Guys let's put something into perspective here, who are the BIG heavies who its supposedly unfair for them to be in the division?
I cannot think of a fighter in the whole history of boxing who was too big for the heavyweight division, in terms of the other heavyweights not being able to count with his size.
As I said before go above 260 lbs and there is nobody in the history of the sport who was any good.
ALL of the best heavyweights ever were reasonably sized.
Wladimir averages just over 240 lbs a fight. George Forman weighed over 250 lbs for his fight with Evander Holyfield, and weighed in over 220 in his prime, hardly a weight disadvantage.
Even Ali at his heaviest weighed in within a few pounds of how much Wlad regularly weighs.
These so called supersize heavyweights arn't really much bigger than the old greats, 10-15 lbs or so compared to the golden years of Foreman and Ali.
Vitali is a bit bigger around 250, but that's a fair upper size limit imo, Lennox was certainly able to hold his own with him.
The real giants above 275lbs are shockingly poor. In the whole history of boxing there has never been a great heavyweight above 275 lbs.
Simply put, 250 lbs is probably the maximum upper limit for a human being to weigh and be effective as a boxer. Beyond that extra bodyweight just detracts from other factors such as speed, mobility, stamina, skill and coordination etc.
If you made a superheavyweight division, all you would do is give opportunity to mediocre fighters, not even decent domestic level to become world champions.
Imo you would even have MMA freaks like that Hong man Choi, former Sumo star Akebono and Giant Silva all turning to professional boxing and fighting for WBC and WBA world titles
If we had a superheavyweight division this would be our future champs.
GIANT SILVA
Hong Man Choi
Akebono
Seriously, would ANYONE want these representing the highest weight class in our sport?

Bookmarks