‘‘At one time I believed I would never get beaten and would go down as one of the legends in the sport,’’ he said. Hamed readily admits that he did, in his own mind, have an aura of invincibility and that ultimately it was his undoing. ‘‘I have a burning desire in my heart and in my belly to show that I’m the best in the world, still,’’ he said. Ingle would answer the count, but was on wobbly knees causing referee to call the fight and award Hamed the knockout victory.Hamed insists he can come back better and stronger in both body and mind when he steps into the London Arena ring on March 23 to face Spain’s European featherweight champion Manuel Calvo in his first fight since Mexico’s Manuel Antonio Barrera inflicted his first professional defeat in Las Vegas last April. However, 30 seconds into the 11th round, Hamed would land a left hand to Ingle's head sending him down for the third time in the fight. Ingle would continue the fight and suddenly take control of the fight in the ninth round, landing several power punches and bloodying Hamed's nose and mouth. Hamed would continue to control the bout and Ingle would be forced to take a knee in the sixth for Hamed's second knockdown after Hamed landed another two-left combination to the head and body. Hamed would get off to a fast start after knocking down Ingle in the first round after landing a left to Ingle's body and then following that with a left to the head. Hamed would control most of the fight and would score three knockdowns over Ingle, but for the second consecutive fight, he had trouble scoring an early knockout as he had in his previous fights. Three Hamed look-alikes were first deployed dancing like Hamed to Faith Evans's hit song " Love Like This" before the real Hamed entered the arena being driven in a convertible to Busta Rhymes' " Put Your Hands Where My Eyes Can See." Paul Ingle and his promoter Frank Maloney refused to wait in the ring as Hamed made his lengthy entrance and instead retreated to the locker room area before returning once Hamed entered the arena. In his first fight without Brendan Ingle, Hamed would enlist the training services of Emmanuel Steward, who was one of the most prominent trainers in boxing at the time, as well as Oscar Suarez, who had previously trained former WBC light middleweight champion Luis Santana. However, Ingle had a change of heart and ultimately agreed to face Hamed instead of Robinson. Hamed then entered negotiations with the reigning European featherweight champion Paul Ingle, though Ingle initially passed on the offer in favor of a bout with former WBO featherweight champion Steve Robinson. The following month in January, Hamed also confirmed that he was splitting with his promoter Frank Warren after their contract had expired and would instead handle his own fight negotiations. A little over a month after the fight, Hamed officially announced that he and Ingle had parted ways. Hamed decided to keep Ingle in his corner for the McCullough fight as an "advisor", but seemed to ignore and disregard Ingle's advice in between rounds. Prior to the fight, Hamed began having trouble with his longtime trainer Brendan Ingle (unrelated to Paul Ingle) stemming from comments Ingle had made in his book "The Paddy and the Prince". In his previous fight, WBO featherweight champion Naseem Hamed had defeated Irish contender Wayne McCullough by unanimous decision, increasing his record to 31–0, but ending his over 4-year knockout streak. Paul Ingle was a professional boxing match contested on Apfor the WBO and Lineal featherweight championships. JSTOR ( September 2021) ( Learn how and when to remove this template message).Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.įind sources: "Naseem Hamed vs. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. This article needs additional citations for verification.
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