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Top 12 All-Time Greatest Opening Rounds — Boxing’s Greatest First Acts


In boxing, as in most things in life, it’s quality, not quantity. Excitement is the name of the game and the greatest fights are the ones offering the most intensity and drama, whether they last one round or fifteen. But sometimes a pair of gladiators make a joint decision to get the proceedings off to a fiery start, and then the rest of the match can have a difficult time living up to its opening act. Herewith, the most thrilling and action-packed first rounds ever, the ones that mesmerized us either because they offered 180 seconds of intense two-way fireworks, or shocking shifts in momentum, or both. Check ’em out:

12: Joe Frazier RTD7 Jerry Quarry, June 23, 1969: An extraordinary three minutes of non-stop, toe-to-toe warfare marked the beginning of the 1969 Fight Of The Year between “Irish” Jerry Quarry and “Smokin’ Joe” Frazier as the heavyweights, both packing deadly punching power, decided to test each other early. The entire round could have been contested in a broom closet, as both refused to willingly surrender a single inch of ring space, throwing and catching one huge shot after another, neither having a decided edge in an amazing three minute slugfest.

Smokin’ Joe and Irish give the fans their money’s worth.

11. Manny Pacquiao D12 Juan Manuel Marquez. May 8, 2004: How appropriate that one of the great rivalries of recent boxing history began with a blistering and unforgettable three minute stanza. For much of it, Marquez was on the brink of disaster as he absorbed a series of power punches from the southpaw dynamo they called “The Pacman.” Three times the Filipino blasted the Mexican to the canvas with his cannon of a left hand, but three times “Dinamita” rose, as he just barely survived round one of the Pacquiao-Marquez tetralogy. In testament to Marquez’s skill and courage, he rebounded to win more than his share of the next eleven rounds and hold Pacquiao to a draw.

Marquez down again in a thrilling first round.

10. Floyd Patterson KO6 Ingemar Johansson. March 13, 1961: Patterson and Johansson were a match made in fight fan heaven as all three of their battles were defined by big punches and wild action. Round one of their final clash was especially eventful as it saw them exchanging power shots at a torrid pace and trading knockdowns. Twice Patterson hit the deck and for a moment it seemed certain that “Ingo” was about to end it early, but then Floyd crashed home a desperation left hook to put Johansson on his backside. The Swede rose and as the frantic crowd cheered them on, the two hurt warriors slugged away until the bell.

Ingo’s turn: Johansson hits the deck in a wild opener.

9. Kelvin Seabrooks TKO10 Thierry Jacob. July 4, 1987: Just seconds into the match, defending bantamweight champion Seabrooks put Thierry down hard with a powerful right hand and the challenger’s hometown crowd went silent. But Thierry rose and what followed was intense, non-stop combat until suddenly it was the champion on the canvas, courtesy of the southpaw’s left fist. Seabrooks scrambled to his feet and Thierry pursued as the crowd roared and the champion soon found himself down a second time. The Frenchman pounded his wounded quarry all over the ring, but Seabrooks somehow survived the round, before going on to break the hearts of the challenger’s fans.

Seabrooks and Jacob square off in Calais.

8. Nov. 5, 2011: James Kirkland TKO6 Alfredo Angulo. Everyone knew this pairing meant toe-to-toe action but no one could have anticipated the unbridled savagery of the first round. Throwing bombs from the bell, Kirkland drove Angulo back, only to be struck with a vicious right hand that sent him to the floor. “The Mandingo Warrior” beat the count but Angulo was determined to end it and for a full minute he unleashed hell, a storm of non-stop power shots that had Kirkland reeling. It was a gamble for Angulo and one that did not pay off. “El Perro” punched himself out and suddenly it was Kirkland in command and landing shot after shot, the attack culminating in the first knockdown of Angulo’s career just before the bell.

7: Sept. 9, 1983: Aaron Pryor KO10 Alexis Arguello II. If only Arguello vs Pryor had been a trilogy, because there was something about these two champions that meshed so beautifully and the result was not just two unforgettable and action-packed battles, but also two ferocious opening rounds. And while both merit standing, it was decided for the purposes of this list we had to choose between the two, so after careful consideration we judged round one of the rematch slightly more intense and engrossing, with the added excitement of an early knockdown. For rapid-fire, non-stop action between two all-time greats, it doesn’t get much better than this.

Pryor and Arguello wasted no time giving fans a sequel worthy of the original.

