Monday, February 16, 2026

Boxing Challenge: Ajagba flattens Martin

  Charles Martin fought well for two rounds in the heavyweight main event for Zuffa Boxing in Las Vegas on Sunday.

Unfortunately for Martin, the fight was scheduled for ten, and once Efe Ajagba began landing, Martin's night became difficult and ended in round four.

Ajagba knocked Martin down once in the third round, but Martin fought back well to survive the round.

Ajagba landed his big right again early in the fourth, dropping Martin, and after Martin rose in worse shape than the first knockdown, Ajagba battered Martin along the ropes to force the stoppage.

Ajagba is reported to be a huge puncher, but when he has stepped up in class (Frank Sanchez, Martin Bakole, and Guido Vianello), he is just 1-1-1 and his power hasn't carried with his rise in opposition.

This doesn't bode well for Martin, who hadn't fought since 2024 before this loss.

Ajagba called for top contenders in the division but I'm not sure that will happen with his commitment to Zuffa, who lacks any other top heavyweights, wants to ignore the sanctioning bodies (which takes Ajagba out of title eliminators) and is unlikely to allow him to fight outside their cards other than the "Ring Magazine" supercards, which has the same owner as Zuffa.

Ajagba could receive more exposure with Zuffa, but fight less-than-great competition.

Boxing Challenge

Vince Samano: 18 Pts (0) 
Ramon Malpica; 18 Pts (1)
TRS: 18 Pts (1)

Saturday, February 14, 2026

Boxing Challenge:

   For the second week in a row, we have a one-fight week in the boxing challenge with Zuffa Boxing's main event on Paramount+ Saturday night.

Heavyweight contender Efe Ajagba meets former IBF champion Charles Martin in the main event, and while it's not the most scintillating match, it's worth a watch with Ajagba's standing as a top ten heavyweight.

Ajagba was thought to be a big puncher as a prospect, but has struggled to score knockouts as his opposition improved.

Ajagba drew with Martin Bakole in his last fight, which he deserved the decision, and won a split decision over Guido Vianello, which he didn't in his outing before that.

Martin has fought just twice since 2022, losing almost every round but badly stinging Jared Anderson in 2023 and scoring a first-round KO over a journeyman in 2024.

Boxing Challenge

Heavyweights. 10 Rds 
Efe Ajagba vs Charles Martin
Ramon Malpica and TRS: Ajagba Unanimous Decision
Vince Samano: Martin Unanimous Decision

Friday, February 13, 2026

Cleaning out the Inbox: Passings

   It's time for us to pay our respects to a few people of note who have recently passed away.

Goodbye to Mickey Lolich at the age of 85.

The portly lefthander won three games in the 1968 World Series for the Detroit Tigers' upset win over the St.Louis Cardinals, winning the Series MVP for his efforts.

Lolich led the American League in wins (25) and strikeouts in 1971, made three All-Star teams, and won fourteen games or more every season from 1964 through 1974.

Lolich finished his career with 217 wins and a 3.44 ERA after he played his final three seasons with the Mets and Padres.

Goodbye to Sonny Jurgensen at the age of 91.

A fourth-round draft pick by the Philadelphia Eagles in 1957, Jurgensen would win an NFL title ring as Norm Van Brocklin's backup in 1960.

After being traded to Washington in 1964 for Norm Snead, Jurgensen would hit his prime, leading the league in passing yards three times (he led the league twice as an Eagle) and throwing 179 touchdown passes in his years in Washington.

Jurgensen was elected to the Hall of Fame in 1983 and is a member of both Washington and Philadelphia's team Halls.

Jurgensen was a longtime member of Washington's radio crew and worked in Washington media for decades.

Goodbye to Barry Wilburn at the age of 62.

Wilburn is one of only ten (as of 2025) players to have won a Super Bowl (Washington) and a Grey Cup (Saskatchewan) in a career spanning 1985-99.

Wilburn led the NFL in interceptions in 1987, picking off nine passes and being named All-Pro.

Wilburn also holds the Washington team record for longest interception return when he intercepted a Minnesota pass in 1987 and returned it 100 yards for a score.

Goodbye to King T.Leatherbury at the age of 92.

One of the "Big Four" in Maryland horse racing in the 1960s and 70s, Leatherbury is fifth all-time in victories in American racing.

With Richard Dutrow, Bud Delp, and John Tammaro, Leatherbury dominated Maryland racing through "claiming" (buying horses in special races) ,,earning him the title "King of the Claimers".

Leatherbury was named to the Racing Hall of Fame in 2015.

Goodbye to Elroy Face at the age of 97.

The "fireman" for the 1960 World Champion Pittsburgh Pirates, Face led the National League in saves three times and finished second on three more.

In 1959,  Face finished 18-1 with all decisions in relief, and to this day, Face s the all-time Pirates leader in appearances and saves.

Face saved three of the four Pirate wins over the New York Yankees in the 1960 World Series, except for the famous Bill Mazeroski walk-off home run in game seven.

Face spent all but a year and a half of his sixteen-year career with Pittsburgh, moving to Detroit and expansion Montreal in 1968 and 69 to finish his career. 

