Greatest European fighter's of all time?

Discussion in 'Classic Boxing Forum' started by LenHarvey, Feb 16, 2025.


  1. LenHarvey

    LenHarvey Active Member Full Member

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    Ethnically Russian but Australian nationality isn't he? Muddled a bit, like Lewis.
     
  2. LenHarvey

    LenHarvey Active Member Full Member

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    Kessler was Brilliant to watch.. nothing flashy just decent fundamentals.. but athletic & heavy handed. I wouldn't put him among the elite tier like the ones in my OP but he was a great fighter nonetheless. The Green KO & the first Froch fight are a must watch.
     
  3. GlaukosTheHammer

    GlaukosTheHammer Well-Known Member Full Member

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    That's fair. Legitimate question here, despite it being somewhat contrarian; would nationalism during the British Empire be British in nature? Or to ask that differently, are citizens of the British Empire not British?
     
  4. HistoryZero26

    HistoryZero26 Boxing Addict Full Member

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    In these cases the deciding factor should be if one competed in European boxing which Lennox did and Tsyzu didn't.
     
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  5. LenHarvey

    LenHarvey Active Member Full Member

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    Ya that's fair.. Though Tszyu competed in the European championships as an amateur.. was born in Russia but fought under the Australian banner. An aussie.
     
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  6. HistoryZero26

    HistoryZero26 Boxing Addict Full Member

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    The thing is during Fitzsimmons era Australia was the center of British boxing. Whether you were Australian or not thats where all the best boxers from the British world were from in the pre WW1 era. Australia wasn't just Australia during this period. It was boxing land.

    The British have a seperate regional system than Europe but can compete for the EBU belt so there really isn't a correct answer to whether or not British fighters should be considered European.
     
  7. LenHarvey

    LenHarvey Active Member Full Member

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    Yes. He was born in Cornwall to an Irish father & a Cornish mother. They moved to NZ when he was a child.. & as a pro boxer he forged his career in the states & Australia.. So he's a bit of a mongrel nationality wise too. . Though if its about birth place then technically he's English. Gets a bit muddled doesn't it.
     
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  8. HistoryZero26

    HistoryZero26 Boxing Addict Full Member

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    I don't count amateur personally but theres nothing wrong with considering fighters in 2 categorys. Many a star fighter have fought in mutliple regional circuits whether that be American and British, British and European, European and American or British and African etc.
     
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  9. LenHarvey

    LenHarvey Active Member Full Member

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    Australia back then was essentially a British territory anyway wasn't it? Full of mainly British settlers...
     
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  10. HistoryZero26

    HistoryZero26 Boxing Addict Full Member

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    Yes. At this time Australia/New Zealand and Canada were basically viewed as an extension of Britain.

    At this point Britain was the cultural center of the world and it wasn't at all clear the British would be dismantling their empire.
     
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  11. Greg Price99

    Greg Price99 Boxing Addict Full Member

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    Incorrect.

    Fitzsimmons nationality maybe debatable, however Great Britain is factually part of the continent of Europe now and was during Fitzsimmons career, therefore British people are European now as they were then, that's not debatable, it's an irrefutable fact.
     
  12. HistoryZero26

    HistoryZero26 Boxing Addict Full Member

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    Its an island it literally isn't an irefutable fact. An island whose foreign policy has been defined by not being part of and different than Europe for centuries.

    Its very debatable. I understand the reasons you would consider them European in many ways they are in many ways they aren't. Its the very definition of arbitrary.

    Also today commonwealth peoples aren't considered British. 100 years ago they totally were.
     
  13. Greg Price99

    Greg Price99 Boxing Addict Full Member

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    What relevance does Britian being an island have on which continent it belongs to? What relevance does it political policies have on what continent it geographically belongs to?

    Cuba is an island with political policies compeltely independent of other North American countries. It's still part of the continent of North America.

    Madagascar is an island, it's still part of the continent of Africa.

    The Philippines is an archipelago, it's still part of the continent of Asia.

    Great Britian is technically an archipelago, not an individual island, and it's part of the continent of Europe.

    Britain is part of Europe. British people are European. That's not a matter of interpretation, any more than it is that Filipinos are from the continent of Asia. It's just fact.

    Now if you ask whether British people think of themselves as European, that's another matter. But factually, they are from the continent of Europe.
     
  14. ron davis

    ron davis Well-Known Member Full Member

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    Ted Kid Lewis
    Marcel Cerdan
     
  15. HistoryZero26

    HistoryZero26 Boxing Addict Full Member

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    In terms of the definition an island by definition is seperate from a continent. Whether islands are part of the nearest continent, continents themselves or just "islands" is the very nature of arbitrary.

    Theres also the matter of Europe not actually being a continent. Geographically Europe isn't a continent(its not a seperate landmass) it was made one because of the geopolitical relevance of the people that lived there. And it is what it is and I understand its a term of convenience but you're talking about undisputable facts.