Following a heavy training session with his son Christopher Eubank Jr, Chris Eubank took time to answer questions regarding the best opponents he fought in his own legendary career. Divided into categories as popular site RingTV had done with his rivals Steve Collins and Nigel Benn, Eubank gives us his verdicts. Best overall: For infighting, Michael Watson in our second fight for closing the range all night and clustering all over with everything into every punch. For outfighting, Dan Schommer for being marginally out of range and in the perfect spot all night to counter my right with his southpaw hook. Best boxer: I will say Ray Close in the sense that I suppose light shots and light feet always troubled me because I always set myself to pivot with correct technique. I was too correct for my own good, and Ray used the in-and-out game. Best puncher: Nigel Benn as a one-punch artist had the fastest delivery and heaviest connection, he really torqued his body as well as anyone I've seen punch or coiled like a spring into that overhand right hand smash. Tremendous puncher was Nigel Benn. Best defense: For blocking, Michael Watson and Gracianio Rocchigiani covered up better than any fighters I've seen, but what I had better than anyone I came across was the natural punching accuracy and so I could get hard shots into the small gaps. For evading, Nigel Benn in the second half of our second fight weaved his head in and out and around the most rapid-fire five-punch combination I've ever thrown, he shouldn't have been able to do that and I still don't know how he did. Fastest hands: With single shots, Nigel Benn. With combination work, Joe Calzaghe. Fastest feet: Dan Sherry kept me twisting and turning all night. Best chin: Henry Wharton. I unloaded everything I had and he was still there as strong as ever come the end. Best jab: Graciano Rocchigiani would counter your jab really well with his southpaw jab from a high position. Strongest: Michael Watson in our second fight. I couldn't even budge him until the 11th round despite throwing all that I had, and every shot he landed was stiff and solid. It took supernatural strength to beat him. Smartest: In the ring, Randy Smith. Out of the ring, Steve Collins.
Funny that Calzaghe is in fastest hands but absent in Boxer, Power, Feet, jab and other categories. Joe had fast hands and that was it? LOL, that does sound about right, although I would say he had good stamina too.
A boxer may not have a lot of dimensions but if he is great at something that can go a long way. Tito Trinidad some say was one-dimensional but that dimension took him a long way to title at 3 weight divisions close to unifying in the 3rd division before he fell.
Calzaghe until he fought Jeff Lacy was a swarming slugger. Not only did he use a lot of workrate, he also loaded up a lot of shots. His stance against Eubank was much wider than his stance against Kessler, Hopkins, Jones.
You can't honestly suggest Joe Calzaghe was better than that (many would argue any) version of Michael Watson?? Look no further than the Eubank fights for proof - Watson completely dominates a peak prime Eubank and Calzaghe desperately struggles with a weak disabled Eubank. That fateful night, Watson's blistering clusters of 4-5-punch combos to the body and head from every angle while turning his shoulders or semi-weaving to switch angles of attack looked unboxable/unfightable! Calzaghe was always wide open to the straight right hand down the pipe and Jeff Lacy was just totally musclebound.