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Bernard Hopkins Schedule BOXING Tickets
BOXING Tickets
SPORTS->BOXING
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Bernard Hopkins Tickets
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For Bernard Hopkins Schedule Schedule or Bernard Hopkins Schedule tickets availability click above link
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The Bernard Hopkins schedule can be dificult to keep up with.
View the events as we get them. Many event dates will be announced well in
advance and are subject to change. In any event The Bernard Hopkins
schedules will be updated regularly. On the day of any Bernard Hopkins
events, you may call 281-447-1579 for a schedule of times and events
performing. Times are also subject to change. Visit our site frequently as
new events are posted daily as we get them. If you dont see an event you are
looking for please give us a call and we will research the event further for
you. On the night of any Bernard Hopkins event, Northside tickets will
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Bernard Hopkins (born January 15, 1965) —nicknamed The Executioner— is a retired professional boxer from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (USA), and is regarded by experts to be one of the best middleweight fighters of all time. Until his controversial loss to Jermain Taylor in July 2005 and a second time, in early December, of 2005, Hopkins was the undisputed holder of the championship belts from all 4 major sanctioning bodies (WBA, WBC, IBF and WBO). In addition, he was awarded the coveted linear Ring Belt after defeating Felix Trinidad in September 2001. On June 10, 2006 he defeated Antonio Tarver to become The Ring light heavyweight champion. His career record stands at 47 wins, four losses, one draw, and one no contest with 32 knockouts.//Hopkins was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania and grew up in a rough section of town, where he got involved in crime and gang activity at a young age. Today, he describes himself as a "thug" in his youth and regrets that it took a stint in prison for him to turn his life around.Late in 1982, when Hopkins was in the 11th grade, he was convicted and sentenced to 18 years in the state penitentiary for "strong-arm robbery" (not armed robbery - beating people and taking their money). For fifty-six months, from 1984 through 1989, Hopkins was one of three thousand inmates in Graterford State Penitentiary in Pennsylvania. While incarcerated, he decided to turn his life around. Hopkins studied for and earned his high school diploma, and also began to take part in boxing again, which he had done off and on as a youth. During four years and eight months in prison, Hopkins won the national penitentiary middleweight championship three times.He converted to Islam [1] during his incarceration and was paroled in 1988, as soon as he was eligible. His dedicated approach to the faith helped him build his successful monastic boxing career by instilling discipline in the once troubled young adult [2]. He immediately joined the professional boxing ranks as a light heavyweight, losing his debut on October 11, 1988 in Atlantic City, New Jersey to a fighter named Clinton Mitchell. But he showed enough in the loss that respected trainer Bouie Fisher took him on. After a 16-month layoff, resumed his career as a middleweight, winning a unanimous decision over Greg Paige on February 22, 1990
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