Re: If Meldric Taylor used the Oscar De La hoya tactic
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Originally Posted by
Jerry Rice
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Originally Posted by
p4pking
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Originally Posted by
Jerry Rice
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Originally Posted by
greynotsoold
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Originally Posted by
Master
OK I have a confession.
I had the fight even coming into the 12th round.
There I have said it.
Many of the boxing writers at the time had it the same. The consensus, then, was that the judge that had Taylor way ahead wasn't watching the fight close enough. Over the years, the reality has changed to the point where Taylor was dominating the fight until Chavez landed a lucky punch and a Don King employee stole the fight from poor Meldrick.
I had Chavez up by two going into the 12th, but knew there were very close rounds that could go the other way. I thought the KD would have sealed it for him.
Some of these comments are strait out of the twilight zone
1. LOl about how he could not run, however he could stand there a battle for three more rounds, takes way more energy to box than it does to run, and body punishment will effect someone's boxing before it effects someone's running ability
2. The question was not about his nature as a boxer, it was how his career would have been different
3. No boxer in history did what Oscar did, however if many had boxing history would be rewritten, this is the best example.
1. You are assuming he would've been able to purely run, without having to throw his jab or set traps, feint etc:confused: Chavez was a monster and very adapt at cutting the ring off, it would have taken a lot more energy to keep distance and still avoid punishment at that point in the fight for Taylor, yes.
2. You can't really seperate the two, was the point made. He had already taken a crapload of punishment before the championship rounds that likely took a lot out of him. The stoppage was just a footnote to this.
3. No it isn't.
1. I am not assuming anything, I am saying take the De La hoya tactic and implement it in this fight, the samething you saw Oscar do is what Meldric would do, one minute you justify a cowardly act by a boxer, the next you say it is impossible for another boxer to do it, makes no since.
2. We do theoretical props all the time, we do you mean we cannot seperate the two.
3. If it isn't give us an example of what is.
1.Well Spicoli pretty well just said it, but Oscar did that because he was able to. He wasn't badly beaten up and still had his legs, and Trinidad was not pressuring him like Chavez could. When did I justify a cowardly act either? It's sense*, by the way.
2. I mean you can't seperate his nature as a boxer from his career path, if he had been more safety first to begin with he would've been a different guy. He wasn't about to suddenly change his whole approach in the championship rounds of a fight that he'd been brutalized in.
3. I guess it's hard since the above holds very true for any fighter. There are many examples of guys who could have hypothetically won big fights by exchanging less, or "running" for the championship rounds, but they are still who they are and it's anyone's guess whether it would have actually impacted their career, let alone "boxing history".
Re: If Meldric Taylor used the Oscar De La hoya tactic
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Jerry Rice
So many posters on this website have an iron clad " Oscar can do no wrong " way of
thinking, he has so many fan boys, running like a rooster for three strait rounds because you are tired is cowardly, it was never done before nor since that night, why that is so painful to admit is puzzling.
Oh and p4p king thanks for the spelling correction, I am posting from my cell phone so sometimes the wrong button gets pushed, however you explaining the difference between sense and since was exactly what I needed in my life.
When did I say it wasn't cowardly or stupid? That whole fight was a big let down from both guys, Oscar and Tito. I'm hardly a fan boy, there is just no comparison between that fight and Taylor-Chavez. So much more punishment was dealt both ways in the latter fight and Taylor didn't have the option to cruise at any point. Maybe a lobotomy is exactly what you need in your life.
Re: If Meldric Taylor used the Oscar De La hoya tactic
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Jerry Rice
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Spicoli
Oscar was able to be that mobile because he didn't soak near half what Taylor did. Had, in this twilight zone, Taylor fought like he did and then tried to count souly on mobility he probably would have been tracked down on jelly legs. The investment was already made and damage done. Tito had 12 rounds to cut him off do damage and pull a win, it wasn't a three round fight.
Oscar admitted that he was tired going into the 10th, I will send you the link if you want, on top of that if Taylor would have been running on jelly legs he never would have made it to the final seconds of the 12 round.
??? Jesus Book, you make me feel drunk and I haven't even started yet. "If" he opted to go strict backfoot like Oscar the fact his legs were dead and heavy would have been apparent where staying mostly stationary late it was not. Oscar may have been tired, I have all the interviews thanks, but that's a world away from being busted up and swallowing his own blood all night.
Edit, I can't stand Oscar, never could and prob never will.