Noted Columnist Kevin Iole's top 25 fighters over the last 25 years

Discussion in 'World Boxing Forum' started by BigReg, May 2, 2012.


  1. BigReg

    BigReg Broad Street Bully Full Member

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    25. Oscar De La Hoya, 1992-2008, 39-6, 30 knockouts – The biggest star of his era, he won titles in six weight classes.
    24. Shane Mosley, 1993-present, 46-7-1, 1 no contest, 39 knockouts – Mosley was a dominant lightweight with uncommon speed and power.
    23. Felix Trinidad, 1990-2008, 42-3, 35 knockouts – Trinidad was a vicious puncher and a quality offensive fighter who fought just about all of the greats of his era.
    22. Riddick Bowe, 1989-2008, 43-1, 1 no contest, 33 knockouts – Though he had a great record, including two wins over Evander Holyfield, Bowe seems like a failure because he was so physically gifted.
    21. Humberto "Chiquita" Gonzalez, 1984-1995, 43-3, 31 knockouts – Gonzalez was a little man with big power. He's regarded as one of the pound-for-pound best punchers ever.
    20. Mike Tyson, 1985-2005, 50-6, 2 no contests, 44 knockouts – Tyson was a massive puncher, but he isn't higher because he never beat a truly elite heavyweight in his prime.
    19. Mike McCallum, 1981-1997, 49-5-1, 36 knockouts – McCallum was one of the sport's best body punchers who may have been the best super welterweight of his time.
    18. James Toney, 1989-present, 74-7, 45 knockouts – Toney was a master craftsman who would be higher on this list if not for his maddening inconsistency.
    17. Juan Manuel Marquez, 1993-present, 54-6-1, 39 knockouts – Marquez is a complete fighter who combines offense and defense as well as anyone in the last quarter-century.
    16. Michael Carbajal, 1989-1999, 49-4, 33 knockouts – He was so good, he forced Americans to pay attention to the light flyweight division. That's saying a lot.
    15. Marco Antonio Barrera, 1989-2011, 67-7, 1 no contest, 44 knockouts – "The Baby-faced Assassin" reeled off wins over the likes of Naseem Hamed, Erik Morales, Johnny Tapia and Paulie Ayala.
    14. Joe Calzaghe, 1993-2008, 46-0, 32 knockouts – Calzaghe had a remarkable run at super middleweight, going 22-0 in 168-pound title fights.
    13. Lennox Lewis, 1988-2003, 41-2-1, 32 knockouts – Lewis beat every man he faced, avenging losses to Oliver McCall and Hasim Rahman, and fought to a draw with Evander Holyfield.
    12. Manny Pacquiao, 1995-present, 54-3-2, 38 knockouts – Pacquiao made an extraordinary rise through the weight classes and his speed and power made him elite.
    11. Bernard Hopkins, 1988-present, 52-6-2, 2 no contests, 32 knockouts – In 2011, Hopkins defeated Jean Pascal to become, at 46, the oldest man ever to win a major belt. He also made 20 consecutive successful defenses of the middleweight title earlier in his career.

