"Potential Heavyweights are now 'Football Tight Ends' and 'NBA Forwards'
That seems to be bandwagon agreement among boxing purists, writers, as well as ex-heavyweights. It think it's very much exaggerated. It's not as if other sports are the only other option for people who happen to be big. What about construction or some other physically inducing occupation? People get so caught up in stuff like this and believe it's absolute truth. "Megatron could have been a beast as a boxer". How do you know that? Especially since the sports require an almost completely different set of skills and discipline.
Re: "Potential Heavyweights are now 'Football Tight Ends' and 'NBA Forwards'
trend has been bigger & bigger, but the quality has somehow diminshed
Re: "Potential Heavyweights are now 'Football Tight Ends' and 'NBA Forwards'
Bottom line is that the more popular a sport is, the more super athletes you're going to get gravitating to it.
Anyone who follows MMA knows this. If you look at the UFC pre-2005 and then UFC 2005 onward (after it became popular), there's no comparison in terms of the athletic talent that is dominating the sport.
So yeah, for many years football was taking a lot of super athletes that could have ruled the HW division, and in recent years MMA has taken a lot of those as well.
Re: "Potential Heavyweights are now 'Football Tight Ends' and 'NBA Forwards'
Quote:
Originally Posted by
brocktonblockbust
trend has been bigger & bigger, but the quality has somehow diminshed
The solution is so simple.
Turn the colour down to black and white on your TV set and then SUDDENLY they will all look stellar for you ;D
Re: "Potential Heavyweights are now 'Football Tight Ends' and 'NBA Forwards'
Boxing requires a really unique skillset and mentality that is unlike those other sports.
People become fighters because they WANT to fight, they are not interested in playing football.
In terms of athleticism, athleticism is one of the LEAST important aspects of HW boxing.
Athletic boxers get knocked out more often/earlier and pose fewer problems statistically than slightly less athletic boxers that is a fact.
This myth was constructed by the American boxing community to save face after they were booted out of boxing.
This myth has been busted many times.
Boxing eras (5) The worst heavyweight era of all time! -OR- Americans play Basketball now! | Box statistics, analysis of boxing history records, stats of boxing eras
Re: "Potential Heavyweights are now 'Football Tight Ends' and 'NBA Forwards'
Extracted from link above:
Oh, sure. All the Evander Holyfields (6'2"), Rocky Marcianos (5'10"), Mike Tysons (5'10") and Joe Fraziers (5'11") play basketball now.
It's as ridiculous as claiming that "Americans ruled in the Golden Age of Boxing because Englishmen played Golf".
The opposite is probably true: Since Eastern Europeans are hardly interested in Basketball and Gridiron (e.g. American Football) Americans can still be at top in these sport fields.
And I wonder why Muhammad Ali wasn't playing basketball if it was so much better. And I wonder why some of the current top basketball players don't decide to step into the ring with the Klitschkos to earn millions, if it's so easy.
But wait! It's not only American football and basketball:
"Klitschko brothers Doing their BEST at this Time when HW Boxing is Low cos of OTHER INTEREST like Gangster Music"
(original quote)
Re: "Potential Heavyweights are now 'Football Tight Ends' and 'NBA Forwards'
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Beanflicker
Bottom line is that the more popular a sport is, the more super athletes you're going to get gravitating to it.
Anyone who follows MMA knows this. If you look at the UFC pre-2005 and then UFC 2005 onward (after it became popular), there's no comparison in terms of the athletic talent that is dominating the sport.
So yeah, for many years football was taking a lot of super athletes that could have ruled the HW division, and in recent years MMA has taken a lot of those as well.
I disagree with the MMA part. I do occasionally watch MMA and I rarely see someone in the heavyweight division and think they could have been a great boxer!! I think Dos Santos could have been ok, although I seriously doubt he'd be "elite". Also if you look at it from another perspective, so many of the guys who have been great in HW division in MMA have come from backgrounds that create good smaller boxers but certainly not bigger guys. For example Cain Velasquez, although he is actually an American fighter he comes from a Mexican background. As we know Mexicans have made up some of boxings greatest ever Champions but only in the smaller divisions. Also Velasquez I think it's fair to say is the man right now as far as HW's go in MMA but I don't see him as being anywhere near the natural athlete that Wladimir Klitschko is or to be fair any of the great boxers throughout history.
