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Three-weight world champion Iran Barkley shared the ring with some of the greatest fighters to have ever laced up the gloves ...
Roberto Duran fought 119 times, winning world titles in four weight classes over a career that lasted from 1968 until 2001.
Roberto Duran is a symbol of Panamanian sport and a world boxing legend, a member of the Hall of Fame and recognized as one of the best lightweight (135 pounds) of all-time as experts classify him ...
NEW ORLEANS – Roberto Duran quit. The macho man just up and quit. One moment he was fighting and the next moment he wasn’t. “No more,” he said to Sugar Ray Leonard. It was the eighth round ...
Lightweight champion Roberto Duran holds his son, Roberto Jr., 2, as his wife Claudine kisses him after he won a unanimous decision over Edwin Viruet in Uniondale, New York, on Sept. 30, 1975.
Boxing great Roberto Duran attends a news conference in New York, in January 2015. The family of boxing great Roberto Duran says he is receiving medical care for a heart problem.
A slum kid with a scrappy gift for fighting, Duran’s will to win in the ring arose, according to the film, out of a desire to avenge his struggling nation over its hotly contested, American ...
“Roberto regrets it so much now … it annoys him just to hear those two words,” says Hodgson. I am Duran pivots around the long term rivalry between the Panamian and Leonard.
Also Durán. Robert and Roberto hung out. Then, after winning his welterweight title against Sugar Ray Leonard, Durán plummeted. The film depicts him undisciplined. Understatement.
Panamanian boxer Roberto Durán, who held world championships in four weight classes during his more than three-decade career, has tested positive for the coronavirus but has had only mild ...
In the upcoming documentary I Am Duran, the Panamanian fighter's family and longtime rivals and opponents Sugar Ray Leonard and Mike Tyson reflect on his life and legacy.