Expert opinions on Liston vs Tyson

Discussion in 'Classic Boxing Forum' started by swagdelfadeel, Jan 20, 2016.


Liston VS Tyson

  1. Liston by KO

    39.4%
  2. Liston by TKO

    9.1%
  3. Liston by UD

    0 vote(s)
    0.0%
  4. Liston by MD/SD

    0 vote(s)
    0.0%
  5. Draw

    3.0%
  6. Tyson by KO

    33.3%
  7. Tyson by TKO

    9.1%
  8. Tyson by UD

    6.1%
  9. Tyson by MD/SD

    0 vote(s)
    0.0%
  1. swagdelfadeel

    swagdelfadeel Obsessed with Boxing

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    Jim Carney- Author and Boxing Expert: Tyson vs. Liston
    Steel and concrete here. Perhaps the two heavyweight champions you’d least like to meet in a dark alley (although Dempsey, Foreman, Jeffries and John L. would also be especially fearsome in that venue). In addition, both Sonny and Iron Mike may have the same major flaws.

    Both are extremely strong and able to convert their strength into punching power. Tyson also has quicker than average hands, which added to his power and defensive ability. He is generally considered above Sonny in this area – Liston’s hand speed being rated average by some, above average by others. Tyson also had the edge in foot speed, though this might mean less than in other match-ups as both would basically be coming forward. A huge advantage for Liston would be his 13-inch edge in reach, whose value is enhanced by what many consider the most powerful left jab of all time. Liston would appear to have the edge in durability, though Tyson rates well here too. Many may feel that the fact that Mike hit the floor more times than Sonny relates to a weaker heart rather than a weaker chin.

    Both men are suspect in the matter of heart and there are specific parallels between them in this area. Each man folded when they met a man around their own talent level at their peak – Liston with Ali and Tyson with Holyfield. They also both were total embarrassments in their rematches with their exposers – Liston futiley chasing Ali then flopping down in round one and Tyson being outmuscled and outfought and then biting Holyfield twice before being disqualified in round three.

    In other areas of this match-up, the pair is close in weight, Liston’s height advantage is not significant to Tyson (virtually all of his major opponents were at least a little taller than Sonny). Though Liston and Tyson have fought men with the same main assets (strength and punch) that they face in each other, I don’t know that Mike ever fought an oncoming fighter who combined brawn and skill with a mercilessly glacial approach like Liston. Likewise, Sonny never met a man with Mike’s hard-hitting, ferocious (and in the beginning) bobbing and weaving attack.

    Tyson was probably the better schooled under Cus D’Amato and Kevin Rooney, but Liston’s trainer Willie Reddish was solid and Sonny had the benefit of training with and serving as a sparring partner for master boxer and former great heavyweight champion Ezzard Charles. Both men rate well in the skill department. However, after the deaths of D’Amato and Jimmy Jacobs and the firing of Rooney, Tyson grew notably sloppier in his ring techniques. Testimony to Liston’s skill is given by Muhammad Ali who notes that Sonny was smart in the ring. Overall, there wasn’t much difference in the quality of foes each man met and beat.

    In this dream matchup, the pair begins by competing with each other to intimidate. Tyson talks of dire consequences for Sonny and gets the famous Liston stare in return. The battle is a nip and tuck smashing war from the beginning. Tyson goes low to the body and switches to uppercuts while Sonny stabs with his awesome jab, sometimes adding left hooks and occasional right crosses to the mix. The battle swings back and forth. Despite the fact that Mike’s short arms and more or less equal strength should give him an advantage in the infighting. Sonny dominates here. For some reason, all Mike usually does in close is hold on, sometimes even grabbing the other party and holding even when he is winning an exchange.

    During his career, Tyson folded in a number of different circumstances, including incidences when he was being overpowered. Liston, on the other hand, usually only had trouble (and only gave in against Ali) when he was fighting men with styles confusing to him. In brawn to brawn confrontations he was always a man’s man. He flattened powerful Cleveland Williams after Williams had broken his nose at the start of one of their bouts. Zora Folley hit him 30 straight shots against the ropes – and then Sonny steamrolled him. Sonny also went through one of his three fights with Marty Marshall with a broken jaw. I don’t think Mike would fare that well in these situations. That’s the difference between the two and that’s why I pick Liston by a late round KO.

    By Moontan(Judge) Heavyweightaction.com -Expert

    Very difficult matchup between two of the strongest heavyweight champions in history. Both dominated their division for a brief period as thoroughly as anybody has seen. Tyson from 1986 to 1990 and Liston from 1959 to 1964. Both loss their title in two of the biggest upsets in heavyweight history. Ali was a 7 to 1 underdog to Liston while Buster Douglas had even greater odds against Tyson.

