James Toney as a heavyweight

Discussion in 'Classic Boxing Forum' started by heizenberg, Apr 16, 2015.


  1. dinovelvet

    dinovelvet Antifanboi Full Member

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    I don't remember him having that fight in the bag at any stage.

    Rahman was too big and strong for Toney to come forward so he just lay on the ropes and pot shotted here and there.
     
  2. janitor

    janitor VIP Member Full Member

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    Toney was landing the cleaner punches, and he was taking the rounds, but he faded down the line.

    He basically lost that fight through poor training.
     
  3. dinovelvet

    dinovelvet Antifanboi Full Member

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    I suppose you're right.

    I can't remember fights i watched last year , never mind 10 years ago.
     
  4. tommygun711

    tommygun711 The Future Full Member

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    Toney clearly beat peter the first time around. I struggle to see how anyone could score that for peter
     
  5. IntentionalButt

    IntentionalButt Guy wants to name his çock 'macho' that's ok by me

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    :think Probably should cut down on the strong declarative opinions then. :!:
     
  6. frank

    frank Active Member Full Member

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    James Toney was only 5'9.5" i think with more strength from weight traing and less fat he would have been a heavy champ.
     
  7. THE BLADE 2

    THE BLADE 2 Boxing Junkie Full Member

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    Agreed. Clearly, his heavyweight campaign adds to his legacy.
     
  8. OvidsExile

    OvidsExile At a minimum, a huckleberry over your persimmon. Full Member

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    I think James Toney was a top 10 heavyweight for the 2000-2010 decade, weak as it was. I think that he gave up as much weight proportional to his natural body size as Duran did going up to super middleweight with a similar amount of success. Like Duran, I commend him for having a fighter's attitude and taking a lot of fights (90) in an era when boxers careers are barely half that. The way he's built, and the way that he punches, I think the best comparison to make for past fighters is Dwight Qawi and Sam Langford.