aggressive fighters are usually pretty good rhythme breakers..unless they are themselves totally predicatable in their own rhythme....dempsey said that beginning fighters can be effective rhythm breakers..because they have none of their own, so they throw punches that make no sense, hence a experienced guy can get caught by a newibie when you figure he will never get touched.
Boom! The very reason why I don't think Jones could handle him, or many Light Heavyweights for that matter. It was impossible to interpret what he was going to throw and which direction he was going to move in. He threw punches from every possible angle, sometimes you'd watch and think..how did he even get that off? Jones, who relies on his reflexes a whole lot, would be up **** creek.
Good point but when a guy gets ring wisdom and there is a method to his madness...and he throws a bomb out of rhythm its a *****, Duran could also be one.
good post....you are on the money with JJW...funny but a R.B. can be a boxer and or a puncher, Walcott was both...Marciano was a modern day ring version of Columbo the T.V. detective, he looked like he was throwing a tap and he double up with a punch and would change up on the order of his punches, not so predictable
Ken Norton was a great rhythm breaker..he was poison to Muhammad Ali and should have won bout #3 of theirs.
You and Chang need to get a room, but yeah, I think that's a valid enough point...and the reason why I picked him to beat Lopez in the other thread. Lopez was accustomed to setting the pace and working at his own rhythm. Chang wouldn't allow that to happen, so whereas Chang would be fighting his usual fight...Lopez would be like a fish out of water.