    Both were tremendous fighters that intimidated their opponents and relied on it to big advantages in many of their fights. Neither fighter held must because the were constantly coming forward throwing punches. Their opponents were always holding and grabing trying to stay upright.

    The Tyson that I am comparing in this fight was the person who dominated boxing from 1986 to 1990 before he had all types of struggles with the law and did not work or train as hard. The Liston that I am ranking was the top fighter in the world from 1959 to 1963. Tyson was never as dominating in the 1990s as he was earlier and Liston of course declined rapidly after his fights with Patterson. Both made a good living on their reputations during the later part of their careers.
    I watched more fight footage comparing these two fighters than any of the previous matches we have picked. Watching Tyson in his match against Razor Ruddock and Liston in his fight against Cleveland Williams. Ruddock had very similar size to Liston and Cleveland Williams was the most powerful fighter that Liston faced during his career. Most fighters who survived Liston boxed and moved and tied him up inside(Eddie Machen). Williams did not, he was the aggressor while the fight lasted and Liston took everything he threw at him and knocked Williams out in third round. Tyson took numerous shots from Ruddock in both their fights and Razor lasted the full 12 rounds in their second fight. Tony Tucker also gave Tyson a lot of trouble with his reach but he held and grabbed which Liston would not be doing. I see Liston’s jab and reach being a big factor in the contest as well as his outstanding boxing ability and his offensive skills. The only fighter Tyson ever faced with the offensive skills and power of Liston was Lennox Lewis and Tyson did not fair well against the Brit. Liston was much stronger than Lewis. I don’t see the fight lasting long because both fighters were so aggressive. Give me Liston in a 6th round knockout.

    The Sweet Science: by Frank Lotierzo Jan.,2005
    Who Would've Won

    A Liston-Tyson confrontation comes down to two things: who would've backed up, and who would've been the least intimidated by the other. I know this may not be popular, but I just can't envision Liston being intimidated by Tyson. Liston had no fear of Clay/Ali, and on top of that he kept going after a hard puncher like Cleveland Williams, who was in his prime at the time, even after having been nailed by bombs from Williams. Liston also chased down Marty Marshall despite having a broken jaw for the majority of the fight. This is in contrast to Tyson, who would go into long defensive shells and stop throwing punches when faced with an opponent who attacked him with big shots. I believe in a battle of wills, Sonny convinces Mike that he's not going to win easier than Mike convinces Sonny that it's not his night.

    The fact that I think Liston wins the psychological warfare translates into the physical fight and how it plays out. I think Tyson may try to jump on Liston like he did Holyfield and Lewis at the onset. The first round or two would be incredible. Tyson would probably come on very quickly, almost recklessly, and his movement and fast hands might provide him with a measure of success. But then he'd face his first problem, Liston wouldn't fall. And, of course, Liston always fired back.

    All it would take would be a few of those telephone pole jabs to take all the starch out of Tyson mentally. I also doubt he'd have the nerve to pull any ear-biting, arm-breaking **** with Liston. Once Tyson gets second thoughts about coming in with impunity and starts to think his way through the fight, he's in trouble. The moment Liston senses that Tyson has some reservations, he'd pick up the pace and apply even more mental and physical pressure.

    The way I see it, Liston stops Tyson. He had the jab reach and power, along with the style, to neutralize Tyson and his greater hand speed. On top of that, Sonny takes away Tyson's biggest weapon, the intimidation factor. It says here that Tyson is the one who harbors self-doubt, and it is Tyson who would be unsure of himself during the stare down as he faced Liston in the center of the ring before the bell for round one.


    Cox’s Corner
    If anyone could intimidate Mike Tyson it would be Sonny Liston. Liston’s awesome 84-inch reach, destructive jab, and deadly hooks and uppercuts would spell trouble for Iron Mike. As Tyson moved in he would be greeted by Sonny’s thunderous long jab. Liston was at least Tyson’s equal in terms of sheer power. Sonny was also under-rated as a boxing technician. Liston would hammer Tyson at long range, control the tempo of the fight, and batter Tyson much worse than Douglas ever could. By the eighth round Tyson would have trouble seeing Sonny’s punches and a murderous barrage would send him down for the count.

    Experts Predicted Outcome: Liston’s favor 4-0
    Jim Carney Liston KO late
    Moontan Liston 6-KO
    Frank Lotierzo Liston
    Cox’s Corner Liston KO
     
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  2. Vanboxingfan

    Vanboxingfan Obsessed with Boxing Full Member

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    I don't have a problem picking Liston over Tyson. Like I said I think where Liston might run into trouble is facing great boxers like Ali or Holmes, or the Superheavies such as Lewis, Bowe, Vitali and perhaps Wlad, and I'm admittedly undecided regarding Louis and Holyfield.
     
