Indeed it does. But that's not what bothered me (for a few seconds before it all escalated, now I'm bored - drop it).
Tony Galento to one of the famous Leonards (Benny or Ray?) is a poor comparison. I can just as easily turn around and compare Dave Green to Rocky...
What he meant matters little - what bothers me is the fact you picked up Bill1234 for something he was well within his rights to say. There was no...
You don't know me as a poster then. I very rarely talk about heavyweights. But this is how it is - Joe Louis would likely smash every fighter...
You're making up your own rules again. The author never asked 'who was the most dominant?' No, he titled the thread 'best fighters', then asked;...
So you want to get trivial about it? We can get trivial. You are assuming he meant all fighters - that is the fact, because he never specified....
'Try to keep up' :huh You're the one who made an error.
No, you just saw the bit where he didn't say 'pound-for-pound' ;)
Sonny Liston in his prime was physically the perfect heavyweight. He was a genuine athlete, with as well-rounded proportions as you'll ever see....
Willie Pep was the most smooth and agile boxer I've watched. He would almost glide across the canvas. I love the way he searches for openings,...
Foster by knockout. You could argue Spinks hit with around the same power as Foster, but there was a difference in their approach. Spinks was...
Buchanan really was in a different class. It'd be a cracking fight, but the winner would never really be in doubt; Mancini might track Buchanan's...
Charles wasn't in Basilio's class. Walcott proved he was quite a bit better than Charles when he knocked him flat.
Gavilan II. -- Paul 'Scrap Iron' Ryan.
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