Lennox Lewis vs Muhammad Ali

Discussion in 'Classic Boxing Forum' started by ribtickler68, May 18, 2014.


  1. ribtickler68

    ribtickler68 Boxing Addict Full Member

    3,985
    131
    Apr 27, 2013
    After reading through the comments in the Louis vs Lewis thread, I would like to know what people think about this match up.

    In particular, I would like to know why Ali gets a bye in these matches and Louis and Frazier don't?
    What does Ali bring to the table that Louis doesn't? He doesn't bring power, he doesn't bring beating huge fighters, either.

    If Lewis is good enough to beat Joe Louis, is it feasible that he has the tools to beat Ali, too? I voted for Joe against Lennox, but I don't have major problems with guys who say the opposite.

    What has Ali done that makes him unbeatable in many people's eyes? Losing to Norton and Frazier? His best prime wins were Williams and Folley, whom Liston had destroyed years earlier!

    Don't get me wrong; Ali could conjure up victory out of nowhere and had great mental strength. He was obviously great, no doubt, but so was Louis. But I guarantee if a poll was started on Lewis-Ali, Ali would win it. His lack of power and weight would be disregarded and the skill factor would become all important.

    I see a real double standard at play here.
     
  2. markclitheroe

    markclitheroe TyrellBiggsnumberonefan. Full Member

    1,821
    27
    Sep 14, 2013
    Im a huge Lennox fan..but prime v prime nobody beats Ali simple as that.
    Ali at his best was the complete fighter.
    Lenny had a few shortcomings that Ali wouldve exposed.
    Ali too fast.Too skilful.Too everything.
     
  3. janitor

    janitor VIP Member Full Member

    71,556
    27,182
    Feb 15, 2006
    Well Louis was far far more proven against fighters Lewis's size than Ali was.

    I would agree that there is an element of Ali getting the benefit of the doubt where Louis dosn't.
     
  4. ribtickler68

    ribtickler68 Boxing Addict Full Member

    3,985
    131
    Apr 27, 2013
    That's all I mean. I have got huge respect for Ali; he was a special fighter, but so was Louis.
     
  5. choklab

    choklab cocoon of horror Full Member

    27,674
    7,653
    Dec 31, 2009
    Well I am one of those who thinks Joe Louis flattens Lennox Lewis so naturally Ali beats Lennox to the punch too. He's not knocking Lennox out but he could grind him down.

    Lennox is a great fighter but he was awful against faster men with quicker hands. In the era that Lennox fought not many actualy punched faster than he did but that is not to say Lennox was historically a fast handed heavyweight. He was perfect for his Times. Just as the division got bigger it slowed down. Along came Lennox. he had the height, weight, amateur pedigree and experience to cash in on heavyweights no faster than he was.

    But put him in with Joe and Muhammad...
     
  6. mrbassie

    mrbassie Boxing Addict Full Member

    6,206
    16
    Oct 18, 2004
    Ali had shortcomings that Frazier and Norton exposed. If you want to talk about his prime years, he was just as much of a sucker for the left hook in the 60's as he was in the 70's.
    He had no defence other than footwork, speed and reflexes. That's not a complete fighter. That's a very fast fighter with impeccable footwork and good reflexes. When he couldn't move he wasn't hard to hit.
    To say prime vs prime he was literally unbeatable is ludicrous. It's fairly astonishing that so many people still can't seperate the media presentation of Ali from the actual Ali, most shockingly in terms of his poiltics but also in terms of his ability. Among the best heavies ever is one thing, unbeatable is another.

    I'm not even thinking about whether he'd beat Lewis or not btw.
     
  7. choklab

    choklab cocoon of horror Full Member

    27,674
    7,653
    Dec 31, 2009
    Well said. I quite agree, there has been a lot of myth making and adding it to an already great fighters legacy.

    However, stylistically, getting away from the layman's legend, from a strictly boxing perspective, I honestly think fast hands were a problem for Lennox.

    Lewis would have to turn this into a hug-a-thon to avoid having both eyes closed up.
     
  8. ribtickler68

    ribtickler68 Boxing Addict Full Member

    3,985
    131
    Apr 27, 2013
    That's what I was getting at; no doubt Ali was great, but he lost to worse fighters than Lewis. I take your point about hand speed and Lewis, and it's conceivable Ali could out speed Lewis.

    It is just the "only Ali beats the giants" argument that pisses me off.
     
  9. janitor

    janitor VIP Member Full Member

    71,556
    27,182
    Feb 15, 2006
    I am with you on that.

    Ali never fought an elite guy the size of Lewis, and while that is not a reason to pick against him, it does introduce an element of uncertainty.

    Louis proved himself agaisnt elite fighters the size of Lewis, about as convincingly as you could realy ask, to the extent that the people picking Lewis are taking a bit of a leap of faith.
     
  10. HerolGee

    HerolGee Loyal Member banned Full Member

    41,974
    4,029
    Sep 22, 2010
    wba champ ernie Terrell, 6 foot 6. ali ripped him to peices.

    foreman, 250lbs 6' 4". schooled him.

    plenty of actual elites beside that, dozens.
     
  11. Shake

    Shake Boxing Addict Full Member

    5,633
    58
    May 4, 2007
    Most people don't picture the Ali that beat Foreman, but rather the 1966 fleet-of-foot version. The man that beat Liston and reigned afterwards. And they merge that natural ability with the mental capacity of his seventies reign. Wether that is just, I don't know -- it is probably that the sixties version was mentally inferior.

    There's something to be said about having a thing taken away from you to reaffirm your resolve. Ali being forced to retire from boxing played a part in him acquiring an inhuman will, imo.
     
  12. HerolGee

    HerolGee Loyal Member banned Full Member

    41,974
    4,029
    Sep 22, 2010
    Lennox was not slow at all but he wasn't fast enough to continually trouble ali, nor is he going to stop him, though he may well floor him more than once.

    whilst ali wont stop lennox, he might well stagger and floor him and certainly should be able to UD/SD him over 15 rounds, but going life and death to do so.

    out of 3, lewis wins 1 by SD, ali one by SD and ali the last by UD.

    Lennox would be his toughest opponent IMHO apart from perhaps Holmes would have been if they had met prime 4 prime.
     
  13. janitor

    janitor VIP Member Full Member

    71,556
    27,182
    Feb 15, 2006
    Terrell was 6' 6'' but he wasn't that heavy. He might not have been much smaller than Lewis if Lewis, had trained using the methods of that era of course.

    Foreman was more like 6' 3'' and 215lbs. He was more in the Max Baer size range, than the Primo Carnera size rang.

    Don't get me wrong, I am picking Ali here, but I think that Louis made the stylistic case better.
     
  14. lepinthehood

    lepinthehood When I'm drinking you leave me well alone banned Full Member

    52,105
    23,327
    Aug 27, 2011
    if it was a trilogy, ali would get stopped in one of them.
    lewis was far more powerful than holmes,frazier and much more accurate than young foreman and a nasty side he'd use.
     
  15. Seamus

    Seamus Proud Kulak Full Member

    61,406
    45,875
    Feb 11, 2005
    My thoughts exactly.

    That said, this is a very difficult match-up to pick for me. But the idea that Ali was unbeatable is, as you state, ludicrous.