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| View Poll Results: who achieved the most, pound for pound? | |||
| Ali |
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23 | 11.86% |
| Armstrong |
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9 | 4.64% |
| Charles |
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2 | 1.03% |
| Fitzsimmons |
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8 | 4.12% |
| Greb |
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30 | 15.46% |
| Langford |
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7 | 3.61% |
| Moore |
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0 | 0% |
| Pep |
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5 | 2.58% |
| Robinson |
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85 | 43.81% |
| Other |
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25 | 12.89% |
| Voters: 194. You may not vote on this poll | |||
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#76 | |
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Undisputed Champion
East Side VIP
Join Date: Feb 2005
Location: Lisboa, Portugal
Posts: 10,118
vCash: 1000 |
Quote:
Fitzsimmons is almost as great as Langford... Defeated Dempsey and Corbett, won the middle, heavy and then lightheavy title. Held his own with serious, dangerous heavies while being a lightheavy. Pound for Pound perhaps the hardest puncher who ever lived. He is rightfully in the argument of greatest of all time. |
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#77 |
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Diamond Dog
East Side VIP
Join Date: Mar 2007
Posts: 34,759
vCash: 1000 |
I agree that Fitz is right in the argument, no question.
Ali, I guess people just love to be blown away. A lot of people don't give a shit about resume and all that there and why would they? Lots of guys just like to be amazed, and Ali is pretty amazing. |
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#78 | |
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Champion
East Side Guru
Join Date: Apr 2007
Posts: 5,794
vCash: 1000 |
Quote:
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#79 | |
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Diamond Dog
East Side VIP
Join Date: Mar 2007
Posts: 34,759
vCash: 1000 |
Quote:
Good post. Janitor has it nailed as far as Fitz goes. The more you dig, the deeper the rabbit hole goes. I think he's right in the mix. |
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#82 | |
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Erik`El Terrible`Morales
East Side VIP
Join Date: Sep 2007
Location: Phoenix Marie`s ass, Fritzl Residence, Glasgow, Scotland.
Posts: 14,253
vCash: 1000 |
Quote:
![]() Wtf does consistency have to do with anything in a 1 off fight at their MW best ? Im talking both at their best, on top form, respecting the opponent & coming in 100%. Since we are on the subject, Robinson never showed any inconsistency until the Turpin fight, his 1 loss in over 120 odd fights came vs a MW Lamotta when Ray was a WW, Ray won the series 5-1 & stopped Lamotta in their last & most important fight for the MW title... that version of Robinson beats any version of Hagler because he was just outright better, thats what Im saying. Please tell me Ive been clear this time ?
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#85 | |
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Belt holder
ESB Addict
Join Date: Oct 2004
Posts: 3,762
vCash: 685 |
Quote:
Okay, that is a different proposition to what I have thought, so yes this time you may have been clearer. To be clear, Buster Douglas rates much higher under this system. Jimmy Braddock, i presume, also comes right up into calculations on a pound for pound basis on your list. Still, irrelevant, but i guess we have the criteria you are talking about right. I agree that Ray vs Hagler is a close pick them fight. I have said this, even though i think Hagler will knock him out. In fact, Hagler vs Turpin, Lamotta possibly even Servo or Levine might also be close fights where Hagler certainly isnt 100% guaranteed to win. (Same with Duran, Hearns etc by the way). Hagler has the better record at middleweight. He is the stronger fighter, has the better proven chin, is naturally bigger, while i havent checked, i assume he does better on tale of the tape and reach but coudl be wrong. In fairness, Sugar has probably an advantage in technique and in speed certainly. As i stated with regards to inconsistency, i am talking only in the company of all time greats. Ray was not inconsistent compared to mere mortals or even lower top 10 middleweights. By inconsistent, i am also talking in delivering results also, not necessarilly performances, since (like for example Ali in fight of the century) Rays "inconsistent" performances were actually still very good performances that most fighters would not be capable of putting in. My problem with Ray is not that he wasnt great, because he clearly was. It is just that he wasnt as outstandingly great compared to other great fighters as many people think. Strangely enough, i think that a lot (though definitely not all) of this has to do with the media and his promotion in it as the greatest of all time. His wonderful welterweight record (which again doesnt suggest that he outclasses every other welter that ever lived, though he very well might) helps his middleweight record immensely when it perhaps should not . As a middleweight, he was the best fighter of his time but he was nowhere near as dominant compared to say Monzon, Greb, Fitzsimmons or Hagler in each's own time. If you want to say he is greater than these then you have to rely on your own vision, favourtism and instincts and invent critera such as i think he would beat these guys on his best night. |
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#86 | |
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Belt holder
ESB Addict
Join Date: Oct 2004
Posts: 3,762
vCash: 685 |
Quote:
While jumping into the rabbit hole, here is something that most people (not necessarilly you) will not have realised, but it is right in front of you. Under modern rules, Fitz did more damage to Jeffries than Lennox Lewis did to Vitali Klitchsko. Therefore, under modern rules, he almost certainly has two wins over the giant sized Jim Jeffries, as a light heavyweight. Wins which would probably go down as the greatest light heavyweight and possibly pound for pound win ever. His resume doesnt stand on it, of course, but those 2 performances is probably as impressive a performance from anyone who is old and past prime, as has ever been fought. |
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#87 |
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Gatekeeper
ESB Full Member
Join Date: Nov 2010
Posts: 461
vCash: 500 |
according to the votes, the following have the best claim to being number one:
1. robinson 2. greb 3. ali 4. langford 5. armstrong 6. fitzsimmons 6. pep 8. charles twenty votes for others. ali seems to be the main 'surprise'. it would be good if some of the thirteen who voted for him could present their cases for ali being the pound for pound greatest. |
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