Who was the 3rd best HW of the 1980s ?

Discussion in 'World Boxing Forum' started by ZiggyBowie, Sep 17, 2025.


  1. Bigcheese

    Bigcheese Well-Known Member Full Member

    1,927
    2,514
    Jun 7, 2015
    He beat Douglas for the belt in 1990.

    I'd pick 89 Holy to beat any 80s heavyweight not named Tyson or Holmes and he might have beaten them as well.
     
    KO KIDD likes this.
  2. heerko koois

    heerko koois Obsessed with Boxing Full Member

    24,163
    17,783
    Apr 26, 2006
    Maybe, but it wasn,t his time yet, this thread is about the 1980,s my friend
     
    VanBasten likes this.
  3. Bigcheese

    Bigcheese Well-Known Member Full Member

    1,927
    2,514
    Jun 7, 2015
    I thought it was about who the 3rd best H2H heavyweight of the 80s was, and my answer is Evander "the real deal" Holyfield.
     
    heerko koois likes this.
  4. northpaw

    northpaw Obsessed with Boxing Full Member

    17,248
    10,812
    Jun 5, 2010
    This is really crazy because I consider Berbick as a caveman without any bit of craft...............but you make a hard to counter argument. He literally beat one of the men I was gonna say
     
    KO KIDD and MaccaveliMacc like this.
  5. Rumsfeld

    Rumsfeld Moderator Staff Member

    49,569
    16,101
    Jul 19, 2004
    Related.

    This content is protected
     
  6. MaccaveliMacc

    MaccaveliMacc Boxing Addict Full Member

    4,495
    6,759
    Feb 27, 2024
    Tucker only beaten Buster Douglas and James Broad in the 80's.
     
    heerko koois likes this.
  7. Rico Spadafora

    Rico Spadafora Master of Chins Full Member

    45,386
    3,799
    Feb 20, 2008
    It’s hard to pick because other than Holmes and Tyson all the others were too inconsistent erratic and underachieved. They mostly played musical belts with each other. Berbick got at lot out of his limited skillset. Tucker was good. Several like Page and Cooney had huge potential that was never fully developed due to personal problems and bad habits. It really is the lost generation of Heavyweights. By that point the money was getting really big even for alphabet title fights and it made the fighters lazy in a sense. They could make a big payday and sit on their ass for several months doing nothing but gorging themselves on food and cocaine until another fight was lined up.
     
    KO KIDD likes this.
  8. LoveThis

    LoveThis Sweet Science Full Member

    333
    422
    Feb 20, 2025
    Ah yes, I heard about cocaine being such a big influence on the 80s and entertainment/sports. Is would make sense, but was it actually a factor in top boxing at that time in such a manner that it would influnce top heavyweight's performances, careers and mentality in a systematic way?
     
  9. Heisenberg

    Heisenberg @paulmillsfitness Full Member

    3,433
    6,430
    Apr 30, 2017
    Holyfield for his wins over Tillis, Thomas, Dokes, Rodriguez and Stewart. The last 3 being in crazy veins of form, all on unbeaten runs and all ranked top contenders.
     
  10. Vantage_West

    Vantage_West ヒップホップ·プロデューサー Full Member

    20,834
    608
    Jul 11, 2006
    witherspoon is the more concrete 3rd. but Pink for my choice.

    it's the 80's heavies scene man. nobody had run longer than 2 years before coke was introduced to them and then the walls came crumbling in.
     
  11. Vantage_West

    Vantage_West ヒップホップ·プロデューサー Full Member

    20,834
    608
    Jul 11, 2006
    also 80's meaning jan 1980- dec 1989 does mean you get some anomoalies. it's why most will have a venture back and notice dokes has the most top class wins...doubt we are saying he should be there, no?
     
  12. Braindamage

    Braindamage Baby Face Beast Full Member

    11,020
    10,060
    Oct 1, 2011
    Probably some Soviet monster that wasn't allowed to participate in the pros.
     
  13. HistoryZero26

    HistoryZero26 Boxing Addict Full Member

    4,789
    4,205
    Jan 6, 2024
    I think most would agree theres no clear cut one just a group you can pick from each with their cases.

    For me its either Tucker, Buster or Witherspoon. Spinks and Pinklon being reasonable choices but a cut below for me.

    Holyfield could be considered part of the 80s generation in the way Holmes can the 70s. I guess H2H you have a creative case to name him number 1 because he beat Tyson, Holmes, Buster and Pinklon. But Holyfield beating Holmes in 1992 doesn't elevate him above Holmes. If you count Holyfield as part of this era he gets added to the pile above.
     
  14. ZiggyBowie

    ZiggyBowie Active Member Full Member

    528
    609
    Sep 17, 2022
    Douglas isn’t really part of this debate for me. He beat Tyson in 1990
    His 80s career was unremarkable, he had decent decision wins against Page, Berbick and McCall and lost in a world title attempt against Tucker.
     
  15. HistoryZero26

    HistoryZero26 Boxing Addict Full Member

    4,789
    4,205
    Jan 6, 2024
    If you look past the 3 losses before fighting Tucker no one except Holmes, Tyson and Witherspoon have a better win column then that. Tangstad would have been a win if not for deductions.

    Theres no shame in losing a close fight to to Tony Tucker when he won multiple rounds against Tyson and Lennox. He was shutting out the 6'10 Mike White when he got caught.