Poll: How good was Primo Carnera?

Discussion in 'Classic Boxing Forum' started by reznick, May 24, 2017.


How good was he?

  1. He was a fraud bum.

    7.8%
  2. He was a fraud journeyman

    16.7%
  3. He was a good fighter

    65.6%
  4. He was an ATG

    3.3%
  5. He was an elite great

    6.7%
  1. he grant

    he grant Historian/Film Maker

    25,404
    9,347
    Jul 15, 2008
    I’m just trying to see who seriously means what on Carnera. If you had to be serious thirty to forty is how you see him ?
     
  2. Grapefruit

    Grapefruit Active Member Full Member

    1,215
    943
    Dec 19, 2017
    I wouldn' say he was great, but physically speaking he was a specimen, he was a big man with the muscles of a wrestler, great chin, good jab, and strong as could be, he was a good fighter, and a very iconic one, but was kinda clumsy and lacked rhythm.
     
  3. reznick

    reznick In the 7.2% Full Member

    15,903
    7,631
    Mar 17, 2010
    Sounds about right
     
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  4. choklab

    choklab cocoon of horror Full Member

    27,674
    7,649
    Dec 31, 2009
    You still seem to be in the bottom 20% on this don’t you? Over 80% voted that Primo was good to great.

    Must be sour grapes..
     
  5. choklab

    choklab cocoon of horror Full Member

    27,674
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    Dec 31, 2009
    Primo would not crack the top ten But Manual Char And Charles Martin can win legitimate titles today?

    Anything can happen today. We have champions learning on the job. If you like Superheavyweights then I’m afraid you must acknowledge Primo. He’s right up there with the best of them.
     
    Last edited: May 15, 2018
  6. Unforgiven

    Unforgiven VIP Member banned Full Member

    58,748
    21,565
    Nov 24, 2005
    Overwhelming poll consensus that Primo was a good fighter.
     
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  7. GOAT Primo Carnera

    GOAT Primo Carnera Member of the PC Fan Club Full Member

    2,665
    2,683
    Jan 28, 2018
    Beeing "good" is a worthless rating without a reference to refer to. Alot of the rating here in the classics is based on respect of former fighters, which is basically a good attitude towards achievements in sports.
    Its a colored reflection and you´ll rarely find puplic interviews discrediting athletes. What does it mean? If this is true, and everyone can see its true for athletes of the past, the assessment of sports performance is clouded by a lets call it "baseline respect" for achievements.

    Its not that difficult to see the lack of rational performance evaluation, when nobody wants to be disrespectful towards athletes, isn´t it? But to achieve pure rational evaluation, and I assure you I know what I´m talking about beeing a scientist, there is no interest in beeing disrespectful or contrary or anything. It´s not existent here.
    Its just about strictly rational performance evaluation.
    Considering this bias, it´s no surprise to find even more praising of athletes that tends to be good, aka "hero worshipping", since there is much less resistance in talking good than in talking bad.

    Therefore, the higher a ATG/Elite Great Boxers with obviously good achievements rates, the more he will get overrated H2H. Like Ali, Tyson, Foreman, Lewis, Holmes, Wlad.
    Fighters like Douglas, Norton, Fury, Mercer, Bruno, McCall, Povetkin, Ruddock would always be real threats to any Heavyweight out there.

    In my opinion, there are either one of two attributes a Heavyweight (or any boxer for his weightclass) should have to considered a threat H2H:

    - Beeing durable enough to take want comes there
    - Having the power to a least get some respect from your opponent

    At least having one of this makes the boxer having a basic attribute to build on. If the boxers has both, he is blessed and can be sucessfull, even if everything else is deminished. I´m not talking about James Smith power, its about applied power, which includes to get the punch to the target as quick as needed. David Tua, Ike Ibeabuchi, past it Tyson and Foreman were blessed with both a chin and power.

    If the boxer has very good skills and none of the two attributes, its easier to win vs. fighters like Ali/Holmes than against a fighter like Lyle, Ruddock, Povetkin or Morrison.

    So lets take this to Carnera. How can we rate his durability and applied power?

    Durability: He got up alot, so at least his recovery seems to be there. I´m not sure about taking a punch. A avarage heavyweight could definately stun him and put him down.

    Applied power: He was never known to be a solid puncher. If he had some sort of power due to raw weight and mass, its some sort of James Smith power (better puncher though). If that body/big arms and fists swing at the right target, they definately cause some impact. What hindered Carnera from doing so is his punching technique. He did have no accuracy or anything to throw an effective power punch or damaging jab.

    For me durability > power for Carnera. But if he hit the spot, his power was okay. both not the worst, but not the best.

    Carnera had another problem.

    He was 260-270lb with 6'5 1/2". The man had the BMI (30) of a wrestler, build with an extreme bulky muscular physique. Its no wonder why people call him an oaf, because he moved like one. He was just not quick on his feet which is no surprise with that stature. This is why he also could not get his body in proper distance to make use of his raech. The feet didn´t effort it. He could not keep up the distance, alot of wrestling followed when opponents rushed in. He could not keep up the distance when a punch was thrown to his head. This is what Carnera did worse, he had absolutely no upper body/head movement to prevent himself from getting hit. He slurped there like a figure vs. Baer and Louis. No kind of protecting arms or fits in front of his face or anything. Instead he waggled his arms in front of him, not bringing him much protection. Often came in hand with grabbing, holding and wrestling, which works for smaller boxers with less raech who have to play that game.
    I don´t want to write any more bibles here.

