Bernard Hopkins vs Charley Burley

Discussion in 'Classic Boxing Forum' started by Theron, Jan 30, 2013.


  1. Manassa

    Manassa - banned

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    Not getting into a quote-for-quote debate, it's boring. This is about all I needed to know, thanks :good

    P.S. - by your reasoning I'm guessing Hopkins comes in around #15 on your all-time middleweight list?
     
  2. lora

    lora Fighting Zapata Full Member

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    Hernard Bopkins vs Bharley Curley
     
  3. El Bujia

    El Bujia Boxing Junkie Full Member

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    I also see no reason to assume the 160-168 pound prime Roy Jones, who holds every single conceivable advantage, would be able to beat the natural Welterweight Holman Williams. You know why? Experience. Holman had over 100 more fights, which of course means he'd have seen what Roy had to have offered many times over, because there were so many fighters the caliber of Jones over the years.

    You guys may laugh, but I'd also take Alfredo Urbina over Pernell Whitaker. Compare the number of fights. Experience is what truly matters. Talent and ability? Boxing skill? The ability to win a fight? Don't make me laugh.
     
  4. LittleRed

    LittleRed Boxing Junkie Full Member

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    Len Wickwar would push in Ray Leonards ****. 463 fights to 40. Numbers don't lie.
     
  5. Surf-Bat

    Surf-Bat Boxing Addict Full Member

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    Possibly. He DEFINITELY doesn't crack my top 10. There were many middleweights greater than Hopkins. Like I said, I watched his entire career from the beginning (almost) until the present. An impressive fighter, but I never saw him do anything jaw-dropping. He was just a solid fighter. Put him in the 1940s and he never comes within a sniff of the championship (unless he's from NY and has Rocky Graziano's management behind him).

    From where I stand, Hopkins and his accomplishments are more a product of the anemic state of boxing than some magical skills he possesses. He was a bright light in a dim era.
     
  6. Manassa

    Manassa - banned

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    How about Hagler?
     
  7. Surf-Bat

    Surf-Bat Boxing Addict Full Member

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    H2H he ranks highly. I'm still debating where to rank him otherwise. The MWs are difficult that way. I definitely have him over Hopkins if that's what you're wondering.
     
  8. McGrain

    McGrain Diamond Dog Staff Member

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    I guess i'd pick Burley to stab it out in a close one.
     
  9. Shake

    Shake Boxing Addict Full Member

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    How do you feel about the assertion that it is almost a different sport now? The dip in activity and frequency of fights in a boxers career makes it so that it suits different types of fighters.

    Injury-prone but otherwise fine boxers can thrive in the current climate, where they couldn't in an environment where you often boxed more than once in a month. You have the advantage of video footage of your opponent, ample time to prepare for his style, and to prepare yourself physically. Ricky Hatton was famous for a lifestyle that would have barred him from any sustained success in the old days.

    In reverse, you could say the best fighters in the old days were the ones that kept fit continuously, could fight while avoiding injuries, be tough and fight with injuries or in less than perfect condition, figure out an opponent while having much more limited info and without the use of performance enhancing substances.

    The current climate favors fighters who, given the perfect preparation and postponement in case of injury, can work towards the highest highs and peak at just the right moment. You need to be a "ten" twice a year.

    In the old days natural fitness, grit and recuperative ability were much more important. It does no good to be sterling one night and wortless the next. You need to be an "eight" all year round.

    Therefore, I submit that modern fighters of comparable standing reach a higher level of quality in comparison to their old time counterparts on a given fight night.

    In other words -- the boxing on display in the modern era is better, overall, than in the days of 200+ fights on a resume. In the old days it was simply more quantity instead of quality.
     
  10. Flea Man

    Flea Man มวยสากล Full Member

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    Shake I agree with all of those points.EDIT: Apart from the but about well-prepared modern fighters reaching a higher performance peak than the old timers that fought more.

    In a 'prime for prime' matchup I see the different era's being able to cross over without much hassle.

    But if Floyd Mayweather had come around in the 30s and 40s he would be obscure, let alone highly regarded.
     
  11. thistle1

    thistle1 Boxing Addict Full Member

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    this guy never said that at all... this guy happens to focus first on ERA's, the Best of those Era's, Champions & Contenders alike are streets ahead of weaker Era's.

    WHY???

    because of the level of competition, number of fights among that competition, longievity in that Era & against such comp and lastly fighting up against the next division or two.

    this guy said two things about Hopkins (and others),

    1) in that Golden Era of the 1930s - mid-late 50s, Hopkins would have been a L-HW, a 6'1" guy at that time was never a MW except as a young teenage fighter passing through the division, leveling off as a L-HW cum HW.

    2) against such reality and fighting facts, again Comp & number of fights against such Comp, does BHop 'stay' the distance, does he remain a TOP fighter???

    well all we've got to compare is His Era, much weeker comp and a fighter who fought (like most today) well below his natural weight - there is very little to say that he swims with the sharks for a career of it.

    Thats it, thats all, and it is the same for ALL fighters from weaker Era's, the fighters that DID it, are Sealed for ALL TIME, the ones that did'nt have to be looked at under the microscope to see where they would fit in such Era's and whether they would still be on top or not... thats it, it's that simple!

    I said Bhop would be a 'Fringe Contender and a Journeyman fighter, as SO many greats then were and became, on the fringe finishing up journeymen.

    as to Froch/Bute - the comparison was Two Great Fighters, the courts were split even as to who was going to win, but Froch walked it... Why? because he was just better... not a difficult analogy was it?

    Burley's just better.


    and believing in God all of a sudden rules a person out of discussion. Please.
     
  12. thistle1

    thistle1 Boxing Addict Full Member

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    and this sums it all up, exactly as I always state...

    the ERA, Comp and Longeivity in it...

    their Sealed, they did it, the Bhops & RJones' have to be veiwed in this light, always, - and beginning with what weight division they would actually be fighting at!!!
     
  13. Surf-Bat

    Surf-Bat Boxing Addict Full Member

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    A well thought out post, even though I totally disagree. You don't become a master of your craft by doing it once or twice per year. The more you fight, the better you get at fighting. It's that simple. Repetition is the mother of skill.

    The fighters of old saw more styles, more tricks and had to overcome MANY more challenges than today's pampered pugs. Back then you had to fight for a living. It was a craft. Today it is a pastime. A hobby, practiced at a bit but never fully committed to. How can you when you have so much down time in between fights? You have nothing better to do but spend your millions for 6 months and dissipate. Not a good thing
     
  14. McGrain

    McGrain Diamond Dog Staff Member

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    Only a tiny handful of fighters have "millions."
     
  15. Flea Man

    Flea Man มวยสากล Full Member

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    The Froch/Bute comparison is still abysmal,