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  1. #1
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    Default Re: I hate comparing records from now to back in the day

    Quote Originally Posted by SlimTrae View Post
    Do fans of other sports have similar comparisons? I don't frequent other sports forums but kinda think its the same for all sports.

    I'm okay with comparing old to new, so as long as we reverse the scenario.

    I do like to muse how well could Floyd Mayweather had done with no hand injections and have hand issues. I also like to consider the only way for Pac to win 8 back then would be to go from the lowest to Heavyweight!


    Comparing records though is kinda iffy-in that I am in the age bracket where magazines was how we compared when I was a kid. From 1980s back to who knows? Rings start? for decades all fans had was a magazine that told us of who fought who, when and where. As a result it wasn't their record we went by -rather the blow by blow we depended on--then comparing previous fight issues. I think as a result losses weren't that big of a deal. Today losing means it's harder to get that shot...regardless of how many belts there are.

    But thanks to YouTube -one can clearly see a 25-1 padded record fighter compared to vs a 19-6 well earned record...is the likely winner between the two!


    Good point on the "other sports." You only have to look as far as the "Jordan vs Lebron vs Kobe" arguments...... the "Brady vs Montana" arguments..... and maybe a little closer to home for most folks here, the "Messi vs Ronaldo" arguments.

    Yes... these are team sports... but fans engage in these entertaining (if unwinnable) arguments just the same.

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    Default Re: I hate comparing records from now to back in the day

    Back in the day we read about more fights than what we saw, which made the fighters more heroic and the era more romantic, however, we were totally influenced by the narrative of the time/writer.

    Today we get to see every single contest, therefore, young fighters go from future stars to "bum" overnight (See Josh Kelly). Why? Because they have a tough night with a "no-name." And likewise young "hype jobs" turn into world-beaters over night after spectacularly ironing out a "no-name."

    Put any all-time great, from any era, under the same scrutiny today, half the fans who wax lyrical about Ali, Roy, Hagler, Leonard, Chavez, whoever, would be calling them "overrated," "bum," "ducker," "coward," etc.

    Here's a test? Name how many all-time great/HOF-ers Ali, Foreman and FRazier beat?
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    Default Re: I hate comparing records from now to back in the day

    Quote Originally Posted by Fenster View Post
    Back in the day we read about more fights than what we saw, which made the fighters more heroic and the era more romantic, however, we were totally influenced by the narrative of the time/writer.

    Today we get to see every single contest, therefore, young fighters go from future stars to "bum" overnight (See Josh Kelly). Why? Because they have a tough night with a "no-name." And likewise young "hype jobs" turn into world-beaters over night after spectacularly ironing out a "no-name."

    Put any all-time great, from any era, under the same scrutiny today, half the fans who wax lyrical about Ali, Roy, Hagler, Leonard, Chavez, whoever, would be calling them "overrated," "bum," "ducker," "coward," etc.

    Here's a test? Name how many all-time great/HOF-ers Ali, Foreman and FRazier beat?
    I definitely agree that the way that boxing runs today creates an unfortunate narrative for many fighters. It’s way too focused on records and less focused on the overall fighter. Just like other sports that have tons of games per season, you aren’t going to go undefeated and that’s alright. The issue is that with boxing, you generally don’t go on like normal after a loss. Like when Lubin got knocked out by Charlo in the first round. He got protected again rather than getting to prove that he belongs up there or not. So sometimes we don’t really know how good someone is because they get protected after a loss.

    As for your question about how many HOFers Ali, Foreman, and Frazier beat. I’m not sure because I’m not sure who is inducted into the HOF.

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    Default Re: I hate comparing records from now to back in the day

    In a broader sense the whole internet age has given us instantaneous information at our fingertips and that has sped up people's thought processes and coming to conclusions much quicker then say fifty or a hundred years ago.

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    Default Re: I hate comparing records from now to back in the day

    We're extremely fortunate to have the databases, record keepers and historians we have in boxing. For a sport that shoots itself in the foot every other month and is generally treated by 'main stream' sports media like a red headed step child it's near the bottom of the list in regards to historical appreciation and general recognition. Basically, there's a big gap between researching an era and actually living an era. We gravitate to what we know and experience first hand, totally natural. Fans early on did the exact same thing. And being honest we do at times tend to wave off and quick glance eras and fighter we don't know. Just names on a page. The 'old timey B&W stuff'. Used that myself when I first started trading tapes way back . But again..the records and accounts are there to at least research and bone up on. Regardless of era you can dig into every fighter over history. But as the saying goes seeing is believing and that's the rub when you're talking fighters near the turn of the early Century. To what level do you count newspaper or wire accounts if at all? Harry Greb is HOF and counted as legend yet we've seen literally nothing save for some shadow boxing. Try talking of him to some young fan and praise him and they blow a gasket...it would piss CutmeMick off very much . On records there is one huge thing that has never changed, numbers can be misleading and manipulated. Be they ko records, wins or loses, even the final "ko or tko". Never just take a record at face value. Every single fighter currently in a HOF or certain to go that way today has run up numbers at one point or another. Guys of yesteryear simply had to fight more often. And yes with that came more than a few lap dog opponents. I tend to look at time over early career just as much as wins loses.

