80's heavyweight fringe title holders, at their best who had the most potential?

Discussion in 'Classic Boxing Forum' started by good right hand, Dec 21, 2008.


  1. good right hand

    good right hand Well-Known Member Full Member

    1,876
    10
    Jul 26, 2004
    outside of holmes, spinks, tyson and douglas who where all the true heavy weight champions

    witherspoon
    tate
    weaver
    smith
    coetzee
    berbick
    page
    tubbs
    thomas
    tucker
    dokes

    these guys where so evenly matched that many of there amature records are all intertwined with each others names for golden glove, national and world amature titles.

    i personally think that pinklon thomas and tony tubbs may be the brightest of the 11 as far a talent. thomas with his outstanding jab and tubbs had very good hand and speed and ring generalship.

    witherspoon deffienetly up there as showed great versititility switching stances in his fight with holmes to lose a decision i thought he won.
     
  2. TBooze

    TBooze Obsessed with Boxing Full Member

    25,495
    2,150
    Oct 22, 2006
    Whitherspoon IMO was the poster boy for the lost generation.
     
  3. GPater11093

    GPater11093 Barry Full Member

    38,034
    91
    Nov 10, 2008
    witherspoon or page i would say
     
  4. JohnThomas1

    JohnThomas1 VIP Member

    52,846
    44,555
    Apr 27, 2005
    1. Greg Page
    2. Witherspoon/Dokes
    3. Thomas
    4. Tate
    5. Weaver

    It's a hard task, but my top 3 are secure.
     
  5. Minotauro

    Minotauro Boxing Addict Full Member

    5,628
    713
    May 22, 2007
    Witherspoon I think he could have achieved a lot more had he fulfilled his potential second would probably be Thomas then Page.
     
  6. True Writer

    True Writer Active Member Full Member

    640
    5
    Mar 2, 2007
    I thought Tony Tucker should have done more.
     
  7. JohnThomas1

    JohnThomas1 VIP Member

    52,846
    44,555
    Apr 27, 2005
    Calling Dinner and HJ

    :lol:
     
  8. janitor

    janitor VIP Member Full Member

    71,585
    27,251
    Feb 15, 2006
    He did get cheated out of two fights for the lineal title against Michael Spinks and George Foreman respectivley.

    However these fights would have turned out he should have been given these chances.
     
  9. Russell

    Russell Loyal Member Full Member

    43,650
    13,048
    Apr 1, 2007
    Almost every member of the lost generation had nearly unlimited potential. They were super heavyweights before that group of fighters became TOO big, most of them having sublime skills to boot.

    Look at the hell a ancient Witherspoon did in the 90's. Absolutely demolishing Gonzale, running Ray Mercer close (I had him winning it.)

    Then Tubbs goes and does great against the Klitscho's in sparring at well over 40, and in the vein of Witherspoon runs one of the 90's best fighters to a ultra close "lose". Which, again, I had the 80's fighter winning. Tubb's made Riddick Bowe look amateurish.

    Almost all of the lost generation fought into the 90's and beyond, and it's a testament to how good they could have been that they raised hell that long past their best. If only they weren't a part of such a lavish, indulgent decade as the 80's.
     
  10. biglads

    biglads Climbing the WBO Rankings Full Member

    1,780
    67
    Aug 30, 2007
    My pick of the list would probably be Witherspoon, Thomas and Page in no particular order.

    "Fit, focused and talented", a bit of a shame that after Holmes started going downhill and before Tyson appeared on the scene, Heavyweight Contenders could only seem to be at most 2 out of 3.
     
  11. mr. magoo

    mr. magoo VIP Member Full Member

    51,131
    25,312
    Jan 3, 2007
    Witherspoon has to be given the benefit of the doubt as being the best of that bunch. For whatever its worth, he was the division's only two time alpha titlist. He also chalked up a larger number of wins against Quality opponents than did his comtemporary peers. We can go on and on about how politics, drugs and Don King ruined an entire generation of heavyweight talent, in much the same way that Vietnam killed nearly a whole generation of American and Vietnamese men. I have my doubts however about how far some of the others may have gone, but not when it comes to Witherspoon. He had the right style coupled with physical abilities that would have given any fighter a tough time, when well prepared. I have always said and always will, that his second meeting with James Bonecrusher Smith was a fix, and that it was the combined effort of both Don King and the sanctioning bodies who dismantled Spoon's career and essentially black balled him from top contention. People can put whatever spin they want on Tim's story, but at the end of the day, he was a feared man in the division.
     
  12. Titan1

    Titan1 Boxing Junkie Full Member

    12,691
    2,566
    Oct 18, 2004
    Greg Page, then Tim Witherspoon, and maybe Pinklon Thomas, or Tony Tubbs. If Tony Tucker hadn't had the drug and knee problems early in his career, then he would be up there too.
     
  13. MRBILL

    MRBILL Obsessed with Boxing Full Member

    21,116
    110
    Oct 9, 2008
    Tim "The Spoon" Witherspoon had the best potential to become great... However, he was just too lazy.....:rofl

    MR.BILL
     
  14. MPG

    MPG Guest

    Tony Tucker.


    Rock Chin and Great size.

    Mediocre everything else though.

    Also a coke addiction.
     
  15. Russell

    Russell Loyal Member Full Member

    43,650
    13,048
    Apr 1, 2007
    You're forgetting good power.