Boxing Forums



User Tag List

Thanks Thanks:  0
Likes Likes:  0
Dislikes Dislikes:  0
Page 1 of 2 12 LastLast
Results 1 to 15 of 19

Thread: Are the fighters of the 90s and todasy better than the fighters of the past ?

Share/Bookmark
  1. #1
    Join Date
    Mar 2009
    Location
    In a room next to the airing cupboard
    Posts
    184
    Mentioned
    0 Post(s)
    Tagged
    0 Thread(s)
    Punch Power
    788
    Cool Clicks

    Default Are the fighters of the 90s and todasy better than the fighters of the past ?

    Most of you are going to throw Bananas and cups of piss at me but I believe that the top fighters fighting today operate at a much higher level than the fighters of yesteryear ( 60's and 70s )

    With todays conditioning and all the advantages we enjoy today in terms of preperation the fighters entering the ring now have the explosive power and stamina that fighters from the byegone era couldnt dream of .

    In terms of compition postwar boxing was immense , there were 100,000 amatuer and professional boxers in the UK alone and only a a handful of weights and a fraction of the titles so undoubted the best made it to the top and it was much harder to manage an average fighter without him getting exposed before British title level .

    Stylewise British fighters had an old victorian stand up macho style where you'd meet in centre ring and have an old fashioned scrap !
    Could the fighters today have really been able to physically withstand that kind of punishment ?
    Could Rocky Grazino really have fought Carlos Monzon the way he fought Tony Zale ?

    With each passing generation fighters get much stronger hit harder and do damage todays careers are alot shorter (making weight is an issue ) and people have grown disinterested in the finer skills of boxing elusive fighters are seen as cowrds and the term 'THROWBACK' banded around .

    Sugar Ray Robinson would never have got to 128-1 today would he ?

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Jul 2005
    Posts
    49,121
    Mentioned
    950 Post(s)
    Tagged
    0 Thread(s)
    Punch Power
    0
    Cool Clicks

    Default Re: Are the fighters of the 90s and todasy better than the fighters of the past ?

    I would suggest that todays fighters have all the advantages. A greater understanding of effective training techniques, knowledge regarding diet and ability to analyse opponents through video and so on. If you pit a modern fighter against an older fighter based on these things, then maybe the olden times fighter might get shown up.

    But I don't like to compare and contrast through generations because it is a different game today. Fighters of yesterday could go 15 hard rounds and more and were allowed to absorb a lot more punishment. Also top fighters fought more often. If Mayweather were to fight too often with his hand issues he might have a few more losses.

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Mar 2009
    Location
    In a room next to the airing cupboard
    Posts
    184
    Mentioned
    0 Post(s)
    Tagged
    0 Thread(s)
    Punch Power
    788
    Cool Clicks

    Default Re: Are the fighters of the 90s and todasy better than the fighters of the past ?

    Quote Originally Posted by miles View Post
    I would suggest that todays fighters have all the advantages. A greater understanding of effective training techniques, knowledge regarding diet and ability to analyse opponents through video and so on. If you pit a modern fighter against an older fighter based on these things, then maybe the olden times fighter might get shown up.

    But I don't like to compare and contrast through generations because it is a different game today. Fighters of yesterday could go 15 hard rounds and more and were allowed to absorb a lot more punishment. Also top fighters fought more often. If Mayweather were to fight too often with his hand issues he might have a few more losses.
    Thats my point though , todays fighters are in such peak condition when they make weight ( with a few obvious exceptions ) they have the ability to shorten careers .
    Watching Johnny Frankham and Kevin Finnegan on the Bunce boxing hour really bought it home just how far the sport has evolved .
    Perhaps I didnt make myself entirely clear in my original post, I just dont think going 15 hard rounds today is possible .

    I think Boxing has evolved and your right about comparing generation to generation its always such a grey area , just think when people hark back to the great postwar fighters they are doing fighters of today a disservice .


    Maybe in conclusion I'll just say .


    Boxing has elvolved as a sport just not as spectacle .

