He never really risked getting knocked out to get a win when he was tired, hurt or behind on points. Against Lewis for example he had his trainers urging him for several rounds and he made a conscious and clear choice to not find out if he could be HW champion by risking getting countered if he actually attacks Lewis consistently for more than 10 seconds at a time That's one thing you can't accuse Tyson of. He was throwing home run shots until the very end against Holyfield and Douglas and took some nasty shots to keep his lead vs ruddock. Against Lewis Tyson was terribly shots but I believe his performance was a bit more dating and courageous than tuas. Tua wasn't completely without courage of course, he has come from behind wins where he was being outboxed even if not hurt early and he didn't quit but His Performance vs Lewis had everything to do with his decision not to make it a brawl when he was being outclassed in the boxing match.
Correct. Tua punked out vs Byrd. Byrd landed a good one, and Tua actually withdrew from the action. He was risk adverse vs Lewis as well. You could argue he was pacing himself due to his lack of conditioning, or he just did not risk what he needed to to win. He came from behind to beat a green Maskeav, but Oleg gassed, which is a reason why Tua came on late. Known for a good chin, his wasn't often tested based on the way he fought. Rhaman did floor him and was jobbed into a draw in the re-match in 2003. Tua defeated Rhaman in 1998, but it really should have been a no contest. IMO, Tua is one of the most overrated boxers on this forum. Yes-- he was a top puncher, but he wasn't a good boxer, and often lacked the will needed to win. Hassim Rhaman should be 2-0 vs Tua.
Don't wanna turn this into a Tua hate fest Just think he is an under achiever because he never really took a risk to find out where his limits really were. He just kind of stopped trying and plodded after his opponent without throwing when faced with a certain amount of punches
David tua is not overrated at all if anything he is underrated. He had brutal power,iron chin, great stamina and was a very good finisher, tua was much.better than earnie shavers for example... In fact tua would destroy shavers early and brutally. Guys that got more credit than tua but h2h probably would get killed by him would be: Ken norton Jack sharkey Max schmeling Rocky marciano Jess willard Probably carnera too
Shavers had more heart. When did we ever see Shavers go gun shy? Guy was a warrior. Kill or be killed.
That, somehow, comparisons were (and are still) being made between Tyson and Tua remains a mystery to me. There is no realistic comparison. There never was one. Tua was not a swarmer. He was a half-reasonable pressure-fighter-cum-slugger and could never cover ground the way Tyson did. Nor could he put combinations together like Tyson. Tua had concussive KO power, which he could carry into the late rounds and a chin as solid any heavyweight could want and, for that, he is overrated on these boards. But this should come as no surprise, because he came onto the scene, as a massively hyped prospect and was dropping opponents left right and center. He was also in some high-drama/action/output bouts, which helped sustain the buzz around him. But, I would say (and I think some others on here might agree with me) that the writing was already on the wall for Tua, as far back as the Izon and Maskaev bouts - both of which showed he could be pushed and that he relied almost exclusively on his power to win a fight. Nonetheless, at this point, he was still winning and still stopping opponents, until he met Ibeabuchi on his way to world title contention. I think, in this fight, we saw both the best and the worst of Tua over 12 furiously paced rounds. And, despite him gaining much kudos in defeat, it was a setback; how much of one, for him personally, we can't really know. Suffices to say, it would be another three and half years before he got his title shot (which was quite possibly helped by Ibeabuchi being effectively off the scene by then). During the build up to the Lewis bout, he didn't really improve, at all. Instead, he put on mass, which was apparently intentional, as Tua felt he needed to be bigger to take on a giant like Lewis. In my opinion, this was a huge mistake and placed him somewhere around 20lbs+ above his ideal weight; not that he'd have beaten Lewis, anyway. Given the above, to suggest Tua "never really risked getting knocked out to get a win, when he was tired, hurt or behind on points" is somewhat of a left-field comment. To give, as example, the idea that in the Lewis bout, Tua "made a conscious and clear choice to not find out if he could be HW champion by risking getting countered" is a big statement. I couldn't subscribe to either of those notions. Tua was a walking liability when it came to exposing his chin; tired or no; hurt or no; behind or no. The reliance on his power and his chin kept him believing that he could end a fight the winner. Against Lewis, Tua was just simply out of his depth but, quite ironically, given the angle of this thread, it was Lewis playing the cautious game; utilizing his physical advantages to the maximum; fighting off the back foot; jabbing Tua's head off; using the ring; constantly moving (almost always to Tua's right). Whenever Tua made a leap forward, Lewis just simply leaned backwards and glided out of range, leaving Tua swinging at air and back at square one. If Tua drifted into range; Lewis moved forward to hold and smother him. The early Lewis body attack on Tua was probably quite effective in laying on some movement-stifling hurt and some of the powershots he caught Tua with were very heavy indeed - but Tua kept coming forward; kept leaping at the space Lewis had, only a split-second earlier, occupied. There's no telling what was going on in Tua's mind, during perhaps his worst career outing. But I would say that one might want a little more evidence than merely Tua not being able to respond to his cornermen's pleas for him to chase Lewis down, before categorically stating that Tua made a “conscious” decision not to risk himself. He already had done and continued doing so, until the very end. Lewis was just too good.