Name the fighters that never impressed you on film, despite being considered very good/great

Discussion in 'Classic Boxing Forum' started by Big Ukrainian, Jul 8, 2020.


  1. JLP1978

    JLP1978 Member Full Member

    244
    374
    Apr 3, 2020
    Joe Gans.

    It hurts me to say that. He looks a little skittish in the ring. He leans on his back foot the same way the Jack Johnson did.

    He could handle pressure and it must have suicidal to try and box with him but still, I don’t see the Ol’ Master.

    With that said, his record is phenomenal and with his power speed and skill, if he could have fought in an era that didn’t permit straight up mauling you might wonder if he would have lost once.

    Perhaps he was the Mayweather if his day with Robinson like power...but just in the right with wild men and horrible rules.
     
    Bronze Tiger likes this.
  2. bcr

    bcr Well-Known Member Full Member

    2,563
    1,440
    Dec 21, 2013
    Ketchel. My favorite old timer but he looks like **** on film.
     
  3. Bronze Tiger

    Bronze Tiger Boxing Addict Full Member

    4,341
    5,266
    Jun 23, 2018
    Luis Rodriguez...with all that bouncing up and down
     
  4. Bronze Tiger

    Bronze Tiger Boxing Addict Full Member

    4,341
    5,266
    Jun 23, 2018
    Alexis Arguello was a great champion ....but he sure got hit a lot
     
    Toney F*** U and JLP1978 like this.
  5. Bronze Tiger

    Bronze Tiger Boxing Addict Full Member

    4,341
    5,266
    Jun 23, 2018
    He was even worse than that before Freddie Roach got a hold of him
     
  6. William Walker

    William Walker Boxing Junkie Full Member

    7,901
    9,152
    Apr 9, 2020
    hmmm... that's interesting, I'd never heard of that b4.
     
  7. William Walker

    William Walker Boxing Junkie Full Member

    7,901
    9,152
    Apr 9, 2020
    I don't like watching him much, but he was in so many awesome fights.
     
  8. greynotsoold

    greynotsoold Boxing Addict

    5,519
    7,071
    Aug 17, 2011
    I think that I watch differently than many of you. When you are watching a guy and his style is crude or otherwise unappealing visually and you underestimate him because of it, you often end up losing to him. You have to get a grasp on what he is trying to accomplish with his way of fighting and, if he has been successful, why he is effective.
     
    Gatekeeper, Man_Machine, bcr and 2 others like this.
  9. Mod-Mania

    Mod-Mania Boxing Addict Full Member

    4,708
    2,887
    Aug 12, 2012
    Riddick Bowe
    Vitali Klistscko
     
    Bronze Tiger likes this.
  10. Mod-Mania

    Mod-Mania Boxing Addict Full Member

    4,708
    2,887
    Aug 12, 2012
    Each to their own.
     
  11. Saintpat

    Saintpat Obsessed with Boxing Full Member

    23,389
    26,647
    Jun 26, 2009
    There’s a little more method to it than you think if you watch other Brendan Ingle fighters. Ingle had strange footwork diagrams on the floor of his gym to teach his style IIRC, so he had a method.

    As someone once said, Ingle’s fighters even walked backwards going to the gym.

    Roy Jr, having seen some of his father’s pupils in the amateurs, also had more rudiments than most realize, although RJJ certainly evolved as a pro, but there’s still some shades of it that you can see later in his career.

    We fought against some Roy Sr fighters (and beat some of them) in the amateurs and if you knew the style you had a lot better chance — a lot of it was based on how they leaned to either side when an opponent jabbed ... everything was off their opponent’s jabs. What we would do was tell our guy to never jab but feint it a lot and then fire the power hand to either side and run them into it — and then finish with the jab, which really threw them off. Roy Sr had an undefeated heavyweight everyone was buzzing about and I had a country-tough, raw southpaw and my guy rammed that jab in his face to finish every combination and they never adjusted.
     
  12. Showstopper97

    Showstopper97 The Icon Full Member

    2,694
    3,256
    Oct 7, 2020
    Felix Trinidad - Always felt he was a limited fighter with power, nothing else. Even felt that his power was overrated imo. Nothing about him impressed me or stood out.

    Marvin Hagler - (Yep, I went there). He was a good, solid fighter all-round, but again nothing about him stood out. He had no special, outstanding qualities. He also feasted on quite a number of smaller fighters on his resume - some of which happen to be his best wins.
     
    Bronze Tiger likes this.
  13. Mike Cannon

    Mike Cannon Boxing Addict Full Member

    4,165
    7,448
    Apr 29, 2020
    Agree, funny that they are prob in most peoples top 5 MW of all time !
     
  14. robert ungurean

    robert ungurean Богдан Philadelphia Full Member

    16,278
    15,345
    Jun 9, 2007
    Ketchel
    J. Johnson
    Carpentier
    Baer
    Marciano
    LaMotta
    FMJ
    Monzon ( I still have him no 1 @ MW)
    Fury
    Joshua
    Mikey Garcia
    Breland
     
    Bronze Tiger likes this.
  15. klompton2

    klompton2 Boxing Junkie banned Full Member

    10,974
    5,433
    Feb 10, 2013
    You routinely overstate his punching power, which was below average at best.
     
    Bronze Tiger likes this.