My non-Philly 15 Azumah Nelson Vicente Saldivar Jose Napoles Chris Eubank Ricky Hatton Jeff Fenech Rocky Lockridge Eusebio Pedroza Tony The Tiger Lopez Samart Payakaroon Yoko Gushiken Betulio Gonzalez Yaqui Lopez Alexis Arguello Jung Koo Chang
Sonny Liston is my favourite fighter ever, then in no particular order Roberto Duran Jack Dempsey Roy Jones Naseem Hamed Corrie Sanders Nigel Benn Mike Tyson Ray Robinson Stanley Ketchel Tyson Fury Henry Armstrong
In no particular order. Duran McCallum Charles Toney Bhop L. Spinks M. Spinks Qawi D. Tiger Tyson Torres Arguello Liston H. Johnson Uysk
Changes all the time...it should I guess. 01 - Charley Burley. Burley was the first "mysterious" fighter I ever got into and he is the guy who got me into deep dives, trying to learn about fighters as historical figures and share that information. He's still probably the definitive fighter for me in terms of his "thinking" style, of being smart. He was also enormously committed to a style and I love and respect that. He did it right rather than changed up for cash. 02 - Roman Gonzalez. He's kind of ended up on the wrong side of history a bit and it seemed to be ending with a whimper rather than a bang but for a while there he was a monster - now he is again. Eight punch combos that were pure liquid, a puncher below 115, rather terrifying. Impossible to run from and almost impossible to out-fight. As complete a fighter as has practised in my lifetime. 03 - Juan Manuel Marquez. This is a guy who, like Burley, found the "right" way to do things, ducked by Morales and Barrera when all that was going on, toiled in obscurity, then landed the dance partner everyone wanted for making money and got routinely mauled on the scorecards in matching him. I thought he won II and III. But Marquez was too furious to quit and too furious to keep to the style he'd nurtured so he changed up to become more popular and eventually to get that win over Manny, which was as astonishing a KO as I've ever seen. Survived mis-management, survived Pacquiao, it's one of the great arcs of our sport and his first victory of Juan Diaz remains one of my very favourite fights. 04 - Midget Wolgast. Just genius, different, a fighter that found another path. There's something fascinating about dead-end technical fighters, guys who due to physical and mental make-up mined a dead end in boxing technique that was never revived. Roy Jones, Jimmy Wilde, Midget, these guys fought in a style that was unrepeatable and where guys who tried got Ko'd. Also absolutely fearless and would fight anyone, all the way up through the weights. 05 - Chucho Castillo. "He would fight a bull with a fork." 06 - Joe Louis. Nobody did it better probably from a technical punching perspective. It's the power, but the way he generates it never fails to impress me. Doesn't matter how many times you see it. 07 - Tyson Fury. Marmite where this guy is concerned, but I love him, love the background story, love the lunatic moments in the ring, love that his preposterous stylings are finding their way to the top of the division. Now on the cusp of immortality. 08 - Naoya Inoue. Been obsessed with this guy since his second fight when he was an emaciated light-fly. 09 - Oleksander Usyk. I followed Usyk from the ams and it's been an absolute delight to watch his special kind of boxing florurish all the way up to heavyweight. I predicted he'd be the guy to beat AJ, that's obviously been done already, but I still think there's an opportunity for the guy to make an enormous splash. It helps that he's really funny. 10 - Marvin Hagler. Unreal that he be dead. 11 - Holman Williams. Another one who would fight anybody, another kind of mysterious guy, another one who put his style through some changes, in this case due to bad hands. Crazy resume, brilliant general. 12 - Joe Gans. Greatest champ of all time? 13 - Richard Tiger. He was unbrawlable, don't you know. 14 - Ivan Calderon. I know how it sounds, but his is one of the few career sets I own. He was just a Rolls Royce of a fighter, brilliant little operator, so hard to hit, so hard to hurt. Then he just went wildly off a cliff and that's when I knew I loved him because it just broke my heart. 15 - Sonny Liston. Brilliant technically, a true destroyer, a deeply troubled, flawed character.
My 1st 5 are written in stone. The next change places amongst them. The final 5 are interchangeable 1 Manos de Piedra 2 Marvelous (still in mourning) 3 The Greatest 4 Smoking Joe 5 Chava 6 Larry Holmes 7 Mike Spinks 8 Dwight Muhammad Qawi 9 Evander 10 The Celtic Warrior 11 The Pocket Rocket 12 Little Red and the Professor 13 Saad and Conteh 14 Vincente Saldivar and Jack Johnson 15 The whole late 70s early 80s lightheavyweight division Ok I cheated so sue me
No particular order, and I'd probably change it around a bit on any given day. 1. Thomas Hearns 2. Dick Tiger 3. Joe Brown 4. Marco Antonio Barrera 5. Sandy Saddler 6. Carl Froch 7. Mikkel Kessler 8. Sonny Liston 9. Archie Moore 10. Alexis Arguello 11. Muhammad Ali 12. Kid Gavilan 13. Roberto Duran 14. Vuyani Bungu 15. Emile Griffith I'll throw in an honorable mention to Joe Frazier as well.
Absolutely love seeing Ivan Calderon on someone's list. He was a phenomenal fighter that is hall of fame worthy for sure. Unfortunately, he fought in a weightclass that is often times overlooked but the guy was the ultimate pro's pro.
No order: Harold Johnson Kid Gavilan Ezzard Charles Alexis Arguello Salvador Sanchez Pernell Whitaker Roberto Duran Joe Louis Yuri Arbachakov Orlando Canizales Ricardo Lopez Jose Napoles Juan Manuel Marquez Manny Pacquiao
Robinson Ali Lewis Tyson Dempsey Foreman Holyfield Duran Hagler Leonard Roy Jones Golovkin Usyk Hopkins Holmes W. Klitschko Monzon
1#R.Leonard #2 Ali #3 Arguello #4Duran #5 Hearns #6 Hagler #7 Holmes #8 Benitez #9 Pryor #10 Holyfield #11J.Louis #12 R.Robinson #13 E.Pedroza #14 J.Mugabi #15 J.Jackson.
Qawi, Lewis , Vtali, Cooney, Holmes, Hopkins, Duran, Mayorga, Jimmy Thunder, Corrie Sanders, Tua, Ibeabuchi, Jeremy Williams, Gene Hatcher, Edwin Rosario