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Mancini-Kim:
Beyond the Brink
I
am always amazed at how many people forget about this savage battle. I say
savage because it was not a one-sided beat down as many have been led to
believe, though Mancini landed an inordinate amount of head shots throughout
the fight. I saw it “live” on TV on November 13, 1982 (though I cannot
recall where I was at the time).
Deuk Koo Kim was 17-1-1 at the time and had fought all but one of his fights
in Seoul, South Korea. He needed to lose several pounds before the fight to
make the weight and many claimed he was dehydrated going in. Ray Boom Boom
Mancini was 24-1 at the time and was the World Boxing Association
lightweight title holder.
The fight featured incredible give and take action early on with Kim showing
heart and courage. However, by the twelfth round, he was showing signs of
fatigue as he began to stumble at times. The thirteenth round began with Boom
Boom pummeling the game South Korean and it appeared the end was near, but
incredibly, Kim rallied with his own big shots thus nullifying any notion of
stopping the action. The crowd roared its approval for both combatants as the
round ended. These were two gamecocks going at it non-stop. Ray had suffered a
cut over one eye and one of Kim’s eyes was swollen.
By the fourteenth stanza, Kim was spent and
Mancini attacked immediately. After missing two lethal shots, he floored him
with a straight right from hell. Somehow, Kim got up, but he was done. He
staggered back to his corner and onto his stool.
As Ray celebrated his hard-earned win in the ring, one could tell something
was not right in Kim’s corner as his seconds were motioning wildly and there
was a sense of urgency. Even Ray seemed to sense that something was not quite
right. As it turned out, Deuk Koo Kim had sustained brain injuries and then
lapsed into a coma. He died a few days later in a nearby hospital.
The aftermath of this tragic bout (with its
many twists and turns) is the stuff of screenplays, but that’s not where I
want to go
on this, the 25th Anniversary of the
fight. No, this is about two very game fighters who took it beyond the brink;
sadly, only one came back. This is about giving both their due.
The story goes that Kim, in an eerie premonition, proclaimed in a note prior
to the fight: “Kill or be killed.” If so (and I have never corroborated
this), it played out that way.
Boxing Photos: 1
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Night at the Foxwoods | Brawl at the
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