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      Cytat dnia: Gołota i tenis

    IP: *.bchsia.telus.net 09.04.04, 02:11
    W dodatku, musialby walnac ponizej pasa...
      • Gość: bue golota do blota!!!!!!!!!! IP: 5.2.* / *.chello.pl 09.04.04, 02:18
        ja mam nadzieje, ze on juz nie uwaza sie za polaka. ja nie chce miec z tym
        bubkiem nic wspolnego...
      • Gość: Fan Goloty Cytat dnia: Gołota i tenis IP: 67.71.186.* 09.04.04, 04:06
        Czytalem ten caly artykul ludzie JAKIE ON RZECZY WYGADYWAL..dawac go zaraz do
        partii najlepiej Samoobrony...
        • Gość: jacek Re: Cytat dnia: Gołota i tenis IP: *.netinfo2.net.ubc.ca 09.04.04, 05:00
          Nie wiem co ty czytales, ale w tym artykule to sie on specjalnie nie nagadal:

          www.suntimes.com/output/couch/cst-spt-greg08.html
          Pozdrawiam,
          J.
        • Gość: wlodek Re: Cytat dnia: Gołota i tenis IP: *.acn.waw.pl 09.04.04, 08:25
          Całkiem fajny komentarz. Ale w sumie dobrze, że w wolnym czasie nie strzela z
          karabinku sportowego... lub innego.
          Do Samoobrony to i on by się faktycznie nadawał, może w chwili pomroczności
          jasnej walnął by przewodniczącego widłami? Byłby spokój...
      • Gość: Maciu Re: Cytat dnia: Gołota i tenis IP: *.sympatico.ca 09.04.04, 05:41
        Andrzej jest bokserem a nie gadaczem. Boksuje na tyle dobrze ze jest w czolowce
        swiatowej. Jezeli myslicie ze murzyni amerykanscy (bokserzy) sa
        inteligentniejsi to leczcie sie ze swoich kompleksow. Andrzej budzi
        kontrowersje swym stylem walk ale musi sie znalezc w swiatku w ktorym przyszlo
        mu zaistniec i robi to jak potrafi najlepiej. Ja mu zycze zeby wygral. Ilu
        jeszcze mamy ludzi ktorzy nie sa nijacy. I jeszcze jedno , jak ktos umie
        boksowac to boksuje a jak nie umie to uczy innych jak sie to robi.
        Maciu.
      • Gość: mm Re: Cytat dnia: Gołota i tenis IP: *.elartnet.pl / 62.233.196.* 09.04.04, 09:10
        golowa to idiota, ale 'jak bedzie bic sie za Polske', to bede ogladac
      • Gość: mm Re: Cytat dnia: Gołota i tenis IP: *.elartnet.pl / *.elart.com.pl 09.04.04, 09:13
        rewelacja, walnac kogos rakieta...
      • Gość: rest Re: Cytat dnia: Gołota i tenis IP: *.transprojekt.ppl / *.transprojekt.gdansk.pl 09.04.04, 09:17
        www.suntimes.com/output/couch/cst-spt-greg08.html
      • Gość: Endrju Zalaczam dla was ten artykul -trzymajcie kciuki IP: *.pecuser.com 09.04.04, 14:42
        abym nie bil po jajach i nie uciekl z ringu
        Andrew Golota had his fists taped at the Windy City Gym on the West Side for a
        light workout of shadow-boxing, bag-hitting, rope-jumping and situps. A long,
        hook-shaped scar covered part of his nose. His bottom lip had a black spot. His
        arms had marks from burns or rubbed-off skin or something.

        Imagine where it all came from. And with Golota, the fun is in imagining the
        worst. Remember the riot after he was disqualified for hitting Riddick Bowe
        below the belt? Remember when it all happened again in the rematch? Remember
        when he quit after the second round against Mike Tyson, and fans threw stuff at
        him?

        He left boxing for nearly three years after that. Now, after beating two
        nobodies and getting another penalty for low blows, Golota, 36, is getting
        another shot at the world heavyweight championship. He'll fight IBF champ Chris
        Byrd on April 17 at Madison Square Garden.

        Can you imagine? Golota gets a title shot? He hasn't won a relevant fight in
        years.

        ''Who else is going to get it?'' he asked. And he had a point.

        Don King is backing Golota, and when asked whether we should expect low blows,
        King said, ''He's not going below, he's going above. I'll have a golf club in
        my corner.''