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Apr 2008
    Location
    london, vegas, crete, algarve, milan
    Posts
    6,339
    Mentioned
    0 Post(s)
    Tagged
    0 Thread(s)
    Punch Power
    1381
    Cool Clicks

    Default Re: Are the fighters of the 90s and todasy better than the fighters of the past ?

    Quote Originally Posted by miles View Post
    I would suggest that todays fighters have all the advantages. A greater understanding of effective training techniques, knowledge regarding diet and ability to analyse opponents through video and so on. If you pit a modern fighter against an older fighter based on these things, then maybe the olden times fighter might get shown up.

    But I don't like to compare and contrast through generations because it is a different game today. Fighters of yesterday could go 15 hard rounds and more and were allowed to absorb a lot more punishment. Also top fighters fought more often. If Mayweather were to fight too often with his hand issues he might have a few more losses.

    Same here

    im guessing the guys of today are more technically efficent compared to those of yesteryear who were made of tougher stuff.
    one dangerous horrible bloke

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Jul 2007
    Posts
    352
    Mentioned
    0 Post(s)
    Tagged
    0 Thread(s)
    Punch Power
    964
    Cool Clicks

    Thumbs up Re: Are the fighters of the 90s and todasy better than the fighters of the past ?

    I think those are good points you make. SRR was great no doubt but did he face anyone close to the slick boxer he was? From old clips I saw, it looks like he beat up tough, slow guys who were big punchers with good/great chins.

    In other words, did he beat anyone with an overall skill set/level even close to his?

  6. #6
    Join Date
    May 2008
    Location
    Bristol, UK
    Posts
    575
    Mentioned
    0 Post(s)
    Tagged
    0 Thread(s)
    Punch Power
    883
    Cool Clicks

    Default Re: Are the fighters of the 90s and todasy better than the fighters of the past ?

    I think this kinda theory applies to almost anything... for example the footballers of today (note that by football I mean soccer) are undoubtably better than the footballers of the past few decades.

    I think this is mostly down to experience.. sport is continually evolving, with better technology and training techniques constantly being researched and updated. I think the demand for greater fitness and technique is higher than ever these days as money often plays a massive role in sporting events these todays, certainly considerably more than it has done a few decades ago when sporting events were pretty cheap to attend and the money generated was nothing compared to events these days... so I think athletes are pushed that little bit more to be at the top of their game for the money makers purpose.

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Apr 2006
    Location
    Beyond the wall
    Posts
    17,202
    Mentioned
    38 Post(s)
    Tagged
    0 Thread(s)
    Punch Power
    4358
    Cool Clicks

    Default Re: Are the fighters of the 90s and todasy better than the fighters of the past ?

    Quote Originally Posted by JoeyUK View Post
    I think this kinda theory applies to almost anything... for example the footballers of today (note that by football I mean soccer) are undoubtably better than the footballers of the past few decades.

    I think this is mostly down to experience.. sport is continually evolving, with better technology and training techniques constantly being researched and updated. I think the demand for greater fitness and technique is higher than ever these days as money often plays a massive role in sporting events these todays, certainly considerably more than it has done a few decades ago when sporting events were pretty cheap to attend and the money generated was nothing compared to events these days... so I think athletes are pushed that little bit more to be at the top of their game for the money makers purpose.
    This applies just as much to American Football
    For every story told that divides us, I believe there are a thousand untold that unite us.

  8. #8
    Join Date
    Nov 2008
    Location
    South London Baby
    Posts
    5,330
    Mentioned
    8 Post(s)
    Tagged
    0 Thread(s)
    Punch Power
    1640
    Cool Clicks

    Default Re: Are the fighters of the 90s and todasy better than the fighters of the past ?

    I'm going to against the majority and say no. I think to be fighting 15 round fights sometimes just a few weeks after each other shows serious levels of physical fitness. However, the definition of the past is the problem here. Are these fighters more physically & technically gifted than the fighters of the 20s & 30s by and large, yes I think they are. More than those of the 50s, 60s & 70s? I think not.

