Re: "Beyond the W-L Record"
People like the zero and if there is a loss they immediately look at who they lost to and not who they beat.
Ryder was the underdog a couple of weeks ago against the undefeated Parker and he pulled off the upset. In reality he faced better opposition and had more experience for the big occasion to win the title.
Re: "Beyond the W-L Record"
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Master
People like the zero and if there is a loss they immediately look at who they lost to and not who they beat.
Ryder was the underdog a couple of weeks ago against the undefeated Parker and he pulled off the upset. In reality he faced better opposition and had more experience for the big occasion to win the title.
Not a great example, the fight ended with an injury.
Re: "Beyond the W-L Record"
Ok I think we can do better than that.
Let's mention someone everyone knows about... Deontay Wilder.
I like him NOW... and he's shown some gumption in 3 fights against Tyson Fury.
But let's not forget he had a gaudy, unbeaten record until not long ago. Based solely on that... he was rated maybe higher than he should have. Most of his early career was made up of nothing but bums.
Case in point:
For his 14th professional fight, he fought 11-38-0 Dan Sheehan. :rolleyes:
Now... I know nothing of this Sheehan character. But I'll venture to say that anyone with an 11-38-0 professional record was either picked off the nearest pub... or he's halfway decent with some horribly wrong fight judging along the way. :rolleyes:
Ok. Next.....
Re: "Beyond the W-L Record"
About 10-15 years ago it really started to open my eyes when it comes to glossy pushed/hyped undefeated guys and how numbers are so easily manipulated. More so in boxing specifically. We fall into this falsehood of '0' translating to immediate quality. We're a society based or maybe reliant on instant stats. The problem is we really tend to stop on the surface and not do what is much easier to do now...look beyond the numbers, dig into them. As mentioned with Wilder, a case like so many others where it reads like a literal manufacturing of glossy numbers. But instead of turning the page and looking into opposition line by line, all we hear is "omg he knocks everyone out". Well yeh. That's the idea. Of course you KO who you're set up to KO. That's the recipe. Thought the same of a Victor Ortiz as they pushed him as some one man wrecking crew. And then reality comes in the form of Maidana. And not to slag on Wilder alone. The field is littered with padded records with full design to get among the very top and see how it works out. Edgar Berlanga anyone :-X. And now hype jobs like Berlanga have to "learn backwards" at a higher level and that can be a disaster. The time to take a calculated risk and work on a reasonable defense, stamina, actual combination punching are the early years. Wilder had to do it. Berto? A glaring example today are guys like Munguia (41-0) but as empty as my midnight plate at the Casino buffet. Zurdo Ramirez just laid an egg and looked like he had no idea after running up 40-0. You simply do not go from the kiddie pool where all things line up your way with soft touch after soft touch and then climb in with a master-class like Bivol. Andrade to a degree as we speak. Another unblemished record but when it was time to shit or get off the pot i.e take a real challenge he literally ducked out. Now he goes from being next for Canelo (?) if he took/won the Ryder fight as proposed..to now fighting a guy Berlanga beat a year ago :cwm13:. Talk about shooting a career in both feet. Another and I hate to say this but..Jaron Boots Ennis. I love me some Boots and think he has all the undeniable talent to worry the very best. But that record man. I mean, again a case of looking beyond the numbers. Great 29-0 but fan or no fan you have to be honest about it. Beyond Lipinets and being the only man to ko a tough as nails Abreu..there's not alot of there there. Padding and fluffing records is nothing new though. And every fighter has their fair share. But in boxings case numbers can lie. And it's on fans to dig into them. Getting back to quality over quantity would be a great start for many up and comers. KO's and W's are beautiful...but exactly who are you beating in the first place. Have to think on the quality over quantity type guys. The ones taking decent guys early to build on.
Re: "Beyond the W-L Record"
Berlanga and Ramirez are two good examples.
Re: "Beyond the W-L Record"
There is tremendous pressure in this era to not only be undefeated, but to win every fight in dominate fashion because every time that you lose a round, you have been "exposed." You hear fighters, all the time, asking for you to find them somebody "easy." This even translates to sparring. Guys are checking records and weight. They won't get in the ring unless they are sure that they will "win."
My partner and I were interested in a fighter that we had seen for years. His uncle was a fighter and ended up 11-16, something like that and my partner had trained him up until he was 5-0. The nephew had been a good amateur, the kind of guy that got to the quarter finals at major tournaments with a lot of good amateurs. As a pro he was matched very gently until he was 10-0 (7), with, in my opinion, only one stiff test. But he spent a week sparring with Oubili. He sparred for a week with Nonito Donaire. He sparred regularly with Stevenson and with Rigondeaux.
He quit, flat out quit, rather than face an opponent with a winning record.
We have another that we are working on, and he is 5-0. He is getting good sparring in Houston and the plan is to take him to Mexico after and 5, 6 fights. Down there we can bring in difficult styles and he can learn.
Back when I was in Oklahoma, we had a diificulty in that the fighter was resistant to the idea that he had a lot to learn. In the old days you would put him in a fight where he would be educated but a loss is deadly now. So we tried to find places where we could get him educated in sparring...
Another thing is that opponents aren't as good as they used to be. It used to be that an opponent brought value to a prospect by going rounds, by actually fighting back, by making the prospect work to win. Now it is a contest as to who can knock them out quicker. Otherwise, you have been "exposed."
There is a direct conflict if you are promoting fights while building fighters. Your audience wants to see good, competitive fights for the money that they spend. You are trying to build an attraction, a fighter that will sell tickets for your shows, and that you may be able to build upon.
Re: "Beyond the W-L Record"
here's a guy that fits the bill. twenty seven year old lightweight, only eight of those wins had winning records
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/Fn-XzuEX...jpg&name=small
Re: "Beyond the W-L Record"
Oh my goodness... yes.
Apparently BoxRec sees this too, and he's ranked #122 in the world. Plus it appears he's going nowhere fast, since at 27 years of age with 33 professional fights under his belt... there isn't a smidgen of a hint he may be stepping up in class.
Perfect example.
Re: "Beyond the W-L Record"
who can forget Tyrone Brunson pathetic doctored ko record.
Re: "Beyond the W-L Record"
alex winwood takes out world rated tibo monabesa in his second pro fight
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/Fqm3GWCa...jpg&name=large
Re: "Beyond the W-L Record"
One fighter who doesn't get enough credit these days is Stevie Johnston
Defeated James Page in his 5th fight
Defeated Sharmba Mitchell in his 12th fight
I would have loved to have seen him against Mayweather around 1998
Re: "Beyond the W-L Record"
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Big J
One fighter who doesn't get enough credit these days is Stevie Johnston
Defeated James Page in his 5th fight
Defeated Sharmba Mitchell in his 12th fight
I would have loved to have seen him against Mayweather around 1998
lil but bad is severely underrated