PDA

View Full Version : ~~~ ESB Box! Writing Championship™ - August - Erik "El Terrible" Morales Tribute~~~


Decebal
08-05-2007, 04:34 AM
Decebal's Boxing Promotion$™

in association with

ESB Forum, "Biiig on Boxing!"

exclusively presents:


The Month of August

Box! Writing Championship™
for the title:

Box! Writing Champion™




to be decided by popular vote after the first ten entries have been received or after the deadline has expired, whichever comes sooner,








for the essay with the title:

"Erik "El Terrible" Morales - a Tribute"



[Only registered and activated users can see links]


Deadline for entries is the 22nd of August 5pm GMT.


Word limit is 250.


The poll will last until the 28th of the month.



The Box! Writing Champion™ will be crowned on the last day of the month.



The Box! Writing Champion™ will earn the right to add "BOX! Writing Champion" to his/her signature/location/user profile and the Box! Writing Championship™ Trophy as his/her avatar forever.



Mr. S.S. Decebal, President of the DBP™: "Once a champion, always a champion, God dammit!"










[Only registered and activated users can see links]







The Box! Writing Championship™ Trophy

Decebal
08-05-2007, 01:03 PM
New format announced.

Decebal
08-05-2007, 03:43 PM
...be the first to compete in the DBP's first Championship!!! Do not miss out on this unique, once-in-a-life-time opportunity! It's FREEEE!

Decebal
08-05-2007, 04:52 PM
The first entrant will receive the status of Official Box! Writing Championship™ Challenger!

In case his/her entry ties for the first spot with another entry, the Official Box! Writing Championship™ Challenger will receive an extra vote ex officio, and will thus be guaranteed victory! ;)

cross_trainer
08-05-2007, 05:09 PM
The first entrant will receive the status of Official Box! Writing Championship™ Challenger!

In case his/her entry ties for the first spot with another entry, the Official Box! Writing Championship™ Challenger will receive an extra vote ex officio, and will thus be guaranteed victory! ;)

In conclusion, Morales was the greatest of all time.

The End.

Decebal
08-05-2007, 05:33 PM
In conclusion, Morales was the greatest of all time.

The End.

Ladies and Gentlemen! We have our first entry!

cross_trainer, Esq. has acceded to the office of Official Box! Writing Championship™ Challenger!

A controversial entry, to be sure, but one that has the full backing of The President, Mr. S.S. Decebal Jr.

"Marvellous; tight and sweet - just as I like them! If only I were 40 years younger!" - Mr. S.S. Decebal Jr., President of the DBP™


The Management of DBP™ would like to remind all entrants that only one entry per entrant will be accepted - the first one! Good luck!

Decebal
08-05-2007, 07:54 PM
serious thread, friends; nobody thinks that the legendary Morales deserves an up to 250 word tribute, for his entire career?:think

salsanchezfan
08-05-2007, 09:44 PM
What do we get if we win? :think

Amsterdam
08-05-2007, 09:52 PM
What do we get if we win? :think

[Only registered and activated users can see links]

salsanchezfan
08-05-2007, 10:01 PM
[Only registered and activated users can see links]



............You know, I'm kinda tired of using a coke can as a spitoon.



I'm in! :good

salsanchezfan
08-05-2007, 10:13 PM
When he dethroned the ageless Daniel Zaragoza nearly a decade and 13 pounds ago, there was little reason to believe Erik Morales would still have such an emotional pull on boxing fans today. Many fighters have longevity, some have a slew of titles to show for their efforts, but few seem to represent the warrior mentality and the willingness to take on all comers the way Morales has.

While there might be a rather sizable gap in their comparative skills, he is in this sense very much like Arturo Gatti. Living proof that one needn't win every fight in order to continue to command big paydays and the respect of the entire boxing community. The meat between the bread is the willingness to risk, the laying it all out there for the world to see. As his career progressed, wins and losses seemed somehow less important than the effort. You knew a herculean effort would always be there. When the smoke clears, that's all we really want anyway.

