Sonny Liston has an underrated Resume

Discussion in 'Classic Boxing Forum' started by SuzieQ49, Jun 5, 2015.


  1. SuzieQ49

    SuzieQ49 The Manager Full Member

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    His Victims:



    Floyd Patterson 2x-
    Cleveland Williams 2x-
    Eddie Machen-
    Zora Folley-
    Johnny Summerlin 2x-
    Nino Valdes-
    Mike DeJohn-
    Roy Harris
    Wayne Bethea
    Henry Clark
    Billy Hunter
    Marty Marshall 2x


    All of these men were young and in there primes when Liston beat them
    (with the exception of Nino Valdes. Take note Valdes was rated # 2 by Ring Magazine 8 months prior to fighting Liston, # 6 by Ring Magazine 2 months prior to fighting Liston, and would defeat London by stoppage in his next fight.)

    This is a wide variety of styles, body types Liston defeated here.

    He has the two dominating victories over the ATG champion(Patterson). No other heavyweight champion TWICE knocked out a hall of fame heavyweight in there prime in 1 round like that.

    He has the dominating wins over the head to head monsters of his era(Machen, Williams, Folley). Folley and Machen were rated # 1 and # 2.

    He has some nice wins over good low end top 10 fighters (Valdes, DeJohn, Bethea, Clark, Summerlin, Harris, Hunter, Marshall 2x). All of these men were either already in the top 10, or would be rated in the top 10 within one year of fighting Liston.

    He has solid victories over tough journeyman (Rischer, Lincoln, Whitehurst 2x, Besmanoff, Zech, A Johnson)

    He won slugfests against big punchers (Williams, Valdes, DeJohn). They were at least 6'3-6'5", 205-215lb

    He defeated highly technical boxers (Folley, Machen, Patterson)


    He cleaned out nearly his entire era, and fought everyone that dared get in the ring with him.

    Two top fighters of his era he missed out on, Henry Cooper and Ingemar Johannson, did not relish getting in the ring with Liston. Both also lost to knockout victims of Sonny Liston (Patterson, A Johnson, R Rischer, Folley).

    The only fights he missed out on were against guys like Frazier, Ellis, Quarry, Bonavena, Terrell etc when he was way past his prime in the late 60s.
     
  2. SuzieQ49

    SuzieQ49 The Manager Full Member

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    Hey how are all those Vitali victims doing these days? You know the ones you used to defend against Wlad's opposition? Adamek, Solis, Johnson, Arreola, Gomez, Chisora, Charr, Sosnowski, Briggs :lol: Any of those guys in the top 10 today?
     
  3. nikrj

    nikrj Active Member Full Member

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    Liston was great, no doubt about that. The only thing that stains his resume are his losses to Ali, especially the second one.
     
  4. red cobra

    red cobra Loyal Member Full Member

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    :rofl
     
  5. BrutalForeman

    BrutalForeman Active Member Full Member

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    That was an old Liston. Young Liston would have caught Clay eventually
     
  6. BillB

    BillB Well-Known Member Full Member

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    I wouldn't bet against Liston in a head-to-head with anyone. I don't care who. That includes a so called prime Ali.
     
  7. Bullet

    Bullet Member Full Member

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    Liston is considered past prime against Ali because he lost, simple as that.
    If he was past prime he wouldn't be such a massive favorite.
     
    Boxingfan712 likes this.
  8. red cobra

    red cobra Loyal Member Full Member

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    The 1958-1960 Liston was a different kettle of fish altogether from that past it sad sack that twice lost to Ali.
     
    Joeywill likes this.
  9. edward morbius

    edward morbius Boxing Addict Full Member

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    The OP makes a good case.

    Liston has a good resume.

    The one comment I take issue with is the description of Folley, Machen, and Williams as

    "head to head monsters"

    All three failed against the top men thoughout their careers.

    Of course, one of the top men was Liston. But Terrell defeated all three.

    Machen also lost to Johansson, Johnson, and Patterson.

    Folley didn't fight the above three, but his record is speckled with losses to lesser contenders like Cooper, Lavorante, and Jones.

    These men were top contenders of the era, but "monsters" strikes me as exaggeration.
     
  10. Saintpat

    Saintpat Obsessed with Boxing Full Member

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    Yes, his first fight with Ali was like 5 or 6 months after his second destruction of Patterson.

    That's a fast fall from prime to washed up.

    But his resume up to the point of the Ali fights rates very highly.
     
    Boxingfan712 likes this.
  11. choklab

    choklab cocoon of horror Full Member

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    No doubt Sonny was a great fighter and it is commendable that he achieved what he did with just 34 fights in nine years but the fact remains that Machen, Folley and Harris were the only contenders Sonny beat before he became champion that were worth anything at the time he fought them. After Sonny was champion beating Henry Clark who was also a good win.

    The others were really erratic fringe guys not worth any thing at that time. he beat them but since every other contender was beating them too I can't think what their value actually is towards a resume. Certainly no disgrace, but nobody bothers to mention these kinds of scalps that all champions beat on the way up.

    For example, at the same stage ALI beat Alex Miteff, Lavorante and Billy Daniels ..and nobody really brings them up.

    It's really the world championship level fights that count. Liston beat Floyd better than anyone. Nobody can take that from him.
     
  12. BillB

    BillB Well-Known Member Full Member

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    A lot depends on how one views Liston's Ali fights.
    I think they both had an odor to them.
    I realize that everyone doesn't agree with this.

    Even so, if Liston was ready to take a dive on command, it reflects on his legacy but not as far as ability is concerned.
     
  13. red cobra

    red cobra Loyal Member Full Member

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    There was no way that the light tap suffered by Liston in 1965 could have led to a knockout. He survived real bombs by Cleveland Williams and shrugged them off like rain water....the two Ali fights stunk to high heaven.
     
  14. choklab

    choklab cocoon of horror Full Member

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    I think the first one was on the level. Liston took a beating because it was years since he'd gone more than a few rounds. By then he was rusty and out of his depth.

    Second Ali fight was a farce. A legitimate knock down ruined entirely by bad officiating. Sonny never got a count.iston never had a chance either. ALI was far too sharp and Sonny had no appetite for a fight that evening.
     
  15. boxfan22

    boxfan22 Active Member Full Member

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    Sigh, so many stupid people on this thread.

    I find it funny you don't mention Sonny Liston cheated against some of his opponents. Cheating tarnished his boxing career.