        Imagine: Golota goes dirty, King smacks him with a 9-iron, people jump into the
        ring and yank on King's hair. Step right up and don't miss it on pay-per-view.

        Golota knows his image but doesn't like it: ''Low blows. Now it's time to
        redeem myself.''

        Redeem yourself? You mean change your image?

        That would be the end of his career. Once a promising fighter, Golota is urban
        legend now. Something crazy is bound to happen, and people will pay to see
        that. That's how he gets a title shot.

        ''I've showed I can box,'' he said. ''It's not because of the low blows.''

        It's because you throw low blows. You bite necks. You head-butt. You start
        riots. It's not because you beat Brian Nix and Terrance Lewis, whoever they are.

        It is so clear what's happening. King thought he could promote this fight, and
        he pressured the IBF into ranking Golota high enough to merit the billing.
        Golota suddenly is No. 15, and New York Times columnist Dave Anderson wrote
        that if that's true, then ''your Aunt Emma is worthy of being at least No. 14.''

        One writer sarcastically said everything would be OK as long as Golota took
        lithium. And at Windy City, people talked about being hit in the head with
        debris at Golota fights. It is the buzz of the boxing world: How can Andrew
        Golota actually have gotten a title shot?

        The answer is this: He is the only one out there who can create a buzz.

        Part of the outcry is that Dominick Quinn deserved the shot instead of Golota.
        Do you know who Quinn is?

        Look, there is a grand but select history of heavyweight title fights at the
        Garden, with nearly two dozen of them in 100 years. Joe Frazier beat Muhammad
        Ali there. Joe Louis beat Jersey Joe Walcott. Jack Dempsey beat Luis Angel
        Firpo. Jess Willard, Larry Holmes and Ezzard Charles won there.

        And now, Byrd vs. Golota. Maybe boxing should have a stepladder up the rankings
        to success. But today, it's a struggle just to find something that someone
        would watch.

        Golota doesn't agree with that and says his image isn't accurate. But we saw
        what we saw: He repeatedly hit Bowe low.

        ''Sometimes it happens,'' he said. ''And he was ready to go [down]. I saw an
        open spot in the stomach and tried to hit it.

        ''They played with my mind. I signed a contract for 10 rounds, but before the
        fight they changed it to 12. I almost didn't fight. My manager, my promoter,
        everyone failed. Including me. I lost the fight.''

        Somehow, he blends frustration with accident. It was July 11, 1996, also at the
        Garden. And that was the most disgraceful day in Golota's career.

        Also, the best.

        Bowe was not the champ but was regarded as the world's best fighter. Golota was
        6-4, 240 pounds of solid muscle with an Olympic bronze medal. He had bitten one
        opponent, head-butted another to the ground. He was next in a long line of
        great white hopes and looked like Drago, the huge, hated Russian fighter
        in "Rocky IV.'' In 1990, Golota emigrated from Poland to Chicago with hopes of
        becoming a truck driver.

        He was supposed to be clobbered. In the seventh round, already having been
        penalized for low blows, he was disqualified for doing it again. During the
        riot, someone hit him in the head with a cellphone.

        They called him Foul Pole after that, but the thing was, Golota was leading on
        the judges' scorecards. And the riot drew such attention that he landed a $2
        million re-match, which also would end with Golota disqualified for low blows.

        Still, he was known immediately as an unpredictable head-case who had the
        ability to fight with the best. You can sell that.

        His latest fights have been easy enough, but that didn't stop him from more
        dirty stuff: "I hit one guy directly in the belly, and he called it a low
        blow.''

        A theory: Golota gets worked up, especially against big guys, and gets tired
        mid-fight. It all blends together, and the low blows are the result. Byrd is
        more skilled than Golota, but won't be intimidating at 220 pounds. Golota has a
        puncher's chance.

        One more thing, Andrew. What did you do during those three years away from
        boxing? What trouble?

        ''I skied,'' he said. ''I played tennis.''

        Hold it right there. Andrew Golota does not ski. Andrew Golota does not play
        tennis. Could you have made a career out of tennis?

        ''No,'' he said. ''Unless I hit someone with the racket.''

        Hmm. Tennis might be able to use that.

        • Gość: TadeuszL Go Golota Go IP: 67.70.228.* 15.04.04, 16:16
          Hej, ten facet przynajmniej nie jest nudny, zycze mu wygranej, no ale jak
          bedzie przegrywal no to chyba bedzie musial goscia po klejnotach?
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