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    Quote Originally Posted by Britkid View Post
    Quote Originally Posted by Dia bando View Post
    When fighter's just get beat, and we say past his best, Eubank, Benn, age to many hard
    fights father time catching up with them.!
    So many great fight never no when to just walk away,! do they damage there greatness,
    in doing so, RJJ for instance.
    Name me fighters you think, carried on to long fighting.
    Probably a lot easier to name the ones who retired too soon...

    YES, by far the majority hang on for to long, very few get away at the right time.

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    Default Re: Past Your Best.

    There are so many.

    Johnson
    Leonard
    Armstrong
    Robinson
    Mosley
    Hearns
    Ali
    Tyson
    Louis
    Comacho
    Duran
    Benitez

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    Default Re: Past Your Best.

    Quote Originally Posted by IamInuit View Post
    There are so many.

    Johnson
    Leonard
    Armstrong
    Robinson
    Mosley
    Hearns
    Ali
    Tyson
    Louis
    Comacho
    Duran
    Benitez

    Roy Jones jr has embarrassed himself and when he lost to Danny Green i think it was one of the saddest moments i have seen in boxing.

    Smokin' Joe Frazier should've retired after the Thriller In Manila, but he continues on and fights Foreman...again!

    Maybe Hagler did the right thing and retired when he did? Maybe he thought he couldn't beat Leonard in a rematch? Think about that for a minute, if Hagler fights Leonard again and loses again his legacy is chopped in half instantly.

    Aaron Pryor was crazy to fight again 1985

    There are so many, but all fighters have huge ego's and they all think they can still do what they did at 24 or 25 years of age when they are 34 or 35 or pushing 40?

    Most fighters are on the decline post 32 years, you do have exceptions, but the peak years are probably 25-30, it's all down hill after that.

    We tend to forget that someone like Duran was already a 70+ fight veteran by the time he lost to Leonard in 'No Mas'. He was past his peak the moment the final bell rang in Montreal!
    Last edited by THE THIRD MAN; 08-03-2013 at 03:24 AM.

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    Default Re: Past Your Best.

    Quote Originally Posted by THE THIRD MAN View Post
    Quote Originally Posted by IamInuit View Post
    There are so many.

    Johnson
    Leonard
    Armstrong
    Robinson
    Mosley
    Hearns
    Ali
    Tyson
    Louis
    Comacho
    Duran
    Benitez

    Roy Jones jr has embarrassed himself and when he lost to Danny Green i think it was one of the saddest moments i have seen in boxing.

    Smokin' Joe Frazier should've retired after the Thriller In Manila, but he continues on and fights Foreman...again!

    Maybe Hagler did the right thing and retired when he did? Maybe he thought he couldn't beat Leonard in a rematch? Think about that for a minute, if Hagler fights Leonard again and loses again his legacy is chopped in half instantly.

    Aaron Pryor was crazy to fight again 1985

    There are so many, but all fighters have huge ego's and they all think they can still do what they did at 24 or 25 years of age when they are 34 or 35 or pushing 40?

    Most fighters are on the decline post 32 years, you do have exceptions, but the peak years are probably 25-30, it's all down hill after that.

    We tend to forget that someone like Duran was already a 70+ fight veteran by the time he lost to Leonard in 'No Mas'. He was past his peak the moment the bell rang in Montreal!
    That is a really good point although it was the first fight that was held in Montreal but nevertheless you can certainly make the case that he did start his decline during that six month period and two fights.

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    Default Re: Past Your Best.

    Saad Muhammad. Its one thing to watch a favorite drag it out at a lower level with rusty guile and worn resiliency but remaining upright most of the time...its another when they are just a memory being regularly blasted out by guys who couldn't touch them in their best.

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    Default Re: Past Your Best.

    The list would be much longer than most fans would believe. It's too bad, but most fighters don't know when to quit. Not all, but most fighters hang around too long for a couple of fights at least, in my opinion.

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    Default Re: Past Your Best.

    "Past your best" also gets overplayed. There are other factors to consider than simply - a fighter got "old." Once you reach a certain level the competition is genuinely tougher. If you are consistently competing at the highest level you are more likely to lose. That's just basic common sense. Contrary to what some people claim nobody is "Superman," indestructible or unbeatable.

