Re: Roy Jones, where did it all go wrong?

Originally Posted by
JazMerkin

Originally Posted by
JonesJrMayweather
Mike Macallum who is in the hall of fame was quoted saying after their fight "He's the greatest ever".... And Glen Johnson is just another tarver yapping away after oh wow he beat 35 year old jones who had just been knocked out. What else is going to say? And those that think the weight thing didn't have a impact watch jones take flush punches from Toney before the weight, a solid heavyweight punch in the first round from John Ruiz who dropped Evander. Then all of sudden Johnson who isn't a kayo puncher drops jones?
Even on the air merchant said "there was a time when Roy Jones never got hit by long looping punches like the one he was hit with with" in reference to Johnson kayoing him. Then sat next to Tarver and said "what happened to Roy, was what happened to all the greats, they stay around and eventually lose to fighters who are well below their level"
I think the point is that with the exception of Hopkins is that Johnson is about as much a 'throwback' as there is in modern boxing. Also this is not Johnson talking shit in the media etc, this is him having a serious conversation with a fellow boxer. His opinion is to be at least considered.
The fact is that if Jones was THAT great, he wouldn't have got flat KO'd by a guy who is apparently so below his level. Robinson, Pep, Armstrong, Ali & both Benny & Ray Leonard were getting beat up at the end of their careers, but they had more than enough ring savvy to ensure they didn't get rendered unconscious. Roy didn't & hasn't even against guys considerably less skilled than Tarver or Johnson.

Originally Posted by
marbleheadmaui
One last thing. I wonder about the current view that Roy's chin was his weakness. I'm not so sure. I suspect anyone who is never taught and never practices how to take/roll with a punch could be one punched by a good fighter. Might it not be true that Roy's chin was adequate and his KO's were another example of a technical failing? If that's true and we want to play imaginary games? Think about Roy having been taught that!
I agree with this completely. I suspect he never really had to learn how to take punches because he was always able to dodge them. He never really had to learn how to handle himself when hurt so when he does get hurt bad, he either gets flattened or goes into a desperate shell on the ropes. Compare this with Hopkins when hurt against Pascal or Mayweather against Mosley. Both very defensively sound guys who are rarely hit clean, but when hurt immediately they tie up & then find spots to come back with something for the opponent.
That's a fair point about the punches. But everyone views things with the hindsight of 20/20. Listening to Roy do commentary on fights both during is prime and afterwards clearly points to him being highly knowledgeable about the technical side of boxing. Yes, if Roy had practiced more using a traditional guard he may have well been able to change his style once he slowed.
The impression that a man can fight for 15 years, not be hit flush via bad technical skills or a glass jaw enough to actually beat him says more to me about him being exceptionally great. Those arguments all lead back to same points over and over. Roy came a weak era and he didn't lose because of weight. Yet those same arguments also are used to take away from what he did accomplish when he completely outclassed james toney who was p4p #1 at the time and undefeated. Points are made about Toney being weight drained. It's actually convenient that people just wait until someone loses to rip them apart. Meanwhile before they loses everything said is washed away? Someone said they should wait until one is completely done fighting before making a judgement on them. Roy was 35 when he lost had been fighting for 16 years. Arguably 4-6 years past his prime. Had he retired at 32-33 he'd easily be top 5 all time. I mean is anyone really counting the fights that holyfield is competing in now? Or Roy for that matter?
I can imagine Floyd losing to Pacman, then all of sudden Floyd is torn apart. But if he happens to destroy pac. They will say, he's just too good and who didn't see it coming, pac's never been in the ring with something like floyd blah blah, then demand that floyd move up to 160 or something. Or at least keep fighting until he loses.
Last edited by JonesJrMayweather; 05-27-2011 at 02:09 AM.
"Sixty forty I kicks yo' ass, Sixty forty I tears yo' ass up" - Roy Jones
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