Decebal
08-06-2007, 07:06 AM
Thanks for your nice piece, salsanchezfan!

The Box! Writing Champion™ will earn the right to add "BOX! Writing Champion" to his/her signature/location/user profile and the Box! Writing Championship™ Trophy as his/her avatar forever.

Decebal
08-07-2007, 11:48 AM
:bump

cross_trainer
08-07-2007, 11:54 AM
Thanks for your nice piece, salsanchezfan!

The Box! Writing Champion™ will earn the right to add "BOX! Writing Champion" to his/her signature/location/user profile and the Box! Writing Championship™ Trophy as his/her avatar forever.

Didn't I already win the Box! Writing Championship in the last thread?

We'll have to set up a unification bout sometime soon...

Decebal
08-07-2007, 12:10 PM
Didn't I already win the Box! Writing Championship in the last thread?

We'll have to set up a unification bout sometime soon...

Congratulations! You have won the The Month of July Contest - part of The Box! Writing Championship™ Series! The Series continues this month, with a tribute to Erik Morales. Whoever wins the most Box! Writing Championhip™ Series Contests by the end of the year, is declared The Box! Writing World Champion™.:good

Manassa
08-07-2007, 01:01 PM
Morales; More or less? With Morales, it was always more.

From his successful days as a scrawny junior bantamweight to his darker times as a small lightweight, Morales gave us everything. Energetic when provoked, Rugged on the receiving end, Intense in motion, Kinetic in action, Marvellous in winning, Obdurate when faced by adversity, Rapacious on assault, Athletic regarding mobility, Lethal on attack, Epic in battle and Stubborn always. That was Erik Morales.

Decebal
08-07-2007, 01:11 PM
Thank you, Manassa, for an eloquent, dashing entry!

Manassa
08-07-2007, 01:13 PM
I was thinking about padding it out a bit, but I thought short but sweet hit the hardest.

Decebal
08-07-2007, 02:01 PM
I was thinking about padding it out a bit, but I thought short but sweet hit the hardest.

In this case, especially given the low word limit...it seems a good bet!

George W Hedge
08-07-2007, 02:54 PM
Erik Morales - The Ultimate Warrior Of Boxing.

Not just the pride of Tijuana, not just the pride of Mexico but the pride of everything we love about this great sport.... he was the ultimate fair play sportsman in the ultimate of hard sports, there is nothing not legendary about El Terrible.

You want to box him, he will box you
You want to fight him, he will fight you
You want to hit him with what you think is the ko punch on the chin, he will hit you right back TWICE if your lucky.

1 of the best technicians of the past 10 yrs
1 of the most value for money warriors of all time
How many boxers can claim to be both an artist & warrior combined, not many.

Never lost decisively in his prime yrs & even when his body was packing it in his heart never did.

It doesnt hurt that he won the best fight Ive ever seen = Morales MAB 1... what a war.

For a fighter who never believed too much in clinching, he done pretty damn well.

Erik Morales = The Ultimate Warrior Of Boxing.

We will never forget you as long as boxing lives.

:good :good :good :good :good :good :good :good :good :good :good :good :good :good
:happy :happy :happy :happy :happy :happy :happy :happy :happy :happy :happy :happy :happy :happy

Decebal
08-07-2007, 03:07 PM
Thank you for your enthusiastic and passionate entry, George W Hedge!

Decebal
08-08-2007, 11:13 AM
:bump

Decebal
08-08-2007, 07:32 PM
It's easy to be intimidated by the high quality entries so far, but nothing is done and dusted yet, and Morales deserves at least as good a tribute as he has so far received.

Amsterdam
08-08-2007, 09:55 PM
Like the timeless Spartan* Erik Morales captured our imagination held with true boxing fans one of our highest titles, the title of warrior. His battles deep, his victories astonishing and this warrior will always be remembered for his heart, grit and determination in gaining victory and thrilling fans.