    Conclusion:

    Durability and power are medium. The problem was agility, or movement to keep a distance. Biggest flaw: Horrible defense both considered agility, head movement and blocking/ducking/rolling punches. No good punch technique beside natural power due to bad punching skills, timing and punch variability.
    For today standards, a fighter close to his size and some raech would just pop his head with no applied power coming back. Some wrestling since Carnera was strong coud happen, rince and repeat. In therms of modern heavyweight boxing he would be very very beatable.
     
    Last edited: May 15, 2018
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  8. choklab

    choklab cocoon of horror Full Member

    27,674
    7,649
    Dec 31, 2009
    You said it right there. In your opinion.

    In your opinion, a minority view, you feel Primo deserves only to be remembered as a fraud or a bum. This is not the findings of this poll. Unfortunately, your opinion is shared with the minority on this. The statistics speak for themselves.

    If you would like a breakdown on my opinion of your assessment of Carnera using the points you make, I am happy to oblige. But it will just be my opinion. It will be more plausible, but it will only be my opinion. Just as your minority opinion is only your opinion.
     
    Last edited: May 15, 2018
  9. SuzieQ49

    SuzieQ49 The Manager Full Member

    37,077
    3,725
    Sep 14, 2005

    I said top 10. Pay attention


    Here is the top 10 today

    RING

    Champion: Tyson Fury

    1. Anthony Joshua WBA, IBF, WBO
    2. Deontay Wilder WBC
    3. Alexander Povetkin
    4. Joseph Parker
    5. Luis Ortiz
    6. Dillion White
    7. Dominic Breazeale
    8. Jarrell Miller
    9. Adam Kownacki
    10. Tony Bellew

    Do you see charr or Martin in the top 10? I don't. They were nothing more than fake paper champions

    Carnera does not beat a single man on that list
     
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  10. GOAT Primo Carnera

    GOAT Primo Carnera Member of the PC Fan Club Full Member

    2,665
    2,683
    Jan 28, 2018
    @choklab Did you read and understand the first part of my post?

    What do you think of the outcome of some statistics in the General Forum, providing footage with users giving a **** about the respect of a fighters achievements, just rating for what they see, with a more seperated grading?

    Its easy to call him good with the next lower rating absolutely discrediting the boxer. Are you that naive to call that an unbiased poll?

    Besides this, I said before that he was more than a bum back then, when it was enough for 88 - 14 - 0 (about 15% loss). Much smaller, shorter and lower raech opponents could be troubled by his size and wrestling alone.

    @SuzieQ49 : For the last Charr debate with choklab: I can even see Charr as well as Mike Weaver easily getting Carnera into deep water....
     
    Last edited: May 15, 2018
  11. reznick

    reznick In the 7.2% Full Member

    15,903
    7,631
    Mar 17, 2010
    What are you talking about?
    There were countless SHWs in Carneras era. Many of the his smaller opponents regularly fought guys from 6”2 220lb to 6”5 250lb. Carnera was the standout SHW of the era and won the strap, and defended it twice.

    There is zero logical grounding to say that the primary reason for Carneras success was that he was bigger than his opponents. If so, the division would’ve been dominated by the SHWs of the era.
     
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  12. GOAT Primo Carnera

    GOAT Primo Carnera Member of the PC Fan Club Full Member

    2,665
    2,683
    Jan 28, 2018
    Who? Baskelball players?
    Did you read my discription about the normal distribution of height considering the amount of population, even calculating everything?

    Did he have alot of success by your definition?

    Read my post. He did not have either one of the two "baseline attributes" in full distinct, plus more and more flaws. Take a comparable random 6'5" 245lb SHW from today (a journeyman today) and put him back into the 189lb Heavyweight devision. He won´t have it very hard.....
     
  13. choklab

    choklab cocoon of horror Full Member

    27,674
    7,649
    Dec 31, 2009
    Of course he can. Carnera who beat Sharkey, Uzcudun and Schaff would absolutely become a belt holder today. He would have Parker for breakfast. He squashes Bellew. Miller? Whyte? These are all vastly inexperienced kids by comparison
     
  14. GOAT Primo Carnera

    GOAT Primo Carnera Member of the PC Fan Club Full Member

    2,665
    2,683
    Jan 28, 2018
    We better stop here. Like @JohnThomas1 once said before: The fairytale game.
     
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  15. reznick

    reznick In the 7.2% Full Member

    15,903
    7,631
    Mar 17, 2010
    What do you mean “did he have success?”

    He won the lineal HW title and defended it twice. Duh he had success. He made it as far as Riddick did.

    I tried my best to read your post. I find it inchorenet, with logic based on conjecture and non sequitor points. I will still try my best to gleam the important pieces from it.

    AJs BMI is not drastically different to Carneras, and he’s lauded as having an elite physique. One can’t be great, and the other bad, if they are so close to one another in measurement.

    Of course Carnera had baseline attributes. He was a natural athlete. He was quick on his feet for his size. His maintenance of balance was great given his size and how his peers throughout history have struggled to carry that kind of frame. He’s above the top 1% in this. We have shown this through footage, and im ready to do so again. He was clearly respected by many of his peers, if you want to go by a more accurate assessment than colorful film makers and editorial personalities.
     
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