Quote Originally Posted by Ted The Bull
He defeated Ray Mancini, Roberto Duran (twice), Sugar Ray Leonard, Tony Menefee, Heath Todd, Gary Kirkland, Luis Maysonet, Jorge Vaca, Todd Foster, Pat Lawlor, Reyes Antonio Cruz, Greg Haugen, Tony Baltazar, Ken Sigurani, Howard Davis, Jr, Cornelius Boza Edwards, Freddie Roach, Vinny Paz, Edwin Rosario, Jose Luis Ramirez ( a member of the World Boxing Hall of Fame), Rafael Limon, John Montes, Greg Conversion, Melvin Paul, and Louis Burke. He was defeated by Julio Cesar Chavez, 108-6-2, Felix Trinidad, 42-2, Greg Haugen, 40-10-1(he lost by an extremely controversial decision when, inexplicitly, he was penalized for not touching gloves before the last round; he won the rematch), Oscar De La Hoya, 38-4, and Chris Walsh, 19-7-1 by TD. He didn't fight either Chacon or Pernell Whitaker, but not from his own doing. Bobby Chacon chose to fight Ray Mancini, and the Duvas never made the match with Whitaker.

Mancini was finished after his 2 fights with Bramble. Duran was ancient history and he still beat Camacho the first time. Leonard was so far gone it is disgraceful to include his win over him as an accomplishment. The next 8 or 9 people you list, really weren't anything. THey hadn't done anything, and never did. Boza Edwards, Paz, Rosario, and Ramirez were the only decent fighters he really beat. Rosario was a very good fighter, and Ramirez was world class. Those are his 2 great wins. Against Chavez he showed some heart, credit to him there.. But that was the last time he put up a decent fight at the top level... His performance against De LA Hoya and especially Trinidad, were plain cowardly. He just ran, those names shouldn't even count towards his legacy one bit, unless it is to detract from it. And good thing he didn't fight Whittaker, he would have been taken apart.