    When you look at the modern Heavyweights (and by that I mean the past 20 years) is there anyone more physically fit than those of the 60s & 70s, and anyone truly more technically gifted than the best of those eras? I don't think so. I was watching the Foreman-Norton fight the other night, and I was just thinking, those guys are too well-conditioned to be modern Heavies. I do agree there has been a moderate improvement in the technical aspect, however I feel that the fighters where this has had the greatest impact is those who were on the lower tiers below the elite. There has definitely been a physical & technical improvement among that level of fighter, however I think the elite of any eras would have been able to hang with each other.

    I think guys like Sugar Ray Robinson, Willie Pep & Benny Leonard would have been capable of being true greats in any era, because they really were special. I think you give a guy like SRR all the things modern boxers have, like 4-6 months between fights & he could have had a great record. I also think one of the reasons why I think boxing has not felt the impact of improved physical training is because it remains reliant on training regimes that have been around for decades, ie running, skipping, bagwork, sparring etc. Ironically these basic techniques remain considered some of the best physical training techniques in the world. The fact that most of boxing remains away from the world of modern gyms which seem more built towards body-structuring as opposed to physical fitness leads me to believe that there have not been as significant advances in physical fitness as there have been in other sports, which for my money are merely catching up with boxing. However, the one area where there has undoubtedly been dramatic improvement is nutrition, which has obviously helped.

    I think we have a tendency to overplay & understate the quality of old-time fighters. People either make out they were unbeatable, and don't give due credit to modern guys, or people make too much of a present fighter's talent & make out he would have beaten all and sundry back in the day. On a brief note to JoeyUK, on the football argument, I really disagree with you, whilst there has been a dramatic improvement in the physical fitness of footballers, this has often been to the detriment of the technical abilities on show in previous decades, most particularly in Britain. I will disagree very strongly with the notion modern footballers are better, although that's a discussion for off-topic or let's get it on.

  9. #9
    Join Date
    Aug 2005
    Posts
    6,706
    Mentioned
    0 Post(s)
    Tagged
    0 Thread(s)
    Punch Power
    1438
    Cool Clicks

    Default Re: Are the fighters of the 90s and todasy better than the fighters of the past ?

    The sport has clearly evolved, and thus the quality of fighting has improved, AT THE LOWER WEIGHTS. I think because in the 50's,60's,70's football and other sports weren't as prominent boxing was getting the cream of the crop talent wise. Now we don't see that talent in heavier weight divisions, I mean Roy Jones Jr moved up to LHW, but since him probably Chad Dawson has been the only athletic phenom who has risen to the top of the sport at 175 and above. Most of the athletic talent now lies in guys too small to play other sports like Mayweather, Gamboa, Pacquiao, Rigondeaux, most mexican fighters, etc.

  10. #10
    Join Date
    Aug 2005
    Posts
    6,706
    Mentioned
    0 Post(s)
    Tagged
    0 Thread(s)
    Punch Power
    1438
    Cool Clicks

    Default Re: Are the fighters of the 90s and todasy better than the fighters of the past ?

    Quote Originally Posted by JazMerkin View Post
    I'm going to against the majority and say no. I think to be fighting 15 round fights sometimes just a few weeks after each other shows serious levels of physical fitness. However, the definition of the past is the problem here. Are these fighters more physically & technically gifted than the fighters of the 20s & 30s by and large, yes I think they are. More than those of the 50s, 60s & 70s? I think not.

    When you look at the modern Heavyweights (and by that I mean the past 20 years) is there anyone more physically fit than those of the 60s & 70s, and anyone truly more technically gifted than the best of those eras? I don't think so. I was watching the Foreman-Norton fight the other night, and I was just thinking, those guys are too well-conditioned to be modern Heavies. I do agree there has been a moderate improvement in the technical aspect, however I feel that the fighters where this has had the greatest impact is those who were on the lower tiers below the elite. There has definitely been a physical & technical improvement among that level of fighter, however I think the elite of any eras would have been able to hang with each other.

    I think guys like Sugar Ray Robinson, Willie Pep & Benny Leonard would have been capable of being true greats in any era, because they really were special. I think you give a guy like SRR all the things modern boxers have, like 4-6 months between fights & he could have had a great record. I also think one of the reasons why I think boxing has not felt the impact of improved physical training is because it remains reliant on training regimes that have been around for decades, ie running, skipping, bagwork, sparring etc. Ironically these basic techniques remain considered some of the best physical training techniques in the world. The fact that most of boxing remains away from the world of modern gyms which seem more built towards body-structuring as opposed to physical fitness leads me to believe that there have not been as significant advances in physical fitness as there have been in other sports, which for my money are merely catching up with boxing. However, the one area where there has undoubtedly been dramatic improvement is nutrition, which has obviously helped.

