by James Toney Sep 9th, 2009 Share this story 3 This content is protected In a new RingTV.com feature, James Toney reveals the best he faced in 10 categories during his long career. James Toney enters his 20th year in professional boxing with Saturdays non-televised bout against Matthew Greer on the undercard of Showtimes Andre Ward-Shelby Pudwill offering. Who knows how far Toney will get in what has to be the last hurrah of his hall-of-fame career but he certainly has a lot to look back on, which the former three-division titleholder did recently with RingTV.com. In what will become a regular blog item featuring the most accomplished fighters of our generation, Toney lists the best he faced in 10 important categories. Best fighter: Mike McCallum -- Thats an easy choice, right off the top of my head its the Body Snatcher. He was the best fighter I fought at middleweight, super middleweight and cruiserweight. Out of all the fighters I fought, I respect him the most because he made me think about everything I tried to do. Before McCallum I was just runnin in on everyone, but he made me slow down and think for the first time. Best Boxer: McCallum -- Yup, its him again. Its between McCallum and Michael Nunn, but I gotta go with McCallum because he was a master boxer who wasnt afraid to stand his ground. Nunn was mostly fast. I admit that he outboxed me for about nine rounds, but my body shots slowed him down. I told him during the fight Im gonna catch you! And I did. Best puncher: Merqui Sosa -- Sam Peter is the hardest puncher Ive fought, but pound-for-pound its Sosa because he hurt me the most. Ill never forget that fight, we fought on an ESPN show in Atlantic City on a Sunday. I went at him like I did everyone back then and that mother f_____ hit me so hard in the third round I was seeing triple for the next three rounds. He knew how to hit and he was so awkward that I couldnt time him and he caught me high on the head. Quickest hands: Roy Jones -- He was fast. Ill give him that, but thats all Ill give him. I would have knocked him out if I wasnt drained from losing 44 pounds in six weeks. I went in (that fight) like a fool and wasnt properly prepared. Quickest feet: Nunn -- He had some fast-ass feet (laughing), didnt he? He was an escape artist for nine or 10 rounds, til I caught up to him. Best defense: McCallum: He was right there in front of me, but I had a hard time hitting him with clean punches. I basically came into my own by fighting him. I learned how to be elusive without running around the ring by fighting Mike McCallum three times. Best chin: Tony Thornton: The punching postman from Philly! (laughs) I thought I was gonna knock him out easy. He was squared up with his chin right there for me to hit but I hit him with every punch I had and he wouldnt budge. I hit him with my best left hook and he didnt blink. Best jab: McCallum: Mikes jab was like a piston. There were other guys I fought who had good jabs, like Nunn and Jones, but they just had speed and they just flicked it. Mike popped that jab with authority. He was an old-school fighter. Strongest: Samuel Peter: He was just a big-ass African with brute African strength. Smartest: McCallum: Come on, who do you think it is? Whos the one fighter I truly respect? You got it, the Body Snatcher, Mike McCallum. I fought my share of boxers who thought they were clever like Roy Jones, Michael Nunn, Montell Griffin, and Reggie Johnson, but they were all scared to really fight. McCallum boxed, he fought, he defended, and he didnt run all over the ring. He could do all that because he was smart.
Love seeing Mike get props like that. Jones is obviously the best he faced, though, although Mike was much more skilled.
Yeah. What surprised me was that Mike said that Toney had improved a lot by the rubber fight. That was probably very true, but seeing how that fight was the only one Toney clearly won I was a bit surprised that Mike was so honest about it. The usual take from fighters is that the opponent was at his best when he got clearly beat, not the other way around.
Being the most skilled usually is the one who makes whatever they can work for them to their advantage. Sure, McCallum had the classic boxer style but that doesn't mean his skills were better. Maybe his jab but everything else Roy has an edge in. Lead shots, foot work, combination punching, evasiveness, etc.
No. Won't spend time educating you on boxing, but the simple fact is that McCallum was a top level fighter even without a semblance of speed and power. Slow Jones down to McCallum's level and he's nothing. Give Mike Jones' speed, reflexes and power and he's absolutely untouchable. No need to make it more complicated than that.
When you make it look as easy as he did, apparently it makes you one-dimensional :-( Jones could K you TFO or win every round of the fight. Crazy how underrated his skills are by the casual fans.