    10. Ricardo Lopez, 1985-2001, 51-0-1, 38 knockouts – A master craftsman, Lopez was the best small fighter of his era. He went unbeaten in 26 world title fights (25-0-1) and knocked off a who's who of his era's best.
    9. Floyd Mayweather Jr., 1996-present, 42-0, 26 knockouts – Mayweather was at his best at super featherweight, when he had a streak in which he beat a string of elite fighters. He remains a masterful defensive fighter who has underrated counterpunching ability.
    8. Thomas Hearns, 1977-2006, 61-5-1, 48 knockouts – Hearns' prime came before 1988, but he has wins over a small army of Hall of Famers. He was a devastating knockout puncher and carried his pop with him from welterweight through middleweight.
    7. Julio Cesar Chavez Sr., 1980-2005, 107-6-2, 86 knockouts – Chavez began his career an astounding 87-0 and beat so many world champions, a list of them all would be the size of a phone book. He was a ferocious inside fighter who went hard to the body and punched well in combination.
    6. George Foreman, 1969-1997, 76-5, 68 knockouts – Arguably the greatest puncher ever, and I know that creates an argument. Foreman destroyed Joe Frazier to win the title in his first stint. After a 10-year retirement, he came back and became the oldest man, at the time, to win a major world title – a record since surpassed by Bernard Hopkins.
    5. Evander Holyfield, 1984-present, 44-10-2, 29 knockouts – Holyfield would fight anyone, usually beat them and almost always won in entertaining fashion. He had memorable wins over Mike Tyson, Larry Holmes, George Foreman, Riddick Bowe, Michael Dokes and Dwight Muhammad Qawi.
    4. Pernell Whitaker, 1984-2001, 40-4-1, 17 knockouts – Whitaker was the best defensive fighter of his era and was practically unhittable at his peak. He racked up innumerable quality wins, but his best performance came when he was robbed against Julio Cesar Chavez Sr. Whitaker got a draw in a fight he appeared to easily win.
    3. Larry Holmes, 1973-2002, 69-6, 44 knockouts – Holmes was at his prime from 1976 through 1984. He had a terrific jab, a great chin and fought and beat most of the great heavyweights of his day.
    2. Roberto Duran, 1968-2001, 103-16, 70 knockouts – Duran's peak was from 1971 through 1985, and he may be the greatest lightweight who ever lived. Inconsistency, with losses to the likes of Kirkland Laing and Pat Lawlor, hurt him badly in his bid for the top spot.
    1. Roy Jones, 1989-present, 55-8, 40 knockouts – Jones was perhaps boxing's most physically gifted fighter in his prime. He was as fast as anyone in the sport, but he was an extraordinarily powerful puncher. He was rarely hit when he was in top form and he took out elite fighters like Bernard Hopkins, James Toney, and Mike McCallum in his heyday. He's hung on far, far too long and is a remnant of the great he was, but that doesn't take away from what he did when he was at his best.
     
  2. Jack

    Jack Obsessed with Boxing Full Member

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    Dreadful list.
     
  3. Vladimir23

    Vladimir23 Boxing Addict banned

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    Terrible list. Kevin "American ******" Iole is a known Klitschko hater. He always tries to bash and discredit the Klitschkos. He should be beaten to a bloody pulp for not having the Klitschkos on that list.
     
  4. Del Boy

    Del Boy R.I.P Darren Sutherland Full Member

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    Good list. While I'm glad to see calzaghe gettin some props he is a bit low also ODLH is quiet low and Lennox a bit high but good overall
     
  5. alakran

    alakran Boxing Addict Full Member

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    Bernard hopkins is to high, he lacks that one outstanding win, i think Marquez, Barrera, Morales and Oscar deserve to be higher than him
     
  6. AZ_40

    AZ_40 Active Member Full Member

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  7. Zopilote

    Zopilote Dinamita Full Member

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    No Morales????

    Fail list.
     
  8. Kush

    Kush Obsessed with Boxing Full Member

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    Chavez should be higher
     
  9. Zopilote

    Zopilote Dinamita Full Member

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    Kush, we need to find that columnist joto and **** him up Zeta style for leaving out God Morales.
     
  10. Jack

    Jack Obsessed with Boxing Full Member

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    His placement of Duran is strange. If you're including Duran's entire career, he ranks easily ahead of Roy Jones. If it's from 1987 onwards, he doesn't deserve to be in the top 10. It doesn't make any sense.
     
  11. Kush

    Kush Obsessed with Boxing Full Member

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    I would usually agree but Morales is above any list. Putting Morales in a list of mortals is an insult to the God :bart
     
  12. Zopilote

    Zopilote Dinamita Full Member

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    Ahh Morales damn it! how the **** could i have missed this??


    You speak nothing but the truth.
     
  13. Julien Sorel

    Julien Sorel New Member Full Member

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    1. whitaker
    2. Pac
    3. jones jr
    4. hopkins
    5. holy
    6. floyd
    7. Oscar
    8. Morales
    9. chavez
    10. Barrera
    11. jmm
    12. lennox
    13. finito
    14. toney
    15. tyson
    16. mosley
    17. tito
    18. kalambay
    19. mccallum
    20. wlad
    21. calzaghe
    22. vitali
    23. winky
    24. canizales
    25. nunn

    something like this, allthough I would probably switch a lot of them if I gave it some serious thought.
     
  14. SouthpawJab

    SouthpawJab On his way up!! 4-0!! Full Member

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    Roy Jones #1...at least he got that right
     
  15. SJS19

    SJS19 Obsessed with Boxing Full Member

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    Sorry dude :verysad