  3. swagdelfadeel

    swagdelfadeel Obsessed with Boxing

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    I'd favor Louis against Holyfield. In his prime, I wouldn't favor anyone over Louis, except Ali.
     
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  4. Vanboxingfan

    Vanboxingfan Obsessed with Boxing Full Member

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    I meant Holyfield and/or Louis over Liston not in terms of fighting each other.
     
  5. foreman&dempsey

    foreman&dempsey Boxing Addict banned

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    Tyson wins by ko.in the past i picked sonny but if you see it closer you will pick mike. Reasons
    .1- Tyson was around 8 pounds heavier prime vs prime. Liston 212 and mike 220 despite tyson was shorter.it is not good when you have to stop a furious bull like mike.
    2- tyson was much faster of hands and feet
    3- tyson was much harder to hit clean
    He had the much better defence here.
    4- hitting power pretty even shot for shot, however mike was much more effective puncher because he was better combo puncher with wider ****nal and he was more accurate,tyson did well every single blow, jab,upper,hook,upper etc
    5- for my money tyson had the better chin here. Not by far
    6- strength i think that goes to liston but based on his way to fight he did not use it too much, he did not make of his strength an advantage like forman did
    .7- stylistically you can think that it goes to liston,but it is just truth
    With patterson because he was much smaller,weaker and worse than tyson in every aspect,mike would have no problem avoiding his jab with his fast bobbing and weaving.PLUS HE HAS THE SIZE, PUNCH RESISTANCE AND POWER THAT PATTERSON NEVER HAD
    8- tyson did beat taller,heavier guys than liston and ruddock and bruno did hit as hard(listón was better overall than them but still...).however liston never faced nothing close to tyson.

    Mike by ko in 8
     
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  6. swagdelfadeel

    swagdelfadeel Obsessed with Boxing

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    1. Liston's prime weight was higher than 212. He rarely if at all weighed below 212. Tyson never weighed above 220 until Douglas.

    3. Liston's defense was highly underrated, and he maintained it throughout an entire fight.

    5. No, no he didn't. Liston was only ever knocked down and out once legitamitally. This was when he was old, and sick by a very hard puncher.

    7. Liston had the stylistic advantage.

    8. Frank Bruno didn't hit harder than Liston. Tyson never faced anybody who did.
     
  7. Seamus

    Seamus Proud Kulak Full Member

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    So, if we buy Monte Cox's opinion that Liston would win, we must also buy his contention that Jack Johnson was just not that great.

    Lotierzo loses credibility when he claims Liston was never intimidated when he was absolutely freaked out and scared of Clay. How he could be unaware of that is just mindboggling. And prattling on about intimidation is just an easy angle to get across baseless hero worship. If that's his only premise then he simply has no argument.

    Carney shows his cards when he claims that Tyson has "above-average handspeed" (the same term he later attributes to Liston) and only "an edge" in footspeed. I really didn't need to read further.
     
  8. swagdelfadeel

    swagdelfadeel Obsessed with Boxing

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    Liston was not scared of clay. Also, Liston had underrated footwork.
     
  9. Seamus

    Seamus Proud Kulak Full Member

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    Should I believe you or Angelo?

    Liston was a bit of a mummy. His footwork was basic and ponderous. Tyson's, at his best, was incredibly agile and quick. There is little comparison, especially in terms of speed, a comparison that was brought about in one of those so unbiased statements above.
     
  10. dpw417

    dpw417 Boxing Junkie Full Member

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    I think the very best version of Tyson beats the best version of Liston.
     
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  11. Wass1985

    Wass1985 Boxing Junkie Full Member

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    There was little comparison in speed between Liston and Patterson, we all know how those fights ended....
     
  12. Seamus

    Seamus Proud Kulak Full Member

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    Liston was extremely rattled by Clay's erratic and crazy behavior. Dundee and others make this claim, not me.
     
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  13. Seamus

    Seamus Proud Kulak Full Member

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    Except that Patterson was 190 pound, coddled middleweight turned into a heavyweight by D'Amato. False ana logy.
     
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  14. Mendoza

    Mendoza Hrgovic = Next Heavyweight champion of the world. banned Full Member

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    I like Liston here for many of the reasons the experts say.
     
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  15. swagdelfadeel

    swagdelfadeel Obsessed with Boxing

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    Angelo was kind of Clay's cornerman. So obviously he would say that. Since we're going on the word of Dundee now, didn't that same Angelo Dundee say Liston was just as fast, if not faster than Tyson? :yep