Breidis is a good win for sure
Joshua and Wilder didn't tower over their peers and neither did Fury. Lewis beat 3 to 4 times the number of contenders that Fury and Wilder did...
Being a super heavyweight doesn't preclude him losing to cruiserweights obviously. And his failure to fight so many of his contemporaries raise...
Sure but the case for Fraziers greatness rests on him beating Ali. A highly competitive loss or two is not going to be enough for people to rate...
Fury has only 3 wins over consensus top 10 heavyweights. Given the paucity of his resume I'm curious how you propose we establish how good he was...
For the purpose of these matches we take fighters at their very best and Ali was clearly not at his very best vs Frazier. He was still dangerous...
Okay I'm struggling to see how Fury and Joshua are great wins given their very poor resumes and many poor performances not to mention Joshuas...
Numerous guys Floyd beat have deeper resumes including Pacquiao, Corrales, Castillo, Alvarez etc. Pacquiaos welterweight resume is greater than...
Fury and AJ have very thin resumes and are largely unproven so I don't see how they can compare with Mayweathers wins over more proven opponents....
Not at all. Tyson and Lewis were both prime just overconfident and underprepared
Ali would have likely won had he been given more warm up fights. I wouldn't favor Frazier over the best version of Ali so I see the fight as an...
He missed out on Foreman, Liston, Mac Foster, Peralta, Martin etc. So no he didn't clean out the division and I would potentially favor Foreman...
He didn't clean out his era and at heavyweight hof standards are incredibly low. That's not a compelling argument Fraziers case for being ahead...
Prior to 2023 I would say by and large Canelo took on the biggest challenges available Bivol, Smith, Golovkin, Lara, Kovalev were seen as big...
A number of those guys weren't even ranked. I don't think Foster or Mathis qualify as notable wins. Jones is pretty questionable as well