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#16 | |
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P4P King
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Fitz kod Sharkey twice,Maher twice, Ruhlin,and while scaling 3 lbs less than Ketchel weighed for Johnson Fitz kod the heavyweight Champ Corbett. Ketchel kod one minor heavyweight Porky Flynn ,who was kod multiple times. |
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#17 | |
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Barry
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Have only read the pages on Fighing ill flick through the rest of the manuel |
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#18 |
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Champion
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Agreed. The shot he dropped Johnson with may be the hardest single punch by any middleweight captured on film, and it was more than a flash knockdown. Johnson did not get up on his first try, and falling over Ketchel when he retaliated suggests he was still stunned when he knocked Stan cold.
Langford took out Wills twice, apparently knocking Harry out with a single hook, and reportedly diluted his record by carrying some opponents, something Mickey Walker also admitted to doing in his autobiography. Walker's best weight was 158-159, the weight he trained himself to for the originally scheduled date with Schmeling. While he conceded that he may not have been able to defeat Max, even when in peak condition, he gave every other heavyweight he faced hell, and Schmeling did not take his power lightly either. Mickey also used larger gloves than Fitz. For Jeffries to say Choynski hit harder is interesting, since Fitz doctored his hands for the rematch with Jeff. (That Corbett kicked Choynski's ass on the street as well as in the ring suggests that Jim was much more of a badass than his public image made him out to be.) |
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#19 | |
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P4P King
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What proof have you that Fitz doctored his hands for the second fight with Jeffries? Walker was a good puncher but never kod a top heavyweight. Fitz kod many. I have never quite made my mind up about the Ketchel fight, other than that Johnson carried Ketchel ,Ketchel falls to the canvas from an uppercut in the 9th ,and Johnson lifts him up bodily. Several prints I have seen of the fight seem to indicate Johnson is falling BEFORE he is hit. But lets not muddy the waters ,lets return to the thread. |
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#20 |
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Belt holder
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I think Fitz must take some beating.To knock a heavyweight out of the calibre of Corbett,conceding 20 pounds after 14 gruelling rounds and with a body shot is really quite remarkable.The guy must have had awesome power.
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#21 | |
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P4P King
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The Gus Ruhlin fight is not on film but the papers say that Ruhlin was knocked so cold that he fell forward onto his face and didn't use his arms to break his fall. |
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#22 |
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Belt holder
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Common sense suggests this might be true, but if you look at his record at this weight, he really didnt seem to knock many people out at all at this lighter weight. Sams power didnt seem to become prevalent until he started going up in the weights and fighting larger fighters. What this means, i dont know. Did the smaller, quicker fighters trouble him more, Did he need the weight to develop his punch, was he foxing early on in his career, Did he change his style completely to a more aggressive approach, did the smaller fighters simply run away from him more? I am interested to hear from some of the huge Langford fans as to what his power was like (at this weight). |
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#23 | |
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P4P King
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Lets not forgett that the Nonpareil at 147 lbs lasted longer than most of his heavyweight oponents an probably landed more conters as well. I think that once you get a pound for pound puncher like Langford or Fitzsimmons being bigger just tends to make you a bigger and slower target. Smaller defensive fighters at least have the speed and reflexes to hang in there and perhaps even nulify their speed advantage. I would suggest that as Langford got bigger and moved up the weight classes his power became greater and his oponents reflexes became slower. We are probably seeing the sme trend with Paquiao today. |
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#24 | |
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Belt holder
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In todays times, other than the occassional exception (such as Paq) it usually works the opposite and power diminishes, but then again, is this a fair comparison. I struggle to find too many modern examples of fighters who go up in weight (certainly from say Middle to heavy) without either getting very old or simply just putting on excess weight and making themselves less effective. Chris Byrd is probably the best example, but even he had a much better record against the Heavyweight fighters than he did against the Light Heavyweights! |
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Champion
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#26 | |
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Dude, don't call me Dude
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In the back of my head there is a story that G-Man was moving up in weight after the Benn fight because of his struggles with making weight. I know there was a fight planned with RJJ but I don't remember at what weight. G-Man was a big guy who picked on (KTFO) smaller guys because he could dehydrate enough to make weight. The physiological effect of this weight drain/gain on his body was probably negative. |
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#28 | |
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Undisputed Champion
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From what I've read this in the weight he was best at, powerful and fast. I haven't checked sources of all his fights to see what weight he was in every single one of them, but lots of reports and articles describe him as 160, 165 in his prime. I think he developed his punch with technique and experience, he found and refined the "knack" of punching, not because of added body weight. |
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#29 |
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Undisputed Champion
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Ketchel's "knock down" of Jack Johnson looks like a fake job to me.
Johnson was already on his way down long before that punch lands. It's clear as day, even on that old grainy film. At best, Ketchel caught him on the way down from a slip. At worst, it was a fake KD put on a ridiculous telegraphed punch, staged by Johnson to add drama to the fight and value to the film. Please check the film before attacking this post. You'll see I'm right.
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#30 | |
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March 8th, 1971
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