I think it's also fair to say that America has somewhat ruled the top division in boxing barring the very early days and the last 15 years, with the emergence of Lennox Lewis the Klitschko's and the decline in top American Heavyweights playing a huge part in this in my opinion. I don't see anyone in MMA like the guys we are now missing in boxing, people like Liston, Ali, Frazier, Foreman, Norton, Holmes, Tyson and Holyfield. I just don't see anyone in MMA that is that kind of athlete. I'm not knocking MMA here just basically pointing out that it's a different sport that requires a different set of athletic qualities.
I think the reason behind it all is money though. If you reach the very top of boxing you have, down the years been able to earn more money than any other sport and that is an undisputed fact!! It is still the case now, look at Floyd Mayweather the highest earning sportsman alive, again and for 72 minutes work!! The problem is reaching the very top of boxing requires a lot of luck and when all said and done it is dangerous too. You need to be lucky enough to have been blessed with the natural athletic qualities required for boxing and then the training is very hard too. Then the danger factor comes into play.... I have a friend who trains a childrens football (soccer) team and he was telling me the about some of the really athletic young lads he gets down there and was also saying that a couple of their mums have been telling him they have been struggling to control their sons lately. He suggested getting them to go boxing a couple of times a week as it is excellent training and it helps teach discipline etc. The immediate response was "It's too brutal". The point I'm trying to get at here is people are very rarely encouraged to go boxing because of the dangers associated with the sport (unfairly in my opinion, certainly at amateur level) and whereas in years gone by the £££ used to be a big factor, lots of other "safer" sports have certainly bridged the gap financially now. I know that in the 60's a top international footballer was earning around £2000 a year and when converted into todays equivalent that is around £75,000 a year. Well in 1974 Ali and Foreman both received a whopping £5 million each for the Rumble which equates to around £53 million now. Although football doesn't quite reach that level just yet there is certainly a lot more money to be had now!! I am using "soccer" as an example here as it is a sport that I have knowledge of rather American Football which I have no clue of other than I know that they too now earn ridiculous amounts of money and I feel these are the reasons that Basketball and Football seem to be taking the big athletic guys away from boxing in the states.
Re: "Potential Heavyweights are now 'Football Tight Ends' and 'NBA Forwards'
Quote:
Originally Posted by
rjj tszyu
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Beanflicker
Bottom line is that the more popular a sport is, the more super athletes you're going to get gravitating to it.
Anyone who follows MMA knows this. If you look at the UFC pre-2005 and then UFC 2005 onward (after it became popular), there's no comparison in terms of the athletic talent that is dominating the sport.
So yeah, for many years football was taking a lot of super athletes that could have ruled the HW division, and in recent years MMA has taken a lot of those as well.
I disagree with the MMA part. I do occasionally watch MMA and I rarely see someone in the heavyweight division and think they could have been a great boxer!! I think Dos Santos could have been ok, although I seriously doubt he'd be "elite". Also if you look at it from another perspective, so many of the guys who have been great in HW division in MMA have come from backgrounds that create good smaller boxers but certainly not bigger guys. For example Cain Velasquez, although he is actually an American fighter he comes from a Mexican background. As we know Mexicans have made up some of boxings greatest ever Champions but only in the smaller divisions. Also Velasquez I think it's fair to say is the man right now as far as HW's go in MMA but I don't see him as being anywhere near the natural athlete that Wladimir Klitschko is or to be fair any of the great boxers throughout history.
I think it's also fair to say that America has somewhat ruled the top division in boxing barring the very early days and the last 15 years, with the emergence of Lennox Lewis the Klitschko's and the decline in top American Heavyweights playing a huge part in this in my opinion. I don't see anyone in MMA like the guys we are now missing in boxing, people like Liston, Ali, Frazier, Foreman, Norton, Holmes, Tyson and Holyfield. I just don't see anyone in MMA that is that kind of athlete. I'm not knocking MMA here just basically pointing out that it's a different sport that requires a different set of athletic qualities.