El Terrible stood behind his boxer-puncher stance dishing out and absorbing punishment for the good majority of his run at the top level and it was a sacrifice well spent. I remember my first Erik Morales bout very well, as it was Barrera vs. Morales, from the opening bell these two opened up on each other and until the final bell they continued. This intense showing of skill and will ended up going down as one of the greatest fights of all time and rightfully so, it was an experience.

Needless to say, this was not the only event that Erik left a little part of himself in the ring, so a tribute to you great warrior and a wish of happyness and good health in the rest of your adventures life.

Decebal
08-09-2007, 05:35 AM
Thank you for your analysis and warmhearted, touching tribute, Amsterdam!


*Leonidas!!!

George W Hedge
08-09-2007, 10:00 AM
Once in a (long) while a fighter comes along that has that mixture of skills, toughness & burning passion... a fighter you just know would have made a home in any era of boxing & entertained along the way.

Erik `El Terrible` Morales was that kind of fighter, from his Tijuana humble upbringing right through to his last superb effort vs David Diaz, Erik Morales never lost his passion or his heart, unfortunetely he made 1 simple mistake, a mistake he could not help... the mistake of being human.

El Terrible proved in his prime days that he was superior or at least equal to any fighter who stepped in the ring with him.
Of his 6 defeats - 3 were debatable (MAB 2 & 3, Diaz) & some would argue (with a strong case) that only 1 of these happened before Erik`s body started feeling the effects... That `Loss` being the 2nd MAB fight, a fight Morales won clearly in my eyes.

I could go on forever why Morales pluses heavily outweigh the minuses but I`ll leave it at this.....

ERIK MORALES - TIJUANA - MEXICO - WORLD ICON

(Thanks for memories that will never die, just like your spirit & passion)

:good :happy :hi:

Decebal
08-09-2007, 09:27 PM
Thank you for your enthousiasm, George W Hedge!

Decebal
08-10-2007, 07:06 AM
:bump

Decebal
08-11-2007, 07:11 AM
Has this man never inspired you?

[Only registered and activated users can see links]

Decebal
08-12-2007, 02:39 PM
Has this man never inspired you?

[Only registered and activated users can see links]

:think

Decebal
08-14-2007, 10:11 AM
allright! only about a week left - time to write in!:good

prime
08-14-2007, 01:35 PM
Who says dashing, gallant heroes are a thing of the past, or perhaps never were? Viciously seizing glory in the ring, graciously raising his conqueror’s hand in his own twilight, Erik “El Terrible” Morales looked and lived the part of that vanishing specimen, the honorable gladiator.

Boxing inspires the best in a young boy: to transcend your humble origins, to develop into the guy who saves the day, to win glory but only with honor, to buy your mother a house, and inspire the children to call out your name.

He became a frightful attack machine, defeating opponent after opponent. He stopped the unstopped champion, and beat the best men of his era. In boxing, you conquer yourself and you must conquer another, equally-hungry man’s will. “El Terrible” knew what it took and thrilled audiences while overcoming rivals with his technical, fierce craft. Never satisfied, he always looked to the next summit, claiming three different belts in three different weight classes.

Perhaps defeat shows more of a man than constant victory, and when time caught up with “El Terrible”, he was promptly courteous and respectful in acknowledging his opponent and his own shortcoming. Never a showboat, never an ego trip, the man quietly went about his business, and demonstrated what dashing, gallant heroes are truly all about.

All this I see in the serene look of the winner that is Erik Morales.

Decebal
08-14-2007, 01:38 PM
:shock:Are you sure you don't do this for a living, prime?

