Boxing Scene Magazine March 1984 Hector Camacho Cover No Label


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Sale price$19.95

Description

Boxing Scene Magazine – March 1984 – Héctor “Macho” Camacho Cover – No Label

This March 1984 issue of Lou Sahadi’s Boxing Scene features Héctor “Macho” Camacho on the cover, showcasing the brash young champion as the sport’s most exciting new star. Packed with year-end awards, fighter profiles, historical retrospectives, and fantasy matchups, this issue captures the drama and diversity of the fight game during the early 1980s.

Condition:
The magazine is in good condition. The item pictured in this listing is the exact copy you will receive. Please review photos for details on condition. Each issue is shipped with a plastic protective covering. Combined shipping is available upon request.

Contents Include:

  • Ten Greatest Fights of 1983 by Ed Schuyler – Hagler vs. Duran tops the annual list.

  • Fighter of the Year – Boxing Scene’s editors crown Marvin Hagler.

  • Most Exciting Fighter – Héctor Camacho earns the spotlight as boxing’s flashiest personality.

  • Comeback Fighter of the Year – Honoring a remarkable career revival.

  • Gregg Edelman: The Zion Lion Roars by Mike Nathe – A rising star with heavyweight lineage.

  • How “The Devil” Got Into Charlie Green by Mike Marley – The tragic downfall of a once-popular contender.

  • Livingstone Bramble Charges: “Mancini Is Avoiding Me!” by Howard Dolgon – A hungry lightweight contender speaks out.

  • A Sad Blot on Boxing by Peter Heller – Champions who fell from riches to rags.

  • Randy “Tex” Cobb in the Movies by Bill Libby – From heavyweight brawler to Hollywood actor.

  • Chicago’s Leroy Murphy: Can Punch Like Tyson, But Needs to Believe It by Mike Marley – A cruiserweight on the rise.

  • The Rocky I Knew by Murray Goodman – Reflections from Marciano’s widow.

  • The Brutal and Beautiful Worlds of Julian Jackson – A profile of one of the hardest punchers of his generation.

  • Alberto Davila: “I Can’t Forget I Killed a Man in the Ring” by Bill Libby – The bantamweight champ on tragedy and redemption.

  • Gus D’Amato in the Agency Likes Rocky Graziano by Bill Rocca – Carrying on boxing traditions as a mentor and agent.

  • This Richards Is Savage Only When He’s in the Ring by Jon Henderson – A top contender with two different lives.

  • Sugar Ray Leonard vs. Henry Armstrong: Who Was Better? – A fantasy fight of two all-time greats.

  • Brown and Blocker: A Double Dose of Dynamite by Ken Rapport – The “Killer B’s” emerge as serious contenders.

A feature-rich issue that blends legends, new stars, and hard-hitting editorials—making it a standout collectible for boxing fans and enthusiasts of the 1980s fight scene.

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