6. Ray Mancini TKO1 Arturo Frias. May 8, 1982: Rebounding from his defeat to Alexis Arguello, Mancini went hunting for Frias’ WBA title but the champion wasn’t about to surrender it without a fight. And in just under three minutes, Mancini and Frias gave fans as much, or more, action than most matches of ten times the duration. As one writer put it: “This was … a whirlwind battle, both men like thresher machines gone haywire as they traded huge shots at breakneck speed.” Both were tagged with tremendous blows, and both were shaken, but it was Frias who hit the canvas and had to be saved by the referee with just six seconds left in the round.

Frias and Mancini let the big shots fly.

5. Benny Leonard TKO6 Richie Mitchell II. Jan. 14, 1921: A truly legendary opening round. Champion Leonard presided over perhaps the greatest lightweight division in history and one of the pugilists who made it so was Mitchell, a dangerous puncher. Benny had beaten him once before and figured he could so again, and quickly. He went for the knockout early and floored Mitchell three times, but then, to the shock of the Madison Square Garden crowd, the challenger rose from the third knockdown and promptly buried a left into Leonard’s belly followed by a right to the head.

Mitchell and Leonard before their legendary battle.

Down went the champion and so hurt was “The Ghetto Wizard” that he was supremely fortunate to beat the count. The biggest chance of Mitchell’s boxing life stood before him, a dazed and teetering Benny Leonard, but before he could strike, the champion snarled at him and waved him in. With the crowd roaring, Mitchell, fearing a trap, hesitated, and thus lost his chance to score what would have been one of the biggest first round knockouts in all of boxing history.

4. Archie Moore KO11 Yvon Durelle. Dec. 10, 1958: In an unexpectedly thrilling round in an unexpectedly thrilling fight, Durelle came close to scoring a monumental upset when barely a minute into the match he blasted Moore with a thunderous right hand and Archie hit the canvas so hard his head bounced twice. Somehow Moore beat the count but he was in desperate trouble and he soon found himself on the floor again. And then a third time. Moore rose but it was obvious to all he was dangerously close to being stopped and Durelle chased “The Old Mongoose” all about the ring and assaulted him with blow after blow.

It appeared impossible that the former champion could survive, but somehow he did as the crowd collectively held its breath and as Archie staggered, skittered and backpedaled in the wake of Durelle’s attack. But, incredibly, before the round was over, there was Moore, standing his ground and exchanging heavy blows with his tormentor as the Montreal crowd went berserk.

3. Michael Moorer TKO5 Bert Cooper, May 15, 1992: Three solid minutes of heavyweight carnage. “Smokin’ Bert” wasted no time getting down to business as he ambushed Moorer at the outset, driving the former light heavyweight champ to the ropes and scoring a knockdown just forty seconds into the match. But Moorer righted himself and it was toe-to-toe mayhem before the tables were turned and then –Boom!- it was Cooper on the floor. Moorer’s follow-up assault was devastating but, incredibly, the round ended with Bert retaliating with heavy shots. Crazy, brutal stuff. And to think there were four more rounds to go! Without a doubt, one of the all-time great heavyweight slugfests.

2. Marvelous Marvin Hagler KO3 Thomas Hearns. April 15, 1985: If you have even just a passing familiarity with boxing, you knew as you read down this list that this now legendary three minute interval of explosive warfare had to be near the top. And you were correct. In the weeks leading up to their huge middleweight showdown, the mutual animosity between Marvelous Marvin and Hitman Hearns only intensified and the pent-up anger and hatred meant both were primed to unleash their big guns right from the opening bell. And that they did. Hagler threw 82 punches; Hearns threw 83, virtually all of them fired with very bad intentions. What a war. What a round!

1. Jack Dempsey KO2 Luis Firpo, Sept. 14, 1923: More than a century has passed but we’re still waiting for an opening round that can top the carnage and whirlwind excitement that was unleashed when the bell for round one rang at the Polo Grounds in New York City for the heavyweight championship battle between “The Manassa Mauler” and “The Wild Bull of the Pampas.” The sound of the bell was still echoing in the New York night when the two big heavyweights collided and the first clean punch, a right from Firpo, put the defending champ on one knee, and Dempsey bounced up without a count. What then followed was sheer fistic mayhem.

Dempsey hovers as Firpo yet again struggles to rise.

Contested before the advent of the mandatory eight count, the action barely paused for a second, even when Firpo took one of his seven trips to the floor; the brave challenger would scramble to his feet and the second his gloves left the canvas, the wild battle resumed. It was non-stop brawling and grappling and slugging and then, just when it appeared Dempsey might prevail by first round knockout, Firpo gathered himself and attacked, his potent right hand sending the supposedly invincible champion through the ropes and out of the ring. Dempsey barely beat the count and had to survive several more solid shots, the two exhausted warriors still exchanging deadly punches at the bell that ended the most thrilling and extraordinary opening round in boxing history. Don’t believe us? Just watch the video:

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