Did you go to that Derek Williams fight? I thought he was a dangerous guy. Flawed, but dangerous. not the kind of opponent to select when you are trying to build up undefeated youthful fighters. I thought the overall level of competition Lewis fought for early in his career pre-title was pretty much the sternest since Tate. It certainly was not as stern as Lyle or Frazier, but a tough road.
I remember when the top 10 looked like this... It hasn't been anywhere near as good since, and probably never will again.
By the way, seeing that this article was written by Steve Farhood explains everything. He thought Lewis' draw with Holyfield was fair. atsch
No we did not go to the Williams fight. Williams, like you suggest, on top form figured to be a real handful for Lewis. There were quite a few respectable figures at least tipping Williams to give Lewis his hardest fight yet. But I must admit, I figured Lewis would win, and win well, but my smugness on that pick needs to be placed against me putting money on Mason to stop Lewis early. Lewis' career path was very solid, although IMO he did not fight enough, he did show continuous improvement, and always stepped up the quality of opposition when required. For instance KO1 of Jorge Dascola may look like a padding the record moment on Boxrec, but Dascola had just come of giving the then top rated Michael Dokes 11 tough rounds, in which I believe Dokes had to get off the floor to win. So for a tenth fight, Lewis was meeting seemingly very competitive opposition.
KO ratings for the period ending July 19 1994: 1: Michael Moorer 2: Lennox Lewis 3: Riddick Bowe 4: Herbie Hide 5: Oliver McCall 6: Larry Holmes 7: Frank Bruno 8: Lionel Butler 9: Larry Donald 10: Jorge Luis Gonzales 11: Tony Tucker 12: Henry Akinwande...
Not a bad list, but nothing like the 1991 one line-up though.. Especially, when the 1994 list includes Lionel Butler, Larry Donald, Jorge Gonzalez, oliver McCall, Herbie Hide and an ancient Holmes... In fact, I change my mind, this list sucks by comparison.
It got slightly better in due course: Boxing Illustrated/Digest for January 10 1996 (there is typo as it says 95...) 1: Riddick Bowe 38-1 (WBO Champ) 2: Mike Tyson 42-1 3: Lennox Lewis 28-1 4: George Foreman 73-4 (World Champ) 5: Michael Moorer 36-1 6: Frank Bruno 39-4 (WBC Champ) 7: Evander Holyfield 31-3 8: Oliver McCall 26-6 9: Bruce Seldon 33-3 (WBA Champ) 10: Alexandre Zolkin 24-2 11: Andrew Golota 12: Alex Stewart 13: Jorge Luis Gonzales 14: Henry Akinwande 15: Larry Holmes 16: Herbie Hide 17: Tommy Morrison 18: Jeremy Williams 19: Frans Botha (IBF Champ) 20: Tony Tucker 21: David Tua 22: Larry Donald 23: Tim Witherspoon 24: Axel Schultz 25: Shannon Briggs And it did improve further, with Bruno and Seldon being cleaned out, the Night of the Young Heavyweights coming along in March 96, and Terrible Tim having a memorable last Hurrah, that year...
Yep And Tyson would have shattered the jaw of the name in your avatar because we know what Old Kenny was like when faced with punchers
:good Yeah, as the 1990s progressed the depth of quality in the heavyweight division quickly disintegrated. This is why I say the decade is a seriously over-rated HW era. Things looked promising in 1991. But by 1994 - '95 the division lacked the substance.