I think the reason behind it all is money though. If you reach the very top of boxing you have, down the years been able to earn more money than any other sport and that is an undisputed fact!! It is still the case now, look at Floyd Mayweather the highest earning sportsman alive, again and for 72 minutes work!! The problem is reaching the very top of boxing requires a lot of luck and when all said and done it is dangerous too. You need to be lucky enough to have been blessed with the natural athletic qualities required for boxing and then the training is very hard too. Then the danger factor comes into play.... I have a friend who trains a childrens football (soccer) team and he was telling me the about some of the really athletic young lads he gets down there and was also saying that a couple of their mums have been telling him they have been struggling to control their sons lately. He suggested getting them to go boxing a couple of times a week as it is excellent training and it helps teach discipline etc. The immediate response was "It's too brutal". The point I'm trying to get at here is people are very rarely encouraged to go boxing because of the dangers associated with the sport (unfairly in my opinion, certainly at amateur level) and whereas in years gone by the £££ used to be a big factor, lots of other "safer" sports have certainly bridged the gap financially now. I know that in the 60's a top international footballer was earning around £2000 a year and when converted into todays equivalent that is around £75,000 a year. Well in 1974 Ali and Foreman both received a whopping £5 million each for the Rumble which equates to around £53 million now. Although football doesn't quite reach that level just yet there is certainly a lot more money to be had now!! I am using "soccer" as an example here as it is a sport that I have knowledge of rather American Football which I have no clue of other than I know that they too now earn ridiculous amounts of money and I feel these are the reasons that Basketball and Football seem to be taking the big athletic guys away from boxing in the states.
Massive post...
Total rubbish.
US was dominant in boxing because boxing was a mainly US sport and half the world were not even ALLOWED to box.
The MOMENT boxing went global, America got wasted!
Even your only real remaining champ, Mayweather, is only a paper champ, who openly ducks the best fighter in the division.
Re: "Potential Heavyweights are now 'Football Tight Ends' and 'NBA Forwards'
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Max Power
Quote:
Originally Posted by
rjj tszyu
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Beanflicker
Bottom line is that the more popular a sport is, the more super athletes you're going to get gravitating to it.
Anyone who follows MMA knows this. If you look at the UFC pre-2005 and then UFC 2005 onward (after it became popular), there's no comparison in terms of the athletic talent that is dominating the sport.
So yeah, for many years football was taking a lot of super athletes that could have ruled the HW division, and in recent years MMA has taken a lot of those as well.
I disagree with the MMA part. I do occasionally watch MMA and I rarely see someone in the heavyweight division and think they could have been a great boxer!! I think Dos Santos could have been ok, although I seriously doubt he'd be "elite". Also if you look at it from another perspective, so many of the guys who have been great in HW division in MMA have come from backgrounds that create good smaller boxers but certainly not bigger guys. For example Cain Velasquez, although he is actually an American fighter he comes from a Mexican background. As we know Mexicans have made up some of boxings greatest ever Champions but only in the smaller divisions. Also Velasquez I think it's fair to say is the man right now as far as HW's go in MMA but I don't see him as being anywhere near the natural athlete that Wladimir Klitschko is or to be fair any of the great boxers throughout history.
I think it's also fair to say that America has somewhat ruled the top division in boxing barring the very early days and the last 15 years, with the emergence of Lennox Lewis the Klitschko's and the decline in top American Heavyweights playing a huge part in this in my opinion. I don't see anyone in MMA like the guys we are now missing in boxing, people like Liston, Ali, Frazier, Foreman, Norton, Holmes, Tyson and Holyfield. I just don't see anyone in MMA that is that kind of athlete. I'm not knocking MMA here just basically pointing out that it's a different sport that requires a different set of athletic qualities.
