
Originally Posted by
mikeeod
Fast, mobile, and slick guys frustrated Evander. He had a warrior's mentality, so he lost interest when the other guy focused on defense and refused to engage. Evander also had a tendency to be overconfident. Another factor is this is that Evander was a natural counterpuncher and preferred that to leading. Some observations from his career:
Larry Donald: Evander was well past his best, but this would've been a bad match up for him during his prime.
Chris Byrd: Another fighter who would've caused Evander issues at any point due to his movement and focus on defense.
James Toney: This was one of Evander's worst cases of hubris/overconfidence. He told Toney before the fight that no one, even Bowe and Lewis, had the balls to stand in front of him and fight. He then proceeded to load up with every shot and punch himself out (he was past his best) while Toney slipped and countered him silly.
Lennox Lewis: Past his best, the first fight is tied with the Toney fight for most overconfident. He had a dream/vision that Lewis would go out in the 3rd, and trained accordingly. He received a gift draw, but performed much better in the rematch (I thought he won but I'm biased).
Michael Moorer: Overconfidence and a heart issue cost him the first fight, which he avenged savagely in the rematch. Moorer had that great jab, tricky style to bother Evander, but he just went full on beast mode in the rematch for the stoppage win.
Riddick Bowe: Second greatest trilogy at heavyweight, second only to Ali-Frazier, and not by much. The Bowe-Holyfield trilogy had more two way/sustained action throughout as Ali-Frazier 2 was a dud (1 & 3 were ridiculous though).
Tyson, Tua, Rahman, Marciano, Foreman, Frazier, Mercer: Put these guys in front of any version of Evander and he looks great. Aggressive fighters with big punches were his specialty.
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