    I think we have a tendency to overplay & understate the quality of old-time fighters. People either make out they were unbeatable, and don't give due credit to modern guys, or people make too much of a present fighter's talent & make out he would have beaten all and sundry back in the day. On a brief note to JoeyUK, on the football argument, I really disagree with you, whilst there has been a dramatic improvement in the physical fitness of footballers, this has often been to the detriment of the technical abilities on show in previous decades, most particularly in Britain. I will disagree very strongly with the notion modern footballers are better, although that's a discussion for off-topic or let's get it on.
    TO be fair about their records, IMO guys now spend as much time in the ring as the guys of old, but they just aren't always in prize fights. You look at Mayweather or Oscar or most top guys they are sparring 15-20 rounds that can be 5 minute rounds with guys who have held belts. I mean Mayweather was doing 20x5minute rounds with Lovemore N'dou and Carlos Baldomir to get ready for Hatton. Even though Mayweather has had only 39 proffesional fights, I can't think of a person who has had more ring experience than him.

  11. #11
    Join Date
    Sep 2003
    Location
    Ex'way to your Skull
    Posts
    25,024
    Mentioned
    232 Post(s)
    Tagged
    0 Thread(s)
    Punch Power
    0
    Cool Clicks

    Default Re: Are the fighters of the 90s and todasy better than the fighters of the past ?

    NO.

  12. #12
    Join Date
    Nov 2008
    Location
    South London Baby
    Posts
    5,330
    Mentioned
    8 Post(s)
    Tagged
    0 Thread(s)
    Punch Power
    1640
    Cool Clicks

    Default Re: Are the fighters of the 90s and todasy better than the fighters of the past ?

    Quote Originally Posted by Taeth View Post
    Quote Originally Posted by JazMerkin View Post
    I'm going to against the majority and say no. I think to be fighting 15 round fights sometimes just a few weeks after each other shows serious levels of physical fitness. However, the definition of the past is the problem here. Are these fighters more physically & technically gifted than the fighters of the 20s & 30s by and large, yes I think they are. More than those of the 50s, 60s & 70s? I think not.

    When you look at the modern Heavyweights (and by that I mean the past 20 years) is there anyone more physically fit than those of the 60s & 70s, and anyone truly more technically gifted than the best of those eras? I don't think so. I was watching the Foreman-Norton fight the other night, and I was just thinking, those guys are too well-conditioned to be modern Heavies. I do agree there has been a moderate improvement in the technical aspect, however I feel that the fighters where this has had the greatest impact is those who were on the lower tiers below the elite. There has definitely been a physical & technical improvement among that level of fighter, however I think the elite of any eras would have been able to hang with each other.

    I think guys like Sugar Ray Robinson, Willie Pep & Benny Leonard would have been capable of being true greats in any era, because they really were special. I think you give a guy like SRR all the things modern boxers have, like 4-6 months between fights & he could have had a great record. I also think one of the reasons why I think boxing has not felt the impact of improved physical training is because it remains reliant on training regimes that have been around for decades, ie running, skipping, bagwork, sparring etc. Ironically these basic techniques remain considered some of the best physical training techniques in the world. The fact that most of boxing remains away from the world of modern gyms which seem more built towards body-structuring as opposed to physical fitness leads me to believe that there have not been as significant advances in physical fitness as there have been in other sports, which for my money are merely catching up with boxing. However, the one area where there has undoubtedly been dramatic improvement is nutrition, which has obviously helped.

