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The Ring Magazine/Getty Images1 of 10
A big part of the fight game is intimidation. If your opponent is scared of you, you've won before you even have to throw a punch.
In this feature, we'll dive back into boxing history and spotlight ten fighters who won their reputations the hard way. Whether it be in-ring skill or extracurricular activities, these are the ten scariest boxers of all time.
Sonny Liston
One of the deadliest punchers of all time, Sonny Liston's staggering 84 inch reach terrified anyone unlucky enough to fight him. Even a paragon of self-confidence like Muhammad Ali was scared to step into the squared circle with Liston, and his punching power was unbelievable.
Born into a sharecropping family in Arkansas, his father brutally beat him, leaving scars that were visible decades later. The anger he stored from those beating fueled him in the ring, and in 1956 he was arrested for assaulting a police officer. There were also pervasive rumors that Liston made extra money moonlighting as a Mafia enforcer.
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2 of 10
Roberto Duran
Boasting the nickname "Hands Of Stone," Panamanian-born pugilist Roberto Duran is widely regarded as one of the greatest boxers of all time. Duran was a terrifying presence from the moment he stepped into the ring, famous for locking his opponents with a cobra-like stare from across the squared circle.
Joe Frazier once remarked that Duran reminded him of mass murderer Charles Manson. His physical gifts helped him back up the attitude, as Duran racked up a staggering 21 first-round knockouts throughout his career. Oh, and he once knocked out a horse with his bare hands to win a bottle of whiskey.
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The Ring Magazine/Getty Images3 of 10
Ike Ibeabuchi
When you take a lot of punches to the face, it can mess things up in your brain. And when your brain doesn't work right, you can be scary. Ike Ibeabuchi is an enormous Nigerian-born boxer who was heralded as "the next Tyson" for his incredible physicality.
When he beat the undefeated David Tua in 1997 in one of the most brutal bouts ever seen, everybody thought he was on his way to the top. Unfortunately, he then lost his mind and became convinced that demons were real and plaguing him, and his dementia led to him brutally attacking several people. He's currently in jail for a 1999 assault on a woman in Las Vegas.
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Focus on Sport/Getty Images4 of 10
George Foreman
It's hard to think of George Foreman as a scary guy after you've seen him hawking grills on TV, but in his heyday Big George was one of the most terrifying men to ever walk the squared circle. Foreman's reputation in the ring was built on his sheer physical power, and when he first rose to the top he decimated many of the sport's best heavyweights.
Foreman used to psych himself up for a fight by telling himself that he was literally going to murder his opponent, and when you watch him fight you can see lethality behind every blow. Just to prove you can't take the fight out of the dog, Foreman also became the oldest heavyweight champion in history in 1994.
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Al Bello/Getty Images5 of 10
Vitali Klitschko
It was hard to choose just one of Ukraine's brutally tough Klitschko brothers for this list, but our money is on the elder, Vitali. Sure, he's got staggering punching power, but lots of boxers have that. What really makes him terrifying is his utter resistance to pain.
Klitschko has never been knocked off of his feet in any fight, and both of his losses came by TKO from suffering injuries that made him unable to continue.The scariest thing about Vitali is that he has intelligence to go with his power - he's the only world boxing champion to also boast a PhD, so he knows just how to hurt you.
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AP Photo6 of 10
Khaosai Galaxy
It seems ridiculous that we could declare a man who weighed in at 115 pounds soaking wet to be one of the scariest boxers of all time, but Thai flyweight Khaosai Galaxy was not a guy you wanted to screw with. He came to Western boxing from Muay Thai, and even though he lacked the fundamentals of the sweet science, Galaxy made up for them with the staggering fury of his left hand.
His trademark punch, which translates from the Thai as "the left hand that drills intestines," left opponents doubled up on the canvas in agonizing pain. He retired with a 49-1 record and 43 of those wins by knockout. It's not the size of the dog in the fight, but the size of the fight in the dog.
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7 of 10
Andrew Golota
When you step into the ring for a boxing match, you're agreeing to abide by a set of rules that are in place to protect both fighters. It takes a really scary individual to willfully disregard those rules, and Andrew Golota is one of the most famous dirty fighters of all time. The Polish-born Olympic bronze medalist will throw a punch anywhere he thinks will get him the win.
In his breakthrough fight against Riddick Bowe, Golota was disqualified for delivering brutal, hammering fists right to Bowe's genitals. Considering the force pro boxers swing with, that's basically a one-way path to sterility. Since then, he's also been busted for impersonating a police officer.
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Public Domain8 of 10
Carlos Monzon
Argentinian boxer Carlos Monzon was a terrifying force both inside and outside of the ring. Violence was simply a way of life for Monzon, who was raised in poverty in the slums of Santa Fe. Boxing was his way out, and he quickly became one of Argentina's favorite sons, pulverizing opponents with his staggering right hands and inhuman endurance.
Although his fame captivated the nation, Monzon also had a dark side, and was prone to outbursts of violence. His public beatings laid out to members of the press put multiple men in the hospital, and he was eventually imprisoned for throwing his wife off of a hotel balcony to her death.
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Sandra Mu/Getty Images9 of 10
David Tua
The common stereotype about Samoan people is that they have an almost inhuman ability to withstand pain, and the career of boxer David Tua would seem to bear that out. Tua became New Zealand's national heavyweight champion at the age of fifteen, riding his incredible punching power to dozens of victories.
Four years later, he won the bronze medal at the Barcelona Olympics and went pro. His career in the ring saw numerous incredible battles. Some of his fiercest achievements came with knocking out John Ruiz in just nineteen seconds and Michael Moorer in thirty seconds. Struggles with his weight is the only thing that has kept him from the top.
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Focus on Sport/Getty Images10 of 10Next: Dancing Faces Are Terribly Hilarious
Mike Tyson
There could be no other name to close out this list. It's funny to think of the vegan pigeon-racing Tyson of today and compare him to the vicious, brutal street thug who dominated the boxing world in the 1990s.
The amazing thing about Mike Tyson is that even despite his squeaky baby voice and average height, he still made seasoned boxers pee their pants in fear across the ring. Just watch the Tyson-Spinks fight and look at the sheer dread in Leon Spinks's eyes as he prepares to get knocked out in a mere 91 seconds - and Spinks was undefeated at the time.
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