Monday, February 9, 2026

Boxing Challenge: Figueroa knocks out Ball in 12th

 Brandon Figueroa landed a crushing left hand seconds into the final round to drop Nick Ball, and after Ball bravely rose, drove the champion down into the ropes to force the stoppage in Liverpool, England, and give Figueroa Ball's WBA featherweight crown.

The fight was an entertaining but awkward battle with the diminutive Ball swapping punches with the much taller Figueroa.

The scores were divergent entering the final round, with two judges having Figueroa ahead by three points and the other scoring Ball ahead by five points.

I had Figueroa ahead slightly, 105-104, and the scores from around the net had many scoring for each fighter.

Figueroa convincingly closed the show in the final round and will take the title back to PBC, while the other three champions have an affiliation of some sort with Top Rank: WBO champion Rafael Espinoza, WBC king Bruce Carrington, and IBF boss Angelo Leo.

Boxing Challenge

Vince Samano: 18 Pts (1) 
TRS 17 Pts (0)
Ramon Malpica: 17 Pts (0)

Sunday, February 8, 2026

PPM-Super Bowl

 It is time for the end of the PPM as the Super Bowl concludes the football season!

Last Week: 2-0
Overall: 169-81

Super Bowl
Seattle over New England 24-13

Saturday, February 7, 2026

Boxing Challenge

 WBA Featherweight Title 12 rds

Nick Ball vs Brandon Figueroa

Ramon Malpica and TRS: Ball Unanimous Decision 
Vince Samano: Figueroa Unanimous Decision

Friday, February 6, 2026

Cleaning out the Inbox: Passings

  The time has arrived for another batch of tributes to those who have recently left us.

Goodbye to Wilbur Wood at the age of 84.

Wood was a journeyman pitcher for the Red Sox and Pirates until being acquired by the Chicago White Sox in 1967, where he fine-tuned a seldom-used knuckleball with the help of future Hall of Famer Hoyt Wilhelm, who was on the Chicago staff.

The rarest of rare as a lefthander knuckleballer, Wood would win the Fireman of the Year award for relievers in 1968, but would truly flourish as a workhorse after being moved to the starting rotation in 1971.

Wood would win 20 games or more in each of the seasons from 1971 to 1974, led the American League in victories twice, made the All-Star team three times, and started over 40 games in each of those seasons, as well as in 1975.

Wood was off to a strong start in 1976 when he was line-driven by Detroit's Ron LeFlore, who broke his kneecap. As a result, Wood never regained his previous caliber upon his return in 1977 and 1978.

Goodbye to Bobby Duncum at the age of 81.

Duncum was drafted by the then-St. Louis Cardinals as a linebacker from West Texas A&M in 1967 and would play in four games for the football Redbirds in 1968, but would earn more fame in the wrestling ring as a heel cowboy.

Duncum would receive title chances against both Bruno Sammartino and Bob Backlund for the WWWF crown, would hold titles in Florida, Georgia, and the AWA, and as part of the "Black and Blue Express, with Ken Patera, who were one of the more underrated teams of their era.

Duncum's son, the late Bobby Duncum Jr, was a wrestler with WCW as part of the "West Texas Rednecks" faction.

Goodbye to John Brodie at the age of 90

The 1970 MVP, Brodie, was the third overall pick in the 1957 NFL draft by the San Francisco 49ers from Stanford, and would spend his entire seventeen-year career in the Bay Area.

Brodie was one of the better NFL announcers after his retirement with NBC Sports, forming a great duo with Don Criqui, and was an excellent golfer.

Brodie was on the Senior PGA Tour for thirteen years and won one tournament, the 1991 Pacific Senior Classic.

Brodie was one of the players credited with getting the AFL-NFL merger talks rolling when he signed a huge future contract with the AFL's Houston Oilers.

Those contracts forced the NFL to negotiate the truce, which would lead to the two leagues becoming one.

Goodbye to Floyd Vivino at the age of 74.

Known professionally as "Uncle Floyd, Vivino was the star of the "Uncle Floyd Show" from 1974-1998, a parody of children's shows which was aimed at adults.

Mostly seen in the New York City/New Jersey market, The Uncle Floyd Show did have a period where it was syndicated in other East Coast markets, which is where I saw it following SCTV on Saturday late nights in the early 1980s.

Vivino often appeared in programs filmed in the NYC area and worked as a comic, musician, and radio host after the demise of his show.

Vivino set a Guinness World Record in 1999, when he played a piano continuously for over 24 hours and ran twice as a write-in candidate for Governor of New Jersey in a campaign parody.

Goodbye to Scott Laidlaw at the age of 72.

A fourteenth-round draft pick by the Dallas Cowboys in the 1975 NFL Draft, in one of the best drafts ever by one team (twelve players made the team, including five future Pro Bowlers, and Randy White in the Hall of Fame), Laidlaw was the backup fullback to Robert Newhouse and a standout on special teams.

Laidlaw played in three Super Bowls, winning one, for the Cowboys, and in 1978, Laidlaw replaced an injured Newhouse on Thanksgiving Day for their game against Washington, with Laidlaw rushing for 122 yards and two touchdowns to defeat Washington.








Boxing Challenge: Ajagba flattens Martin

  Charles Martin fought well for two rounds in the heavyweight main event for Zuffa Boxing in Las Vegas on Sunday. Unfortunately for Martin,...