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    Default Re: I hate comparing records from now to back in the day

    I think by 1930, boxing as an industry was in a form that would be recognizable to us. Gone were the days when a man got a world title and not defend it for years, somethimes they went to pursue entertainment instead. In America it was second only to baseball in terms of popularity, so tons of supply of contenders for a title. The Great Depression made men fight for whatever purse was offered, even if the fight was risky or a disadvantage. Only some boxers were able to refuse poorly paid fights. Go back to 1928 as an example, take Featherweight/Jr Lightweights Benny Bass (101 -41-9) or Tony Canzoneri (141 - 24 - 10), they would fight 3 times a month, for years. What did they earn? A few bucks. They didn't care if they got a few losses. The money wasn't there, so keep taking fights.

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    Default Re: I hate comparing records from now to back in the day

    Quote Originally Posted by NoSavingByTheBell View Post
    In a broader sense the whole internet age has given us instantaneous information at our fingertips and that has sped up people's thought processes and coming to conclusions much quicker then say fifty or a hundred years ago.
    Good point. However, we don't need some random observers interpretation, full of natural prejudice and bias to give us the "truth."
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    Default Re: I hate comparing records from now to back in the day

    Quote Originally Posted by TitoFan View Post
    Quote Originally Posted by SlimTrae View Post
    Do fans of other sports have similar comparisons? I don't frequent other sports forums but kinda think its the same for all sports.

    I'm okay with comparing old to new, so as long as we reverse the scenario.

    I do like to muse how well could Floyd Mayweather had done with no hand injections and have hand issues. I also like to consider the only way for Pac to win 8 back then would be to go from the lowest to Heavyweight!


    Comparing records though is kinda iffy-in that I am in the age bracket where magazines was how we compared when I was a kid. From 1980s back to who knows? Rings start? for decades all fans had was a magazine that told us of who fought who, when and where. As a result it wasn't their record we went by -rather the blow by blow we depended on--then comparing previous fight issues. I think as a result losses weren't that big of a deal. Today losing means it's harder to get that shot...regardless of how many belts there are.

    But thanks to YouTube -one can clearly see a 25-1 padded record fighter compared to vs a 19-6 well earned record...is the likely winner between the two!


    You only have to look as far the "Brady vs Montana" arguments.....

    Yes... these are team sports... but fans engage in these entertaining (if unwinnable) arguments just the same.
    Montana man here!!! When I hear the Brady won more, bigger, stronger argument that IMO plays to the reason for catapulting that older guy whose body build was that of an office worker. 3 SB appearances 3 won.
    0 interceptions in all his trips there plus SB MVP -count me old school Joe wins!!!

    Quote Originally Posted by Fenster View Post
    Back in the day we read about more fights than what we saw, which made the fighters more heroic and the era more romantic, however, we were totally influenced by the narrative of the time/writer.
    True. Back then we depended on the writer, whereas today we don't have to depend on the commentator, we can turn the volume down then call him a fool. What fight is this fool watching?

    What I love about the magazine days that all the databases can't do is..... preserve the moment.
    Meaning when I /you read that issue be it June 1985..they covered everything that happened.
    With a database, or historian they only cover events meaningful to (THEM) during June 1985 as the example.

    That Ring magazine... the then-Bible of Boxing listed every fight, every place, how each sanctioning body ranked them..thats how I learned of USBA NABF...otherwise I wouldn't know to type it up on the internet.

    And then the subsequent pages of that great Bible of Boxing told us about their lives. Who got locked up that month? Who was released that month? It was Ring magazine that I learned Riddick Bowe paid people in the inner city to turn their guns in I think at a church? and how he was kinda pissed off when he learned how much he had to pay.

    In other words Ring magazine (back then) told us about Boxing, boxers and their lives. (as it related to that timeframe, of course) usually behind by 2 or so months? Today it is instant!

    Technology we'd have to ask those questions...but some questions we wouldn't know to ask...like - this case in point- When did Bowe last give charity? Depends on whose covering it.
    I loved those days man. Not sure if they still cover all aspects of a fighter's lives cause I've drunk the Kool Aid...Ring is just a magazine for shifting ranks of fighters
    All's lost! Everything's going to shit!

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