    Obviously many cases are clearcut.

    However, boxing is the ultimate "hindsight" sport. You match a contender with a proven respected champion? The contender wins - it's because the proven champion is past his best. The prospect loses - it's because he was overrated.
    3-Time SADDO PREDICTION COMP CHAMPION.

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    Default Re: Past Your Best.

    Quote Originally Posted by IamInuit View Post
    Quote Originally Posted by THE THIRD MAN View Post
    Quote Originally Posted by IamInuit View Post
    There are so many.

    Johnson
    Leonard
    Armstrong
    Robinson
    Mosley
    Hearns
    Ali
    Tyson
    Louis
    Comacho
    Duran
    Benitez

    Roy Jones jr has embarrassed himself and when he lost to Danny Green i think it was one of the saddest moments i have seen in boxing.

    Smokin' Joe Frazier should've retired after the Thriller In Manila, but he continues on and fights Foreman...again!

    Maybe Hagler did the right thing and retired when he did? Maybe he thought he couldn't beat Leonard in a rematch? Think about that for a minute, if Hagler fights Leonard again and loses again his legacy is chopped in half instantly.

    Aaron Pryor was crazy to fight again 1985

    There are so many, but all fighters have huge ego's and they all think they can still do what they did at 24 or 25 years of age when they are 34 or 35 or pushing 40?

    Most fighters are on the decline post 32 years, you do have exceptions, but the peak years are probably 25-30, it's all down hill after that.

    We tend to forget that someone like Duran was already a 70+ fight veteran by the time he lost to Leonard in 'No Mas'. He was past his peak the moment the bell rang in Montreal!
    That is a really good point although it was the first fight that was held in Montreal but nevertheless you can certainly make the case that he did start his decline during that six month period and two fights.
    Yes, i believe the moment he beat Leonard in Montreal and that final bell sounded we had already seen the best of Roberto Duran, the rematch was too soon and he was never the same after No Mas. Duran was at his peak as a Lightweight, he gave us one last glimpse of his real greatness in that 1st Leonard fight, but after so many battles and a decade long career the truly great Roberto Duran was no more.

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    Quote Originally Posted by THE THIRD MAN View Post
    Quote Originally Posted by IamInuit View Post
    Quote Originally Posted by THE THIRD MAN View Post
    Quote Originally Posted by IamInuit View Post
    There are so many.

    Johnson
    Leonard
    Armstrong
    Robinson
    Mosley
    Hearns
    Ali
    Tyson
    Louis
    Comacho
    Duran
    Benitez

    Roy Jones jr has embarrassed himself and when he lost to Danny Green i think it was one of the saddest moments i have seen in boxing.

    Smokin' Joe Frazier should've retired after the Thriller In Manila, but he continues on and fights Foreman...again!

    Maybe Hagler did the right thing and retired when he did? Maybe he thought he couldn't beat Leonard in a rematch? Think about that for a minute, if Hagler fights Leonard again and loses again his legacy is chopped in half instantly.

    Aaron Pryor was crazy to fight again 1985

    There are so many, but all fighters have huge ego's and they all think they can still do what they did at 24 or 25 years of age when they are 34 or 35 or pushing 40?

    Most fighters are on the decline post 32 years, you do have exceptions, but the peak years are probably 25-30, it's all down hill after that.

    We tend to forget that someone like Duran was already a 70+ fight veteran by the time he lost to Leonard in 'No Mas'. He was past his peak the moment the bell rang in Montreal!
    That is a really good point although it was the first fight that was held in Montreal but nevertheless you can certainly make the case that he did start his decline during that six month period and two fights.
    Yes, i believe the moment he beat Leonard in Montreal and that final bell sounded we had already seen the best of Roberto Duran, the rematch was too soon and he was never the same after No Mas. Duran was at his peak as a Lightweight, he gave us one last glimpse of his real greatness in that 1st Leonard fight, but after so many battles and a decade long career the truly great Roberto Duran was no more.
    Do you give him a get out of jail freecard for losing to Leonard ?

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