1.) Ali
2.) Holmes
3.) Louis
4.) Tyson
5.) Foreman
6 -10 pick 4 from: Lewis, Holyfield, Liston, Frazier. Johnson, Marciano, Dempsey
Last edited by BIG H; 01-08-2011 at 10:35 AM.
God is a concept, By which we can measure, Our pain, I'll say it again, God is a concept, By which we can measure, Our pain, I don't believe in magic, I don't believe in I-ching, I don't believe in bible, I don't believe in tarot, I don't believe in Hitler, I don't believe in Jesus, I don't believe in Kennedy, I don't believe in Buddha, I don't believe in mantra, I don't believe in Gita, I don't believe in yoga, I don't believe in kings, I don't believe in Elvis, I don't believe in Zimmerman, I don't believe in Beatles, I just believe in me!!
Ali- His resume is the best there is at heavy and is also one of the most gifted fighters ever to box.
Holmes- To me was just as good as Ali but did not have the names to beat when his era came.
Louis- Was the best of his time but the bum of the month club kinda puts his comp pretty low.
Holyfeild- A Cw that to me when in prime was a fighter that could hang with any heavyweight.
Lewis- Best resume there is behind Ali only other one that is close to him is Holyfeild thats about it.
Foreman- Smashing Joe and Norton like there were bums and also hardest hitting heavyweight.
Frasier- Was a beast and has a win over the greatest just could not get past Foreman.
Tyson- Seem to be unstoppable but his week comp and losses to top comp puts him down the list.
Marcaino- One the weakest era but Rocky got the 0 when he stopped and thats pretty impressive.
Tunney- To me him beating the most feared man of the old school fighters says a lot. Not to mention his boxing skills were very ahead of his time which is also very impressive.
I agree with Andre Tunney is a sleeper many of us just forget....Most of that has to do with the fact Gene was just a quiet guy and family man that used boxing as his profession but outside the ring kept to himself....So there was never a lot of hoopla surrounding him in the media except when he fought...He was not a bragger, he was not a mean fighter or a 1 punch KO artist...He was well rounded and boxed fantasticly
A prime Dempsey beat Tunney.
Do not let success go to your head and do not let failure get to your heart.
Have a cc Andre along with daxx all this talk about Johnson being ahead of his time. Yet there is nothing about how ahead of the game Tunney was as well but yet he is remembered for the long count.
Do not let success go to your head and do not let failure get to your heart.
Gotta love the lists...
1. Wlad
2. Ali
3. Louis
4. Tyson
5. Lennox
6. Marciano
7. Foreman
8. Fraizer
9. Holyfield
10. Vitali
My list
1. Rocky Marciano. Just unstopable. Slik defence, insane conditioning and punching power! Beating some of the most acomplished fighters of all time Walcott, Charles, Louis and Moore speaks for it self. Here alot of peaples will say ja but they were old. This can make me just lought!
2. Joe Louis. Rocky would have beaten him when Louis was young too! He was the bes athlet of them all.
3. Sonny Liston. He has the perfect physic and has solid boxing fundations. It's a petty that he was under influenceI don't know who can beat him in his prime and if he is not selling fights!
4. Charles/Walcott. This guys have the moves, the knowidge, the experiance and the physic! I don't understand why now most of the people are thinking that being bigger makes you better. Being pumped doesn't mean that you are going to punch harder, being faster , have better condition and taking punch better!
6. Frazier just humble, hard working guy with the biggest heart of them all!
7. Ali/Jonson for the sake of show business
9. Holyfield. He is really good in his fondations and has big heart.
10.Forman/Holmes/Tyson you choose![]()
In no special order...
1) Marciano: condition and punching power count a lot in a division where the skill level isn't generally as high as in some others. Also, he is pretty underrated defensively, and for his ability to adapt and adjust during fights.
2) Dempsey: very fierce, fought at a quick pace for HWs. Ray Arcel called him the best.
3) Louis: most effective puncher ever, very fast, kill you with any punch. Eddie Futch called him the best.
4) Johnson: huge historical impact. I don't know enough about him to assess his skills, except that he lost to Willard in a fight I think was probably legitimate.
5) Jefferies: very athletic HW and huge for his day. Very widely respected for many years after his reign. (Nat Fleischer rated him very highly, if I recall) People tend to forget that he fought Johnson after a 5 year layoff.
6) Tunney: I guess everybody knows by now that I am a huge Tunney fan, possibly the role model in my life. I always think that a thoughtful guy that can move, box and punch has an edge.
7) Tyson: at his pre-Douglas peak he was really something. Largely, I think, because he fought like a featherweight. His peak was short lived because he stuck with the peek-a-boo style, and as soon as his reflexes slipped a bit he became a target.
Holmes: real good fighter. moved well, sharp straight right, effective right uppercut, great jab. Got hit with right hands and fell down but got up. A better version of Ali.
9) Lewis: pretty good fighter that got to be a very good fighter once somebody taught him to use his attributes and fight smart. But his last fight, man, that was sad. Terrible skill level for a HW world championship fight.
10) Charles: 8 defenses, wasn't it? Great, great fighter. Given his success at MW and LHW, maybe the best of them all. I always try to give him his due. And I think he'd have beaten Frazier (watch his first with Marciano), Patterson, and the rest of that group of "great" heavies. Unless Foreman caught him, or if he couldn't handle Liston's jab.
I'm a firm believer in sayin' so don't make it so: Ali saying the he was the greatest countless time doesn't make him "The Greatest." There is a cottage industry that has grown up around this belief...he fought the best opposition...all that.
But, look, he went life and death three times with Kenny Norton who, otherwise, was 4-8-1 against top 10 opposition, usually getting ko'd in 1 or 2 rounds. Frazier was a one handed fighter that couldn't avoid a punch to save his life, and he hit Ali at will with left hooks. "The Greatest" should've, at some point in all those rounds against a guy that had only a left hook, figured out how to block a left hook. Leon Spinks beat him!!! He got a gift against Earnie Shavers, and I thought Jimmy Young beat him.
He threw a flicking jab, no shoulder in it. No left hook to speak of, never hit the body, dropped his hands and left himself wide open (first Frazier fight) when he threw uppercuts, couldn't fight inside. His defense consisted of skipping aound the ring, out of reach of his opponents but too far away to counter, either. In range, he leaned back and got hit, or grabbed behind the head and pulled down, which is illegal.
Ali was a master of self-promotion, and, after his exile, the media bought into it and sold it. He benefitted from an era of mediocre to poor competition- remember, this was after the television era, which saw a huge decline in the skill level of the overall boxing population.
You are right Ali was technically bad and he got some shady decisions but please you could critique any fighter like that.
Frazer destroyed people with that left hook but could not knockout Ali. Foreman and Liston were beaten by him when others greats would have failed.
The peak years of Ali were taken away and those close fights were when he did not have the legs of the young Ali. His chin and heart are not to be questioned.
Do not let success go to your head and do not let failure get to your heart.
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