Behold your false god, Roberto Duran

Discussion in 'Classic Boxing Forum' started by ripcity, Jul 17, 2010.


  1. Addie

    Addie Myung Woo Yuh! Full Member

    42,502
    402
    Jun 14, 2006
    :crybaby *****! ...That emote is hilarious. :lol: Makes me wonder why it's not used more often....
     
  2. teeto

    teeto Obsessed with Boxing banned

    28,075
    54
    Oct 15, 2007
    I'm so emotional right now!
     
  3. Addie

    Addie Myung Woo Yuh! Full Member

    42,502
    402
    Jun 14, 2006
    Do you value my opinion less because you know I'm 5'7 and resemble Winona Ryder, Teeto? ...The avatar was a terrible idea.
     
  4. Bokaj

    Bokaj Obsessed with Boxing Full Member

    28,278
    13,307
    Jan 4, 2008
    :lol: How did I "fail"? It was there to see plainly. To elaborate, compare the 15:th round against Bonavena to the 15:th round against Chuvalo or Terrell.

    You have to be truly blinded by bias not too see the very clear difference.

    That this also is backed up by many accounts amkes even stronger, of course. And how are they "second hand accounts"? These were people who worked closely with Ali most of them and D'Amato only related what he saw first hand of Ali.
     
  5. itrymariti

    itrymariti Cañas! Full Member

    13,728
    47
    Sep 6, 2008
    You did state that DLH would have beaten Pacquiao, though. (Despite the fact that he's never convincingly beaten even a Cotto-level WW let alone a Pacquiao-level one.)

    Ironically, Duran was actually in excellent condition for the Benitez fight. He was under the limit weeks before the fight, trained very hard, refused to allow girls and food to distract him. Ray Arcel claimed he was in the best shape "physically and mentally" since he trounced De Jesus for the second time. Yet, he performed poorly.

    Perhaps - dare I say it?! - Duran was just not in his prime at that stage? Oh no, what an outrageous excuse-maker I must be... prime for prime, Laing whoops Roberto every time. :lol:
     
  6. teeto

    teeto Obsessed with Boxing banned

    28,075
    54
    Oct 15, 2007
    Yeah, that's all it is! I'm 5ft9, i could dominate you. Hahaha
     
  7. itrymariti

    itrymariti Cañas! Full Member

    13,728
    47
    Sep 6, 2008
    We've been through this before. As I stated to you, Bonavena was a unique stylistic challenge that Ali had not seen before, and a better fighter than Chuvalo. Nonetheless, he was sharp enough to effortlessly slip Bonavena's best and return fire with some of his strongest ever punches.

    What bias?
     
  8. Addie

    Addie Myung Woo Yuh! Full Member

    42,502
    402
    Jun 14, 2006
    Well, he beat Trinidad in reality, and I still maintain today that a prime Oscar De La Hoya would have dealt with the Filipino relatively easily. The disparity in size coupled with Oscar's own strengths such as hand speed and punching power, I just think Manny would be biting off more than he can chew.

    As I say, I saw evidence in the Benitez fight to convince me that Duran was operating at a far lower level than he had a few years previously. Perhaps the weight class was a factor, and El Radar was always going to be a difficult assignment, anyhow.

    I saw a well conditioned, and competitive Roberto Duran in the Leonard rematch...until he quit.
     
  9. itrymariti

    itrymariti Cañas! Full Member

    13,728
    47
    Sep 6, 2008
    So then maybe you shouldn't have been poking fun at the reasons given for Duran's losses post-Leonard II? :smooch
     
  10. Addie

    Addie Myung Woo Yuh! Full Member

    42,502
    402
    Jun 14, 2006
    Duran lost because he was beaten by the better fighter on the night...not because he needed a poo, not because he didn't train, not because he was out of shape, and not because Leonard forced him to do anything. That's all.
     
  11. Unforgiven

    Unforgiven VIP Member banned Full Member

    58,748
    21,583
    Nov 24, 2005

    Kirkland Laing, now there's a guy who never trained properly or got himself right for a fight.
     
  12. redrooster

    redrooster Boxing Junkie Full Member

    13,635
    332
    Jan 29, 2005
    that's what I admire about him. I remember the time it was announced he would face Hearns after Hagler, one black gentleman remarked "Duran is hard core"

    But there is no resemblance to young Duran to Duran from '81 on. It's like comparing young Rod Stewart to old Rod Stewart
     
  13. hobgoblin

    hobgoblin Active Member Full Member

    810
    26
    Jul 31, 2004
    guys like you take success for granted. just do your job right for a day and people make a big deal about it...because it is a big deal. imagine you are a plumber and you have to fix the toilet. i couldn't do it. you gotta do it fast & right. you have to go house to house. you can't sit 2 hours at one place figuring it out. and your customer will be angry if you didn't fix it for good and have to come back. doesn't sound so easy. don't take success for granted.

    duran did his job...and he did it very very well...he deserves all the praise.
     
  14. Addie

    Addie Myung Woo Yuh! Full Member

    42,502
    402
    Jun 14, 2006
    Same for Ray Leonard. :good:happy
     
  15. Bokaj

    Bokaj Obsessed with Boxing Full Member

    28,278
    13,307
    Jan 4, 2008
    That Bonavena was awkward and probably hard to look good against doesn't explain why Ali was so tired in the last round. It was not a very fast paced fight, certainly not as fast paced as the one against Chuvalo.

    Mildenberger was also an awkward customer, but that didn't make Ali look slower or more tired against him, just less fluid than usual. Against Bonavena Ali fought more flat footed and at a lesser pace than he ever had before the lay-off, but still looked more tired than he had in previous fights. That should say something - and just not that Bonavena was awkward.

    Ps. Ali also looked surprisingly tired after the Quarry fight, and said himself that he was chocked at how tired he felt. In the very next fight he came out flat footed.