RJJ is the not the GOAT, but he is the best fighter ever

Discussion in 'World Boxing Forum' started by bionic, Aug 7, 2012.


  1. turbotime

    turbotime Hall Of Famer Full Member

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    I just like teasing the Cubans that act like Rigo is the second coming of Whitaker when he barely beat Cordoba and no one else of note :patsch :lol: :rofl
     
  2. turbotime

    turbotime Hall Of Famer Full Member

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    Jones would never have lost to DM. Ever. He'd beat Dariusz now, hell DM lost to Gonzalez whom Roy absolutely toyed with.
     
  3. milkman11

    milkman11 Boxing Junkie Full Member

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    He was the best athletic boxer ever. A guy who didn't really apply basic fundamentals except for feinting.
     
  4. Rico Spadafora

    Rico Spadafora Master of Chins Full Member

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    Never said he would but we will never know.....That is the problem with the Jones fanboys it is always woulda, coulda, shoulda with you guys.

    All I am saying is a close loss to someone would look a hell of a lot better than some of these savage KO losses do and I guarantee you Roy would trade a close loss to someone like Benn over the KO against Tarver.
     
  5. turbotime

    turbotime Hall Of Famer Full Member

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    Hagler would not beat the best Roy Jones. Hell neither would Spinks. Charles/Burley IMO had the best chance but then again I favour Roy.

    He's on another level with his abilities at his best.
     
  6. ripcity

    ripcity Obsessed with Boxing Full Member

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    At his best I can't see anyone beating Roy Jones at 168 and 175. I also think that he's at the very least a tough night for anyone at 160 and 200.
     
  7. Mind Reader

    Mind Reader J-U-ICE Full Member

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    Actually Rico, i think KO losses way past your best, is better than close losses at your best. That is only my opinion though...

    I am sure if Roy could do it over, he would have taken more risks though, a lot of those fighters he would have destroyed.
     
  8. bionic

    bionic New Member Full Member

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    What's with the straight comparisons to Robinson? RJJ fought in era with greatly superior athletes, people lived longer, were stronger, faster, larger...

    Why does this get swept under the rug?

    Anyone ever watch footage of Olympic events from Sugar Rays era? In many of those sports it's easier to see how big the gap is because a lot of Olympic events are time based or point based.

    RJJ would have smoked SRR
     
  9. Vanboxingfan

    Vanboxingfan Obsessed with Boxing Full Member

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    I agree. For whatever reason Roy didn't fight all the fighters he could have but he was damn good in his prime and not too many fighters under 175 wuold have beaten him at his best. Charles would probably have had the best chance. Perhaps Greb who managed to beat Tunney and Conn who was ahead of Louis at one point might of been interesting, but that's hypothetical.
     
  10. Vanboxingfan

    Vanboxingfan Obsessed with Boxing Full Member

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    You could probably add Ali to that list. He did a lot of things wrong but made up with it with speed.
     
  11. The Brush!

    The Brush! Guest

    BUT did he have the GBOAT???








    NOPE!
     
  12. the_what

    the_what Bolo Punch KO Full Member

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    Jesus with boxing gloves (c) The Ring in '97
     
  13. keith

    keith ESB OG Full Member

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    I rank him number 5 all time. Behind SRR, Ali, Louis, and Armstrong.


    Keith
     
  14. Body Head

    Body Head East Side Rape (CEO) Full Member

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    Roy Jones is the GOAT. RJJ KO1 Pacquaio.
     
  15. Smashgar

    Smashgar McMustache Nuthugger Full Member

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    Jones had a bad end to his career, like a lot of guys have had, but as time goes by that will fade from memory the same as it did for those others.

    There is no mystery to his chin. Again, look to Chris Byrd.

    Byrd had a legitimate heavyweight chin. Not uncrackable, as Ike showed, but definitely legit. (Nobody goes all those rounds with the Klitschkos, Tua, etc. without a decent chin.) Except Byrd stayed heavier for nearly his entire career, came down to 175 much later, and those factors made the effects even worse.

    When Byrd came down to light heavy, the effect upon his punch resistance was CATASTROPHIC. Shaun George weighs 175 and has like a 50% KO rate. A guy who went 12 with Tua should be able to stand in front of him and laugh all day, even when totally shot. And yet George got Byrd out of there faster than Povetkin did seven months prior.

    How the **** does that happen? Where did his chin go?

    Losing weight like that ****s up your punch resistance. It just does. Maybe a younger guy could manage it, maybe, but not these guys in their mid/late thirties. Byrd went from going 12 with Wlad to getting sparked by a light heavy that even shot Jones could have handled. Jones didn't come down as far or after anywhere near as much time, but the same logic applies.

    Roy Jones was fast and elusive, but he did not campaign across 40 pounds worth of weight classes for the first 14+ years of his career without ever getting cracked on the jaw. He was not somehow hiding a glass chin for over a decade by magically keeping all his opponents to a 0% connect rate. His chin was fine, until he lost the weight.