Foreman never hit Ali with his best shot, right?

Discussion in 'Classic Boxing Forum' started by JohnThomas1, Jun 2, 2023.


  1. Barrf

    Barrf Boxing Addict Full Member

    6,074
    9,234
    Sep 19, 2021
    Far better to have bet on Buster Douglas.
     
  2. Barrf

    Barrf Boxing Addict Full Member

    6,074
    9,234
    Sep 19, 2021
    That was one of Ali's biggest strengths post-exile -- he was a great "grappler". Ironically, Foreman himself became really good as an older guy, I wonder if the Rumble is what motivated him to learn?
     
    cross_trainer likes this.
  3. Man_Machine

    Man_Machine Boxing Junkie Full Member

    8,692
    9,898
    Jun 9, 2010
    I'd have to agree.
     
    JohnThomas1 likes this.
  4. PFPIsAMyth

    PFPIsAMyth New Member Full Member

    88
    70
    May 17, 2023
    Very convincing argument.

    Yes.
     
  5. PFPIsAMyth

    PFPIsAMyth New Member Full Member

    88
    70
    May 17, 2023
    No, because I would have picked Tyson to win going into the fight.
     
  6. swagdelfadeel

    swagdelfadeel Obsessed with Boxing

    19,237
    20,844
    Jul 30, 2014
    Ali didn't always make exaggerated movements when hurt. Case in point, the first Liston bout in the second round.

    Ali himself admitted he was hurt and out on his feet at a point.

    Their's literally nothing more to say, than this is just completely untrue. Ali is usually seen as holding a styles advantage over Foreman.... which is what brought him to victory in their bout.
     
    Man_Machine likes this.
  7. Richard M Murrieta

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

    22,635
    30,422
    Jul 16, 2019
    As many of you posters pointed out that George Foreman did not lay a glove on Muhammad Ali in Oct 1974, but besides the Parkinson's, who ended up neurologically deficient as the results of the head shots afterwards for overusing the Rope a Dope? It was not George Foreman.
     
    Last edited: Jun 3, 2023
  8. ThatOne

    ThatOne Boxing Addict Full Member

    6,433
    8,834
    Jan 13, 2022
    There's more to strength than brute force. Dwight Stephenson is a Hall of Fame center. He weighed 258 pounds . He stood up 300 pound plus defensive linemen on the regular.
     
    Flash24 likes this.
  9. ThatOne

    ThatOne Boxing Addict Full Member

    6,433
    8,834
    Jan 13, 2022
    You would have had to have found a house to take the bets. It was virtually but not totally off the boards. That's what an upset it was.
     
  10. Pat M

    Pat M Well-Known Member Full Member

    1,706
    4,263
    Jun 20, 2017
    Most people fight like they train. Foreman's heavy bag routine was ridiculous, but apparently impressed whoever was narrating the video. It was ineffective in the ring. Ali took Foreman to the ropes and made him fight on the inside. GF appeared to know little about body punching or inside fighting. GF stood with his feet parallel, swung wide, like in the video, and Ali controlled the distance, probably turning many of GF's punches into slaps. Ali could push or pull GF whenever he wanted because of GF's stance. The narrator of the video (clueless) was impressed, too bad for GF, Ali was not impressed. GF could have used that heavy bag time to learn to throw useful, short, body punches instead of the cartoonish punches he was throwing in the video.

    Easy work for Ali, after the fight he looked like he had been for a short walk instead of in a fight.

    This content is protected
     
    cross_trainer likes this.
  11. PFPIsAMyth

    PFPIsAMyth New Member Full Member

    88
    70
    May 17, 2023
    At no point in the Liston fight did he ever look out on his feet because it's quite obvious when someone is.

    Tip 1: Stop believing what Ali says about what happened in a fight, because he will create anything to make what he did seem more impressive or larger than life. He fed into the rope-a-dope narrative for this reason because it's a much better story than what really happened.

    "Usually seen" By who? Most people picked Foreman to beat Ali because they thought he was all wrong for him and there's tons of people who think he'd win in a rematch for that same reason too. "Oh, Foreman wouldn't fall for the rope-a-dope act again. He'd be much smarter in the rematch" is what you'll find. In fact, most people think Ali won that Foreman fight because his tactic was better (tiring him out), not because they think his style is wrong for Foreman.
     
  12. ikrasevic

    ikrasevic Who is ready to suffer for Christ (the truth)? Full Member

    7,234
    7,708
    Nov 3, 2021
    This content is protected


    If these are the best shots before uppercuts, then they are not. Muhammad Ali fell from Frazier's hook; he would fall from this too. But he didn't receive the best shots from Foreman, but he did from Shavers.
     
  13. JohnThomas1

    JohnThomas1 VIP Member

    53,347
    45,531
    Apr 27, 2005
    A Zen boxer!!! Golfers and Tennis players refer to being "in the zone" during their greatest rounds/matches where they are almost automatic and just completely immersed in the moment.
     
    Man_Machine likes this.
  14. JohnThomas1

    JohnThomas1 VIP Member

    53,347
    45,531
    Apr 27, 2005
    Most people picked Foreman because -

    A. Ali was seen by the majority to be old, over the hill and washed up.
    B. Foreman had just massecrated two fighters that had previously beaten Ali before most people were settled in their seats.
    C. A growing element was already viewing Foreman as virtually invincible at that time.
     
    newurban99, ikrasevic and Pugguy like this.
  15. Richard M Murrieta

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

    22,635
    30,422
    Jul 16, 2019
    Muhammad Ali sang to George Foreman, Hit Me With Your Best Shot, Fire Away. Ha Ha.