was a true boxer. Damn shame he's gone. One can only hope for more fighters like him.
 

SmokinDro520

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Re: Sad Day For Boxing... R.I.P. Diego Corrales
« Reply #13 on: May 08, 2007, 06:16:32 PM »
R.I.P to a True Fighter
PoP PoP THIZZ!!
 

E. J. Rizo

Re: Sad Day For Boxing... R.I.P. Diego Corrales
« Reply #14 on: May 08, 2007, 10:44:48 PM »
<a href="http://www.youtube.com/v/qjehZW7_JrY" target="_blank" class="new_win">http://www.youtube.com/v/qjehZW7_JrY</a>