Rocky Marciano or Jack Johnson who was the greater fighter?

Discussion in 'Classic Boxing Forum' started by cotto20, Sep 21, 2009.


  1. mcvey

    mcvey VIP Member Full Member

    97,728
    29,078
    Jun 2, 2006
    I quite agree and I have not made a pick in this debate.
     
  2. Seamus

    Seamus Proud Kulak Full Member

    61,565
    46,161
    Feb 11, 2005
    Well, I think Jeffries is almost as overrated as Johnson. The guy was a beast of a man for his time but he struggled with guys far, far smaller. I think the word that best describes him is "limited."
     
  3. mcvey

    mcvey VIP Member Full Member

    97,728
    29,078
    Jun 2, 2006
    Don't tell me, tell Mendoza ,his self appointed protector, and number one fanboy.
    You are entitled to your opinions ,as I have said before , I don't agree with you on Johnson ,but that 's bye the bye. If we all agreed there would not be much point to the forum would there?
     
  4. Seamus

    Seamus Proud Kulak Full Member

    61,565
    46,161
    Feb 11, 2005
    Nope there would not.

    A lot of amorphous inexact terms like "greatness" and "talent" get tossed around here. That sort of argument is fairly pointless. Basically, you only get the quality of answers in regard to the quality of questions you ask.

    I like to learn some facts or at least reported facts in my discussions.
     
  5. mcvey

    mcvey VIP Member Full Member

    97,728
    29,078
    Jun 2, 2006
    One of my pet hates is the overuse of the word "great", it has been devalued so as to become almost meaningless, imo :good
     
  6. Dempsey1238

    Dempsey1238 Boxing Junkie Full Member

    12,719
    3,559
    Jul 10, 2005
    Perhaps, but I think both Johnson and Marciano earn the right to be called great.
     
  7. MrMarvel

    MrMarvel Well-Known Member Full Member

    1,792
    15
    Jan 29, 2009
    At least one of them has.
     
  8. MrMarvel

    MrMarvel Well-Known Member Full Member

    1,792
    15
    Jan 29, 2009
    How fit would Burns need to be in order to avoid being completely dominated and ktfo?
     
  9. frankenfrank

    frankenfrank Boxing Junkie Full Member

    13,965
    68
    Aug 18, 2009
  10. Dempsey1238

    Dempsey1238 Boxing Junkie Full Member

    12,719
    3,559
    Jul 10, 2005

    And which one??
     
  11. janitor

    janitor VIP Member Full Member

    71,579
    27,231
    Feb 15, 2006
    At the end of the day it is subjective.

    Quantity vs consistency.

    Personaly I think that verry few posters here have a handel on how deep Johnson's resume is and what it means.
     
  12. MrMarvel

    MrMarvel Well-Known Member Full Member

    1,792
    15
    Jan 29, 2009
    Johnson. Clearly. He is historically the more important and far superior to every other heavyweight of his style.

    I am not impressed by Rocky enough to think of him as an all-time great heavyweight, and that is relative to the level of development of the division in that day. I see him as reigning during a weak period with a smart manager. I don't regard a single fighter he faced as a great or even outstanding heavyweight. Moore was a great light heavyweight. So was Charles. Both were solid heavyweights. But neither was great or outstanding at that weight the way, say, Frazier or Louis was. And I believe either of them would beat on him on another day. Walcott clearly wasn't an outstanding heavyweight and he had Rocky whipped but for his chin that betrayed him (as it often did). Louis was outstanding, but way over the hill. Layne, LaStarza, Matthews, Cockell and the rest were nothing special. Rocky doesn't look very good on film. Put him in the 1980s prize ring and we will talk about an interesting fight, but nothing more.

    I believe he gets the attention he does because he's white. Sorry. I know that's controversial. But it's the only way I can explain how a limited smallish heavyweight gets touted as an all-time great. There's no rational explanation.
     
  13. Dempsey1238

    Dempsey1238 Boxing Junkie Full Member

    12,719
    3,559
    Jul 10, 2005

    I dont think its race, What made Rocky great was because he clear out his era.

    Weight or not, Charles, Walcott, Louis and Moore were GREATS of the ring.
    Louis was past his prime, but Charles and Walcott were cleaning out the divsion when Rocky got em in the ring(I dont count the lost to Johnson on Charles part, Clear robbery imo)

    Johnson may have had a great pre title run, but once he won it, he didnt face the best out there, were Rocky time in and time out fought the best.

    Archie Moore did more at lightheayvweight than Bob Foster getting rank number 1 over Valez, were Foster got blasted out mostly against good or great heavyweights.

    Johnson didnt relly help his case with middleweights like Ketchel or Langford imo.

    I rank Rocky higher, thought because Johnson is the first black fighter, historic is higher.


    PS, Fraizer or even Joe Louis beating Marciano is mostly guess work imo. I give each fight 50 50 about.

    I also belive if Ali is taking off of Fraizer's record, Rocky beat the better fighters.
     
  14. janitor

    janitor VIP Member Full Member

    71,579
    27,231
    Feb 15, 2006
    I dont see any way that a champion who defended his title half a dozen times against elite contenders of his era (all ranked top 5) can not be considered great.

    There is no prescedent from any period in history for such a champion not being acored this status and if you are going to set it then a lot of other champions traditionaly considerd great will be colateral victims.
     
  15. ClintMagnum

    ClintMagnum Antitheist Full Member

    600
    1
    Jun 11, 2009
    Jack Johnson is the ATG. In any era he shines. The man was a legend. Get things in perspective. He wasfighting 30 round wars before the likes of Marciano were even born. He was retired before Joe Louis even hit puberty. He was a boxing visionary. Imagine him in the 70's, 80's or current era with the same benefit of training and nutrition techniques the recent champs have had.