The Funny Man 7
08-14-2007, 07:52 PM
Morales Dared To Be Great
The Quixotic Dream: Thirty years ago, Wilfredo "Bazooka" Gomez ruled the junior bantamweight division with an iron fist, defending his title with seventeen consecutive knockouts. many experts assumed that no fighter could ever match the Puerto Rican’s accomplishments. But the one they called "El Terrible" dared to be great. He dared to challenge himself. Gomez proved his greatness by turning out the lights on seventeen consecutive super bantamweight challenger. We watched "El Terrible" do so by going to war with some of the very best fighter of his generation; of any generation.
The Hunger: During his championship reign, "El Terrible" sought to push himself beyond his perceived limits. With millions of pesos in the bank and a guaranteed place in the hall of fame, the self-searching warrior pursued fights with Diego Corrales, Joel Casamayor, and Juan Diaz. The Tijuana tough man was insatiably ambitious, taking only the toughest assignments. "El Terrible" Understood that risk is the price of greatness. He dared to be great.
The Epilogue: In the penultimate fight of his career, "El Terrible" finally took a count of ten. His face was unmistably that of a broken fighter. A man who couldn’t (or wouldn’t) play the young man’s gambit anymore. That "El Terrible" was finally beyond his limits is no commentary on his desire. Rather, it proves the earnestness of his search for the frontier of his ability. He continued until he could go no further. He dared to be great.

Decebal
08-17-2007, 03:48 PM
Thank you for a fair and sound tribute, The Funny Man 7.

Decebal
08-18-2007, 04:14 AM
:bump

Decebal
08-19-2007, 04:49 AM
[Only registered and activated users can see links]

Three more days left, before the thread closes, and three more entries will be accepted! Erik certainly deserves more than 7/10 for his entire career! Let's have those entries!:good

Decebal
08-21-2007, 07:14 AM
Today is your last chance to enter this month's ESB Box! Writing Championship™!:happy

Decebal
08-21-2007, 07:32 AM
Box! Writing Championship™ League Table*

rekcutnevets................................3 points
cross_trainer................................3 points
Drew101........................................1 point**

*as of July 2007
** 3 points are awareded for coming first; 1 point for being runner up

Decebal
08-21-2007, 07:51 AM
Whoever wins this month's competition will be the one who will choose the subject for next month's competition. This will consist of a question on a technical theme, which will allow analysts with technical/historical knowledge a chance to show off their expertise and skill.

"I like technical stuff; technical stuff is what I like!" Mr. S.S Decebal, President of DBP™

Ted Spoon
08-21-2007, 09:53 AM
After a fantastically long-winded period of success against the worlds elite followed a string of painful reminders. The disdainful veteran was to take heed of his failing powers, eventually. A man like Erik Morales, a fighter like ‘El Terrible’ would attempt to march without legs. It’s the typical, Mexican warrior attitude, but Erik Morales delivered a little more than your average Mexican…

There was something a bit special about Morales. Your attraction to boxing could be for a number of reasons, but Morales would provide the goods wherever you stood. A small man, but a distinguished figure, Morales had a magnetic demeanour about him. Jet black hair, the looks of an undertaker and a seriousness that never dwindled. He was intense to look at. He would showboat, beat his chest, he would take that chance, salute the fans, just for you. He understood what boxing was about and covered all pillars with his boxing, bravery, fire and modesty. There was a great admiration for his weight-jumping, P4P worthy skill-set, and an even bigger appreciation for his selfless rallies that brought you to your feet.

He was a fighters fighter.

Morales’ career turned into a bit of a car-crash at the end, but you can’t hold it against a man when his instinct tells him to fight on. It was the same instinct that created magic against Barrera and the same instinct that later created failure against Pacquiao, but, either way, it made you care - a rarity indeed.

Decebal
08-21-2007, 09:58 AM
Thank you for that well-ballanced, true-fan tribute, Ted Spoon.

Decebal
08-21-2007, 10:01 AM
Three more entries are to be accepted - get yours in quickly!:good

Decebal
08-22-2007, 04:15 AM
8 hours left! Let's have another entry!:rasta

Decebal
08-22-2007, 04:27 PM
When he dethroned the ageless Daniel Zaragoza nearly a decade and 13 pounds ago, there was little reason to believe Erik Morales would still have such an emotional pull on boxing fans today. Many fighters have longevity, some have a slew of titles to show for their efforts, but few seem to represent the warrior mentality and the willingness to take on all comers the way Morales has.

