The great White Hope was Just another "Great White Hype".
Quarry has had too many dissappointing bouts, and then you wonder, was he just overrated?
That ball was on the line!
It gets by Buckner!
Michigan can't take a timeout!
Tunney is down!
No good, wide right!

The Top 5 Reasons You Can't Blame Jerry Quarry for Not Winning the Heavyweight Title
Hello, I'm butterfly1964, and Welcome to The Top Five Reasons You Can't Blame. A show that takes a look at boxing personalities and establishments who have made questionable decisions, controversial comments, or unpopular stances, and take a deeper look into these matters. My job is not to further villify these individuals, but to challenge conventional wisdom, and reexamine what has been accepted as fact. In this episode I'm counting down the top 5 reasons why you can't blame Jerry Quarry for never winning the heavyweight title, or at least one of the titles. Quarry had a lot of promise and was given the title, "The Great White Hope" in anticipation that a white man would once again win the heavyweight title. However, his career was full of disappointments, and heartbreaks. Before I count down the reasons why you can't blame Quarry, Here's some evidence supporting this claim.
Jerry Quarry had talent, no doubt about that. He also had heart. But he just didn't have that certain swagger, and convergence of events that could lead him to winning the title.
Quarry was a hot prospect. He was really hyped up to be something special, but when you struggle to beat guys like Tony Doyle, you can't really be hot stuff!
Quarry liked to brawl, but he was a good boxer, and sometimes he wouldn't use his skills and just act on instinct.
When you are hyped up like that, you have to seal the deal. Quarry didn't seal the deal, yet, he had three chances against first Ellis, then Frazier, and then Ali.
Quarry was disappointing in a lot of his fights. So, the great White Hope was Just another "Great White Hype".
Back then, fans were seething an anger about Ali and his antics, and they felt that if a white man came back and won the title, then that would restore glory to boxing.
Quarry has had too many dissappointing bouts, and then you wonder, was he just overrated?
Before I count down the top 5 reasons why you can't blame Jerry Quarry for Not Winning the Heavyweight Championship, here's some reasons that didn't make the top five. I call them, "The Best of the Rest".
Best of the Rest
1. Supersized Heavyweights Surfaced in the 1970s - Even though Jerry Quarry was a great prospect, at between 195-200lbs, he wasn't a full sized heavyweight. And in the 1970s, more and more fighters appeared on the scene that weighed in at well over 200lbs.
You have the George Foreman's, and the Ken Norton's and the Buster Mathis', the Mac Foster's. Of course there's Ali and Frazier.
He gave up weight to fight a lot of these guys, so it's not suprising that the bigger guy might win.
Another Best of the Rest...
2. Bob Foster - On June 27, 1972, Foster, the light heavyweight champion put his title on the line against Jerry Quarry's brother, Mike Quarry. Foster knocked out Quarry so hard, that he was out cold for a long time and had to be hospitalized. This light heavyweight title fight was on an undercard for the main event, a rematch between Jerry Quarry and Muhammad Ali. Concern for his brother might have caused Jerry's concentration to be shaky, and in turn would hurt his chances at getting another title shot.
Originally posted by Brian Kenny
Coming up next on The Top Five Reasons You Can't Blame, we'll discuss what Quarry's family has to do with all this.
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