Why are many ATG lists including boxers who I know many of you have never seen live?

Discussion in 'World Boxing Forum' started by jasper222, Oct 6, 2011.


  1. jasper222

    jasper222 Member Full Member

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    Not that I've anything against you, but that is a problem.

    Journalistic sources say that Shane Mosley is a great fighter, once the P4P king. He has accomplished much. However, why is it that people with Shane in their lists are being made fun of? Hasn't he accomplished much and is on the level of say, Kid Chocolate?

    How would you know Aaron Pryor wasn't fighting bums and has-beens? How would you know if Pancho Villa wasn't taking PEDS (assuming they had PEDS in their time)?
     
  2. jasper222

    jasper222 Member Full Member

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    So ATG lists are based on accomplishments? Okay, I'll keep that in mind. Anyway I'm satisfied with the answers in this thread, you can close this now.
     
  3. MetalMandible

    MetalMandible Chinchecker Full Member

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    Because footage exists of nearly everyone that people generally put on lists and many of us read boxing histories, as well. Get your head out of your ass, fool.
     
  4. Davew430

    Davew430 Well-Known Member Full Member

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    Not just accomplishments, you take into consideration the people they fought, the competition around at that time and the conditions they fought in too
     
  5. Beezy

    Beezy 2 Eazzy Full Member

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    As someone alluded to earlier... its all subjective and always will be subjective..... there is no accurate formula or perfect way at ATG lists or p4p lists..... BUT.. out of respect, you give fighters who have accomplished more the benefit of the doubt dude..... Floyd has skills but its hard to rank him over SRR with all of SRR's accomplishments.... and level of competition... resume and achievements play huge roles in these thing which sounds pretty fair to me.. especially since top fighters today only fight twice a year for 12 rounds if a fight lasts that long.. and the big dogs, PAC MAY MARTINEZ KHAN can fight opponents we the public deem as cherrypicks..... fighters today have it easier than fighter back then.. its not like this is football when gameplans, coaching, and techniques have become harder and more complex.... things have gotten waaaayyy easier for the elite fighters... Pac just fought Mosley... Mayweather fought Ortiz and Martinez fought Barker.... def easier for fighters today
     
  6. jasper222

    jasper222 Member Full Member

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    Nov 13, 2010
    I was trying to be polite, yet you are the example of a person who is struck by my thread and tries to muscle in and insult me over the internet. :-(
     
  7. m8te

    m8te Oh you ain't know? Full Member

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    i've seen ali, louis, sugar ray robinson, pep, duran, armstrong, sugar ray leonard, archie moore, carlos monzon, and ezzard charles fight.

    I've seen them fight enough to be able to judge whether I consider them to be an atg or not. what difference does it make if it's LIVE? IT'S THE SAME EXACT FIGHT WITH THE SAME EXACT SIGNIFICANCE whether you're there in person witnessing the fight, or if you see it 50 years later on your laptop. what's your point? how does seeing a live fight factor into whether you judge a fighter to be one of the greatest ever or not? that's right, it doesnt at all.
     
  8. ah.sure

    ah.sure Active Member Full Member

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    :lol:
     
  9. jasper222

    jasper222 Member Full Member

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    There is NO book or video that has a complete recollection on past fighters. We wouldn't know if opponents were Hatton-level or not since we don't have any footage of a certain champion's opponents. We only have the side of the champ.

    Sorry if I keep using Hatton though. :cool:
     
  10. jasper222

    jasper222 Member Full Member

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    Nov 13, 2010
    If you read the thread and understood it you'd see that I already conceded that point on live. Do I still have to edit the opening post for you to understand? :good
     
  11. Beezy

    Beezy 2 Eazzy Full Member

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    I agree.. its actually easier to study a fight and fighter after its recorded than live... when its live, there's too much emotion when watching fights.. you don't analyze.. you're just entertained.. watching fights in replay makes it easier to see why a fighter lost a fight and etc
     
  12. Beezy

    Beezy 2 Eazzy Full Member

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    Jul 31, 2010
    And who says Oscar ain't an ATG??? He is...

    :deal
     
  13. Davew430

    Davew430 Well-Known Member Full Member

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    Jan 30, 2009
    True, there's not one book.

    But there's unlimited sources on the internet
     
  14. Bogotazo

    Bogotazo Amateur Full Member

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    I suppose when there is 0 footage of ANY of their era's competition, then it becomes difficult. Of Ricardo Lopez, Kosta Tzyu, and others dominant in their division for long stretches of time had no way of evaluating everyone they beat, then that would be problematic; they'd obviously be worth something as fighters for their accomplishments, but we'd have no way to compare them.

    (BTW, I do believe Shane belongs somewhere on the ATG list.)

    Fighters like Greb, though, while we have no footage of him, we can conclude was great because of the film we have of his competition, which was also stellar. If you showed me Golden Johnson, De La Hoya, Vargas, Margarito, Collazo, Leija, and then told me a guy who I'd never seen called Sugar Shane Mosley beat them all, I'd have to rank his accomplishments higher than other fighter's I'd seen on tape.

    We can't guess how he'd do against individuals, but for me All-Time-Greatness has more to do with who you fought and who you beat, because too many times, our faith (or lack of) in a fighter's ability comes back to bite us in the ass whenever there's an upset. What you prove in reality should always overcome what we think the clash of two skill-sets would be on paper. Ex: looking at Leonard and Duran alone, I wouldn't pick Duran to move up and beat him the first time. But he did, and it's one of the best wins in the history of the sport.

    So resume counts above all IMO, and you don't always need a ton of fight footage for that.
     
  15. Royal-T-Bag

    Royal-T-Bag Obsessed with Boxing Full Member

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    you're a ****ing idiot.

    you're basically saying anyone who boxed before we started watching should be left off ATG lists despite them being deserving based on easily obtainable evidence such as video footage, resume and how they're depicted in magazines and books.

    you'd have to be 135 years old to witness all these greats yet since the 30's writers have been compiling these lists consisting of many fighters before their time.

    your argument holds no weight.....there's such thing as video footage, magazines and books to reference.