While there might be a rather sizable gap in their comparative skills, he is in this sense very much like Arturo Gatti. Living proof that one needn't win every fight in order to continue to command big paydays and the respect of the entire boxing community. The meat between the bread is the willingness to risk, the laying it all out there for the world to see. As his career progressed, wins and losses seemed somehow less important than the effort. You knew a herculean effort would always be there. When the smoke clears, that's all we really want anyway.

Decebal
08-22-2007, 04:28 PM
Morales; More or less? With Morales, it was always more.

From his successful days as a scrawny junior bantamweight to his darker times as a small lightweight, Morales gave us everything. Energetic when provoked, Rugged on the receiving end, Intense in motion, Kinetic in action, Marvellous in winning, Obdurate when faced by adversity, Rapacious on assault, Athletic regarding mobility, Lethal on attack, Epic in battle and Stubborn always. That was Erik Morales.

Decebal
08-22-2007, 04:28 PM
Erik Morales - The Ultimate Warrior Of Boxing.

Not just the pride of Tijuana, not just the pride of Mexico but the pride of everything we love about this great sport.... he was the ultimate fair play sportsman in the ultimate of hard sports, there is nothing not legendary about El Terrible.

You want to box him, he will box you
You want to fight him, he will fight you
You want to hit him with what you think is the ko punch on the chin, he will hit you right back TWICE if your lucky.

1 of the best technicians of the past 10 yrs
1 of the most value for money warriors of all time
How many boxers can claim to be both an artist & warrior combined, not many.

Never lost decisively in his prime yrs & even when his body was packing it in his heart never did.

It doesnt hurt that he won the best fight Ive ever seen = Morales MAB 1... what a war.

For a fighter who never believed too much in clinching, he done pretty damn well.

Erik Morales = The Ultimate Warrior Of Boxing.

We will never forget you as long as boxing lives.

:good :good :good :good :good :good :good :good :good :good :good :good :good :good
:happy :happy :happy :happy :happy :happy :happy :happy :happy :happy :happy :happy :happy :happy

Decebal
08-22-2007, 04:29 PM
Like the timeless Spartan* Erik Morales captured our imagination held with true boxing fans one of our highest titles, the title of warrior. His battles deep, his victories astonishing and this warrior will always be remembered for his heart, grit and determination in gaining victory and thrilling fans.

El Terrible stood behind his boxer-puncher stance dishing out and absorbing punishment for the good majority of his run at the top level and it was a sacrifice well spent. I remember my first Erik Morales bout very well, as it was Barrera vs. Morales, from the opening bell these two opened up on each other and until the final bell they continued. This intense showing of skill and will ended up going down as one of the greatest fights of all time and rightfully so, it was an experience.

Needless to say, this was not the only event that Erik left a little part of himself in the ring, so a tribute to you great warrior and a wish of happyness and good health in the rest of your adventures life.

Decebal
08-22-2007, 04:29 PM
Once in a (long) while a fighter comes along that has that mixture of skills, toughness & burning passion... a fighter you just know would have made a home in any era of boxing & entertained along the way.

Erik `El Terrible` Morales was that kind of fighter, from his Tijuana humble upbringing right through to his last superb effort vs David Diaz, Erik Morales never lost his passion or his heart, unfortunetely he made 1 simple mistake, a mistake he could not help... the mistake of being human.

El Terrible proved in his prime days that he was superior or at least equal to any fighter who stepped in the ring with him.
Of his 6 defeats - 3 were debatable (MAB 2 & 3, Diaz) & some would argue (with a strong case) that only 1 of these happened before Erik`s body started feeling the effects... That `Loss` being the 2nd MAB fight, a fight Morales won clearly in my eyes.

I could go on forever why Morales pluses heavily outweigh the minuses but I`ll leave it at this.....

