Who Would Beat A Prime Leonard At Welterweight?

Discussion in 'Classic Boxing Forum' started by Joeywill, Mar 22, 2022.


  1. mark ant

    mark ant Canelo was never athletic Full Member

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    You`re seriously suggesting that Leonard was the greatest fighter of all-time are you?
     
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  2. Journeyman92

    Journeyman92 MONZON VS HAGLER 2025 Full Member

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    Napoles and Emile have a great chance. I’d take them both as the favourite actually.
     
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  3. Richard M Murrieta

    Richard M Murrieta Now Deceased 2/4/25 Full Member

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  4. Rope-a-Dope

    Rope-a-Dope Boxing Junkie Full Member

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  5. JohnThomas1

    JohnThomas1 VIP Member

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    There was no degree of fortune - he had to go thru hell staying in it and it was courage, commitment, heart and skill that allowed him to win. Not luck.

    Louis had better fundamentals but take away that power and he comes back to the pack significantly. Power allowed him to change fights in an instant and he was nigh well impossible to take liberties against because behind that sharpness was huge POWA. He was extremely dangerous when in trouble and often turned the tables on an aggressive opponent in the blink of an eye.

    Leonard had a crapload of skill and it was hardly just athleticism. The art of boxing is to hit without being hit and SRL could sure as heck do that.
     
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  6. ETM

    ETM I thought I did enough to win. Full Member

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    That's a tough sell. He was in his mid 20s, undefeated champion, coming off an impressive win over Benitez. Leonard was seasoned peaking as a fighter. You could make a much better case Thomas Hearns was a bit green for his first bout with Ray.
     
  7. Richard M Murrieta

    Richard M Murrieta Now Deceased 2/4/25 Full Member

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    As much as I admired Jose Mantequilla Napoles, he might give Sugar Ray Leonard a decent fight, but remember he had very brittle scar tissue above his eyebrows thanks to Billy Backus in 1970. The speed factor plus his sharp punching could spell the difference in the outcome.
     
    Last edited: Mar 25, 2022
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  8. surfinghb

    surfinghb Boxing Junkie Full Member

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    Hard to say.. but a lot of guys could give him a good run for his money ,,, Surely Armstrong and Walker are in the mix .. along with McFarland. Ross, etc .. some old tough fighters for sure ...
    SRR .. etc
     
  9. fbear

    fbear Member Full Member

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    No. Just responding to the question as posted. Duhh.....
     
  10. fbear

    fbear Member Full Member

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    The question was who beats a prime Leonard, no? Are you saying there is a version of Hearns that beats a prime Leonard then?

    Perhaps we should agree on a definition of prime then.. I would say that Leonard was a better fighter in the second Duran fight than the first Duran fight, by virtue of the fact that he learned a lot from the first Duran fight, and fought a smarter fight than in the first.
     
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  11. Quick Cash

    Quick Cash Well-Known Member Full Member

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    Duran was not consistent enough at those higher weights to win a best of ten, but I also don't see any vast improvement in Leonard's game in New Orleans. He was, what, a point ahead against an out-of-shape Duran?
     
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  12. Quick Cash

    Quick Cash Well-Known Member Full Member

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    He hurt Tommy multiple times in two fights. One of which was at a weight that very much favored Tommy.
     
  13. Quick Cash

    Quick Cash Well-Known Member Full Member

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    I mean, fantasy fights are always a bonus, but Trinidad, to me, looked too drained and flatfooted at welterweight to compete with someone like Leonard.
     
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  14. mr. magoo

    mr. magoo VIP Member Full Member

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    Could be the case.
     
  15. cross_trainer

    cross_trainer Liston was good, but no "Tire Iron" Jones Full Member

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    Easy. Muhammad A--

    --ahem. Never mind




    ...On a more serious note, if we're allowed to do next day weigh-ins and modern rehydration sorcery, you could probably find some natural junior middles and middles who'd have a chance.

    EDIT: If you want to get technical, the current welters basically are exactly that. So maybe look in the best welters of the rehydration era.
     
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