I think the reason behind it all is money though. If you reach the very top of boxing you have, down the years been able to earn more money than any other sport and that is an undisputed fact!! It is still the case now, look at Floyd Mayweather the highest earning sportsman alive, again and for 72 minutes work!! The problem is reaching the very top of boxing requires a lot of luck and when all said and done it is dangerous too. You need to be lucky enough to have been blessed with the natural athletic qualities required for boxing and then the training is very hard too. Then the danger factor comes into play.... I have a friend who trains a childrens football (soccer) team and he was telling me the about some of the really athletic young lads he gets down there and was also saying that a couple of their mums have been telling him they have been struggling to control their sons lately. He suggested getting them to go boxing a couple of times a week as it is excellent training and it helps teach discipline etc. The immediate response was "It's too brutal". The point I'm trying to get at here is people are very rarely encouraged to go boxing because of the dangers associated with the sport (unfairly in my opinion, certainly at amateur level) and whereas in years gone by the £££ used to be a big factor, lots of other "safer" sports have certainly bridged the gap financially now. I know that in the 60's a top international footballer was earning around £2000 a year and when converted into todays equivalent that is around £75,000 a year. Well in 1974 Ali and Foreman both received a whopping £5 million each for the Rumble which equates to around £53 million now. Although football doesn't quite reach that level just yet there is certainly a lot more money to be had now!! I am using "soccer" as an example here as it is a sport that I have knowledge of rather American Football which I have no clue of other than I know that they too now earn ridiculous amounts of money and I feel these are the reasons that Basketball and Football seem to be taking the big athletic guys away from boxing in the states.
Massive post...
Total rubbish.
US was dominant in boxing because boxing was a mainly US sport and half the world were not even ALLOWED to box.
The MOMENT boxing went global, America got wasted!
Even your only real remaining champ, Mayweather, is only a paper champ, who openly ducks the best fighter in the division.
I will not bite at a pathetic post like this. I have given my honest opinion on why the top American athletes no longer go to boxing the way they once did!!
Re: "Potential Heavyweights are now 'Football Tight Ends' and 'NBA Forwards'
Yeah because several lines of evidence blow your opinion out of the water.
It's pretty obvious that if the world competed on equal footing in boxing as today throughout its history, many of your great American champs would never have even existed!
Everybody knows it.
That is a fact.
So much for your little opinion! LOL
Re: "Potential Heavyweights are now 'Football Tight Ends' and 'NBA Forwards'
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Max Power
Yeah because several lines of evidence blow your opinion out of the water.
It's pretty obvious that if the world competed on equal footing in boxing as today throughout its history, many of your great American champs would never have even existed!
Everybody knows it.
That is a fact.
So much for your little opinion! LOL
OK so where are the American athletes in the heavyweight division these days then?
And also do you really believe that the likes of Ali and Foreman wouldn't wipe the floor with todays crop?
Re: "Potential Heavyweights are now 'Football Tight Ends' and 'NBA Forwards'
Quote:
Originally Posted by
rjj tszyu
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Max Power
Yeah because several lines of evidence blow your opinion out of the water.
It's pretty obvious that if the world competed on equal footing in boxing as today throughout its history, many of your great American champs would never have even existed!
Everybody knows it.
That is a fact.
So much for your little opinion! LOL
OK so where are the American athletes in the heavyweight division these days then?
And also do you really believe that the likes of Ali and Foreman wouldn't wipe the floor with todays crop?
Foreman would be an average plodder/puncher of no significance struggling to maintain a non-bummy record.
Muhammad Ali would be wasted by any ordinary heavyweight today and should he consider dropping to his natural division (cruiser) he would be utterly outclassed here as well.
The Americans are still there in the HW division, they have not gone anywhere.
Mike Perez, Deontay Wilder, Chris Arreola, Bryant Jennings, Carlos Takam these guys would have STEAMROLLED over past eras like the golden era beyond any doubt. And QUAOTE ME..
"They would have been heralded as a PROOF of US superiority were they have boxed back then!"
It's just that NOW days they have to contend with a new boxing superpower from a stronger background and far more disciplined.
These are the Klitschko's, Pulevs. Povetkins etc of the world.
Put it this way. The US will NEVER AGAIN dominate boxing. And you know it! :D
Re: "Potential Heavyweights are now 'Football Tight Ends' and 'NBA Forwards'
The opposite is true.
If Russian nations suddenly became interested in pro basketball, US would be quickly dethroned.
If Russian nations suddenly became interested in pro gridiron, US would quickly be dethroned.
Stronger race of people, more serious and disciplined society. It's just how it is man!
Re: "Potential Heavyweights are now 'Football Tight Ends' and 'NBA Forwards'
I don't think I even need to continue this argument, you are clearly retarded!!