ERIK MORALES - TIJUANA - MEXICO - WORLD ICON

(Thanks for memories that will never die, just like your spirit & passion)

:good :happy :hi:

Decebal
08-22-2007, 04:30 PM
Who says dashing, gallant heroes are a thing of the past, or perhaps never were? Viciously seizing glory in the ring, graciously raising his conqueror’s hand in his own twilight, Erik “El Terrible” Morales looked and lived the part of that vanishing specimen, the honorable gladiator.

Boxing inspires the best in a young boy: to transcend your humble origins, to develop into the guy who saves the day, to win glory but only with honor, to buy your mother a house, and inspire the children to call out your name.

He became a frightful attack machine, defeating opponent after opponent. He stopped the unstopped champion, and beat the best men of his era. In boxing, you conquer yourself and you must conquer another, equally-hungry man’s will. “El Terrible” knew what it took and thrilled audiences while overcoming rivals with his technical, fierce craft. Never satisfied, he always looked to the next summit, claiming three different belts in three different weight classes.

Perhaps defeat shows more of a man than constant victory, and when time caught up with “El Terrible”, he was promptly courteous and respectful in acknowledging his opponent and his own shortcoming. Never a showboat, never an ego trip, the man quietly went about his business, and demonstrated what dashing, gallant heroes are truly all about.

All this I see in the serene look of the winner that is Erik Morales.

Decebal
08-22-2007, 04:30 PM
Morales Dared To Be Great
The Quixotic Dream: Thirty years ago, Wilfredo "Bazooka" Gomez ruled the junior bantamweight division with an iron fist, defending his title with seventeen consecutive knockouts. many experts assumed that no fighter could ever match the Puerto Rican’s accomplishments. But the one they called "El Terrible" dared to be great. He dared to challenge himself. Gomez proved his greatness by turning out the lights on seventeen consecutive super bantamweight challenger. We watched "El Terrible" do so by going to war with some of the very best fighter of his generation; of any generation.
The Hunger: During his championship reign, "El Terrible" sought to push himself beyond his perceived limits. With millions of pesos in the bank and a guaranteed place in the hall of fame, the self-searching warrior pursued fights with Diego Corrales, Joel Casamayor, and Juan Diaz. The Tijuana tough man was insatiably ambitious, taking only the toughest assignments. "El Terrible" Understood that risk is the price of greatness. He dared to be great.
The Epilogue: In the penultimate fight of his career, "El Terrible" finally took a count of ten. His face was unmistably that of a broken fighter. A man who couldn’t (or wouldn’t) play the young man’s gambit anymore. That "El Terrible" was finally beyond his limits is no commentary on his desire. Rather, it proves the earnestness of his search for the frontier of his ability. He continued until he could go no further. He dared to be great.

Decebal
08-22-2007, 04:31 PM
After a fantastically long-winded period of success against the worlds elite followed a string of painful reminders. The disdainful veteran was to take heed of his failing powers, eventually. A man like Erik Morales, a fighter like ‘El Terrible’ would attempt to march without legs. It’s the typical, Mexican warrior attitude, but Erik Morales delivered a little more than your average Mexican…

There was something a bit special about Morales. Your attraction to boxing could be for a number of reasons, but Morales would provide the goods wherever you stood. A small man, but a distinguished figure, Morales had a magnetic demeanour about him. Jet black hair, the looks of an undertaker and a seriousness that never dwindled. He was intense to look at. He would showboat, beat his chest, he would take that chance, salute the fans, just for you. He understood what boxing was about and covered all pillars with his boxing, bravery, fire and modesty. There was a great admiration for his weight-jumping, P4P worthy skill-set, and an even bigger appreciation for his selfless rallies that brought you to your feet.

He was a fighters fighter.

Morales’ career turned into a bit of a car-crash at the end, but you can’t hold it against a man when his instinct tells him to fight on. It was the same instinct that created magic against Barrera and the same instinct that later created failure against Pacquiao, but, either way, it made you care - a rarity indeed.

Decebal
08-22-2007, 04:41 PM
Please read the entries at posts 45 - 52 carefully, and vote for the best Tribute to Erik "El Terrible" Morales.