    I think we have a tendency to overplay & understate the quality of old-time fighters. People either make out they were unbeatable, and don't give due credit to modern guys, or people make too much of a present fighter's talent & make out he would have beaten all and sundry back in the day. On a brief note to JoeyUK, on the football argument, I really disagree with you, whilst there has been a dramatic improvement in the physical fitness of footballers, this has often been to the detriment of the technical abilities on show in previous decades, most particularly in Britain. I will disagree very strongly with the notion modern footballers are better, although that's a discussion for off-topic or let's get it on.
    TO be fair about their records, IMO guys now spend as much time in the ring as the guys of old, but they just aren't always in prize fights. You look at Mayweather or Oscar or most top guys they are sparring 15-20 rounds that can be 5 minute rounds with guys who have held belts. I mean Mayweather was doing 20x5minute rounds with Lovemore N'dou and Carlos Baldomir to get ready for Hatton. Even though Mayweather has had only 39 proffesional fights, I can't think of a person who has had more ring experience than him.
    I wasn't saying they were necessarily all better back then (although I definitely think the Heavies were) IMO Mayweather could have hung with the best whatever era, I just don't think there have been such significant advances to make modern fighters 'better' than the older fighters.

  13. #13
    Join Date
    Aug 2005
    Posts
    6,706
    Mentioned
    0 Post(s)
    Tagged
    0 Thread(s)
    Punch Power
    1438
    Cool Clicks

    Default Re: Are the fighters of the 90s and todasy better than the fighters of the past ?

    Watch Ray Robinson vs Lamotta or whoever, they had virtually no defense back then. Even comparing Leonard to Whitaker or Mayweather or Jones, athletically he could hang with anybody, but the sport has changed considerably, the new style of being a slick boxer went from Ali to Leonard to Whitaker to RJJ to Mayweather, it has definitely evolved. IMO if Robinson were to fight with the exact same style he had, he wouldn't have done that well because he was so easy to hit, and he wouldn't know what to do against a real defense, I think he would have picked it up really quick, but that throwing in a guy from the 40's would be suicide for them against the pros nowadays when directly comparing them. Thats why a great can only be compared in their generation.

    MMA has evolved a lot quicker because all the sports involved have had a lot of time to evolve, but look at the difference between the founders of the sport and look at the sport now.

    Look at both american and european football, look how they've changed.

    All sports evolve, regardless of how simple they may appear. Boxing's evolution right now IMO is the huge amount of southpaws that are pouring into the sport. Based on the amateurs we are likely to see a 50/50 representation between southpaw and orthodox fighters.

    Want evidence of this watch Jack Johnson
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GQtuT...eature=related

    look at their stance, technique, etc the sport has definitely evolved a great deal, of course the closer you get to nowadays the smaller the change will be.

    IMO if Ali-Frazier took place nowadays Ali wouldn't have been hit at all by that left hook, he would have had his right hand up the whole time.
    Last edited by Taeth; 03-25-2009 at 02:42 PM.

  14. #14
    Join Date
    Feb 2009
    Posts
    107
    Mentioned
    0 Post(s)
    Tagged
    0 Thread(s)
    Punch Power
    790
    Cool Clicks

    Default Re: Are the fighters of the 90s and todasy better than the fighters of the past ?

    Wow yea from that video boxing has evolved massively...they seem to move about with their gloves down for a bit then lay into eachother. SRR wouldnt have got 128-1 today but as posted above all sports evolve and sportsmen are only going to get better

  15. #15
    Join Date
    Jul 2007
    Posts
    13,929
    Mentioned
    123 Post(s)
    Tagged
    1 Thread(s)
    Punch Power
    1923
    Cool Clicks

    Default Re: Are the fighters of the 90s and todasy better than the fighters of the past ?

    Jesse Owens woulodn't even get on the US Olympic team today.

Thread Information

Users Browsing this Thread

There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)

     

Similar Threads

  1. Replies: 76
    Last Post: 01-06-2009, 07:41 PM
  2. Replies: 33
    Last Post: 09-16-2008, 05:26 PM
  3. Replies: 38
    Last Post: 08-02-2008, 08:06 PM
  4. Replies: 22
    Last Post: 12-21-2007, 08:46 PM
  5. Replies: 39
    Last Post: 02-26-2007, 07:32 AM

Tags for this Thread

Bookmarks

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •  




Boxing | Boxing Photos | Boxing News | Boxing Forum | Boxing Rankings

Copyright © 2000 - 2024 Saddo Boxing - Boxing