Let's try this experiment: 1) Nominate a way to tell how strong an era is. 2) Only ONE nomination per post. Explain it in as much detail as possible in that post. 3) If you want to nominate multiple ways of evaluating era strength, do it in multiple posts. 4) Everyone who agrees with the method in a post, "like" the post. 5) Everyone who disagrees, reply to the post with "disagree", and state your reasons. 6) No arguing with the "disagree" posts. Hopefully this will produce some idea of where the agreements and fault lines are between our forumites.
It’s a pretty straight forward albeit imperfect three-step process: 1) Watch a good number of fights involving top-level fighters in a given weight class in a given era. 2) Evaluate the talent. 3) Form your conclusions.
No true king of the hill. The weakest era's tend to have a clear top dog. (1930's louis, 1950's Rocky) While the stronger ones liike the 70's and 90's see the title change hands pretty often.
I'll begin. Frequent, documented fight fixing at the highest levels are one sign of a weak era. When we compare eras, we're mostly talking about contenders and champions. If we can't tell how many of an elite fighter's matches were legitimate, there's no way to know how good (or bad) they were. A lot of fixed fights may mean that the contenders (or champ) didn't deserve a high ranking at all. Maybe the best guy in the division is rated as #7. Maybe half the top 10 belong closer to the top 50. Fight fixing may have a domino effect, since historical ratings often depend on only a few fights between guys we assume are good. For example -- add a few fixed fights, and suddenly that champ with three title defenses is a guy who one fixed title match, and two legitimate victories over fighters who owe THEIR rankings to fixed fights. It snowballs in ways that makes bad matchmaking (i.e., contenders all ducking each other) look benign by comparison.
The Sharkey Schmeling era is both one of the weakest and had no true king of the hill. Ali's era was incredibly stacked and had a clear king of the hill
Sharkey and Schmeling got cleaned out by Louis by the time he was 24. Ali lost to Frazier and many believe Norton. Ali was the top dog but had guys there to push him off it on the right night.
The 70's and 90's had tons of really dangerous guys hanging around. It made the era's strong. Where was the scary Top contender in the 30's and 50's?
I meant pre Louis era, just Carnera, Sharkey and Schmeling all battling each other for Tunney's lost spot in the late 20s I meant 1960s Ali, aka prime Ali
Ahhh. Drat. I misread your initial post to mean exactly the opposite of what you were saying. I need some sleep.
TBH 60's Ali had good but not great competition. Ali looked utterly unstoppable. Terrell, Patterson, Folley and the like were good but not great fighters. Fair enough on the late 20's, however I think Tunney would have probably been head and shoulders above everybody there but Schmeling, had he not retired young.
You confused the hell out of me too. I re read that post half a dozen times. No idea WTF you were talking about.
Sign of a weak era #3 (4? 5?) -- Contenders look clueless on film, based upon universally accepted standards of boxing. This one's pretty self explanatory. I'll just add one nuance: by universally accepted, I mean accepted by coaches now AND in the 1950s or so. If fighters look bad according to both standards, they're probably doing something wrong.
Signs of a weak thread starter: Threadstarter's posts make no sense, and actively confuse their victims despite the latter's best efforts to understand them.