Decebal
08-22-2007, 05:47 PM
I am finding it hard to pick between 4-5 very good entries...:think

Decebal
08-22-2007, 07:17 PM
The entry at no. 50 looks hard to beat!:yep

Decebal
08-23-2007, 05:51 AM
Yap...46 is very good too!

Decebal
08-23-2007, 08:23 AM
*vote*vote*vote*vote*vote*vote*vote*vote*vote*vote*vote*vote*vote*vote*vote*vote*vote*vote*vote*vote *vote*vote*vote*vote*vote*vote*vote*vote*vote*vote*vote*vote*vote*vote*vote*vote*vote*vote*vote*

Decebal
08-23-2007, 02:50 PM
:-((

Decebal
08-24-2007, 03:28 AM
Voting is underway!;) There are some very good entries, and they deserve out attention!

Decebal
08-24-2007, 10:08 AM
:dead

Decebal
08-29-2007, 08:07 AM
any last minute votes?:think

Decebal
08-29-2007, 12:52 PM
yap...entry 45 is pretty damn good - a nice summary in few words.

Decebal
08-29-2007, 04:41 PM
Who says dashing, gallant heroes are a thing of the past, or perhaps never were? Viciously seizing glory in the ring, graciously raising his conqueror’s hand in his own twilight, Erik “El Terrible” Morales looked and lived the part of that vanishing specimen, the honorable gladiator.

Boxing inspires the best in a young boy: to transcend your humble origins, to develop into the guy who saves the day, to win glory but only with honor, to buy your mother a house, and inspire the children to call out your name.

He became a frightful attack machine, defeating opponent after opponent. He stopped the unstopped champion, and beat the best men of his era. In boxing, you conquer yourself and you must conquer another, equally-hungry man’s will. “El Terrible” knew what it took and thrilled audiences while overcoming rivals with his technical, fierce craft. Never satisfied, he always looked to the next summit, claiming three different belts in three different weight classes.

Perhaps defeat shows more of a man than constant victory, and when time caught up with “El Terrible”, he was promptly courteous and respectful in acknowledging his opponent and his own shortcoming. Never a showboat, never an ego trip, the man quietly went about his business, and demonstrated what dashing, gallant heroes are truly all about.

All this I see in the serene look of the winner that is Erik Morales.


The winning tribute to Erik "El Terrible" Morales and the winner of ESB Box! Writing Championship™ for August!

:clap: :clap: :clap:
:happy :happy :happy :party :soccerred :party :happy :happy :happy



The Box! Writing Champion™




[Only registered and activated users can see links]



prime


The Box! Writing Champion™ will earn the right to add "BOX! Writing Champion" to his/her signature/location/user profile and the Box! Writing Championship™ Trophy as his/her avatar forever.



Mr. S.S. Decebal, President of the DBP™: "Once a champion, always a champion, God dammit!"


Box! Writing Championship™ League Table*

rekcutnevets................................3 points
cross_trainer................................3 points
prime...........................................3 points
Drew101........................................1 point**
salsanchezfan.................................1 point***

*as of August 2007
** 3 points are awareded for coming first; 1 point for being runner up
***salsanchezfan was co-runner up (along with Manassa) as well as Official Box! Writing Championship™ Challenger, having entered the first entry, and as such is deemed the runner up.

As Box! Writing Championship™ Winner for August, prime is kindly asked to provide a topic/question on a technical topic, that will allow the contestants in the Box! Writing Championship™ - September to show their technical/analytical/historical skills.



Mr. S.S. Decebal, President of the DBP™: "I like technical stuff; technicall stuff is what I like, goddammit!"

Decebal
08-30-2007, 04:06 AM
Thank you too all who have taken part in August's contest! Some very touching tributes to EM! I was truly impressed!

September topic coming soon!:good

Decebal
08-31-2007, 03:47 AM
The Box! Writing Champion™, prime, has kindly agreed to pick the topic for September's competition. Decebal's Boxing Promotion$™ was delighted to approve it. It will be: "My Favourite Fighter's Style"