Langford yes. I’m not a Baer guy. No to Ray and Jackson. Jeanette, Fitz and McVey. Idk. I don’t like lumping in ancient fighters with recent ones.
Witherspoon was one of the best contenders in the history of the division. You could just about make the case for top 30, but I probably wouldn't.
Hard to say he wasn't a top 30 guy in terms of h2h at his best. He had some very competitive bouts with Just about every big name in the 80's (too bad we didn't get the Tyson fight). In terms of resume he was a bit of an underachiever, but i say that in spite of him being a 2x champ with several good wins. That's how good he was. Could have been an atg but fell victim to the typical "fought way longer than he should have" and "didn't give it his all in his prime".
To me that fight was the best example of Championship heart I've ever seen in the division (though the Holmes-Norton and Holyfield-Bowe fights were like that, too...I'm sure I'm forgetting many, forgive). Larry was out on his feet at more than one point in the 9th. The fact that he not only fought back, but effectively kept Tim off him, really took a sensational amount of courage imo.
Tim is probably top 30. He was a fine heavyweight who imo would have given Iron Mike a much tougher fight than Frazier, Berbick, or Williams...and of course Holmes, though Larry was 5 years past his prime. I think the Smith ko was a fluke btw. I don't think Tim's mind was really on the fight (though he was definitely trying, the video is evidence). I don't think the Tim who fought Holmes would have been taken out early by Mike.
I thought also it was very courageous of Larry after enduring such punishment dished out by Witherspoon in that 1983 battle.
Completely disagree with the bolded. At his best and in top shape both Holmes and Thomas beat him. Sure the Holmes fight was somewhat disputed but Holmes was starting to age a bit. There are plenty of heavyweights he would never beat best for best. Around the 30-40 mark would be close to the money per the thread tho.
I would slightly disagree. Holmes was starting to fade a bit but Witherspoon was very green, and Holmes didn't want a rematch. I do agree that Witherspoon does not beat certain guys like Ali, Foreman etc. even at his best. But i would give him a good shot vs Holyfield, Bowe, Lewis, Wladamir etc. He would be a underdog vs these guys but would have more than a decent chance. Overall, he is top 30 for me. I wonder if he wasn't blacklisted and if he had a chance to fight the younger versions of Holy, Lewis, Bowe etc. he might have beaten them, and his legacy would have been massively enhanced by one win vs any of those guys.
Witherspoon was a bit green but so many put that fight forward as his best ever effort (particularly big Holmes fans) so it's very hard to say he wasn't at his best there. I don't like his chances against any of the guys you named but it's all opinion of course. I have no problem with ayone putting Tim around the 30 mark. He's around that somewhere.
John L. Sullivan Peter Jackson Bob Fitzsimmons James Jeffries Jack Johnson Sam Langford Jack Dempsey Harry Wills Jack Sharkey Max Schmeling Max Baer Joe Louis Jersey Joe Walcott Ezzard Charles Archie Moore Rocky Marciano Floyd Patterson Ingemar Johannson Sonny Liston Muhammad Ali Joe Frazier George Foreman Ken Norton Larry Holmes Mike Tyson Evander Holyfield Riddick Bowe Michael Moorer Lennox Lewis Vitali Klitchsko Wladimir Klitchsko Alexander Povetkin Tyson Fury Anthony Joshua That's already over 30. You could have some names below him, but then there are fighters who also have case over hin like Maher, Corbett, Burns, Jeannette, McVea, Carnera, Ray, Quarry, Bonavena, Spinks, Wilder and others.
I think Witherspoon has a case for Top-30, but it's based almost entirely on a roughly four and a half year period, during the ’80s. From and including Snipes, in June 1982, to his KO1 Loss to Smith (2), by the end of 1986, Witherspoon had had 14 bouts, going 11-3-0. This included 10 matches against Ring-Rated opponents (and 2 World Titleholders), with whom he went 7-3-0. Of the 14 matches, 6 were World Title fights, in which he went 3-3-0. The mixed results from these contests, nonetheless, made Witherspoon a two-time World Champion. I could be wrong and I am genuinely not sure whether the above makes him a shoo-in for the Top-30 or not - but, I'll take a punt on that kind of a schedule, being unmatched by many heavyweights we might typically see placed in the 21 to 30 range.
I don't recall doing a top 30 at HW, I've done 25 (iirc) but nothing more. 1. Muhammad Ali 2. Joe Louis 3. Larry Holmes 4. Lennox Lewis 5. George Foreman 6. Wladimir Klitschko 7. Evander Holyfield 8. Joe Frazier 9. Rocky Marciano 10. Sonny Liston 11. Jack Johnson 12. Mike Tyson 13. Ezzard Charles 14. Riddick Bowe 15. Floyd Patterson 16. James J Jeffries 17. Jack Dempsey 18. Ken Norton 19. Max Schmeling 20. Max Baer 21. Chris Byrd 22. Jersey Joe Walcott 23. Jerry Quarry 24. Jack Sharkey 25. Harry Wills 26. Vitali Klitschko 27. Ingo Johansson 28. Bob Fitzsimmons 29. Anthony Joshua 30. Alexander Povetkin I'd also probably put Michael Moorer above Terrible Tim. Ron Lyle, Tyson Fury, Ike Ibeabuci and David Tua too. I'd definitely say Sullivan is greater, but I don't know anywhere near enough about him or his résumé to rank him.