What if Frazier and Ali fought in the 60s?

Discussion in 'Classic Boxing Forum' started by VG_Addict, Oct 31, 2012.


  1. Senor Pepe'

    Senor Pepe' Boxing Junkie banned

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    1967

    Yank Durham said Joe Frazier would be ready for Cassius Clay in two-years.

    Yank said, Joe was still learning, right after Joe 'chopped up' George Chuvalo on July 19, 1967.



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  2. yancey

    yancey Active Member Full Member

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    Agree 100% with this post.
     
  3. PhillyPhan69

    PhillyPhan69 Obsessed with Boxing Full Member

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    I hate to nit pick pepe...But do you have a source for this information????
     
  4. Stevie G

    Stevie G Obsessed with Boxing Full Member

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    If Ali had n't have been exiled,the earliest Frazier would have been competitive would have been 1968 or '69.
     
  5. PhillyPhan69

    PhillyPhan69 Obsessed with Boxing Full Member

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    Oh he wouldn't have been just competitive...he woulda whooped em' again!
     
  6. round15

    round15 Boxing Addict Full Member

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    I can agree with you somewhat Mr. Magoo.

    I think Joe has a harder time with the Ali of 67 but at the same time we're talking about the Joe who didn't bust his ankle singing with this group and the cataracts weren't as pronounced as they'd become after FOTC.

    Joe moved better in the late 60's, stayed low and worked the body better. I still think Joe catches up with the same Ali who fought Folley and Williams but Ali chances of winning are greater.
     
  7. Bill Butcher

    Bill Butcher Erik`El Terrible`Morales Full Member

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    Clear UD to Muhammad Ali, very hard & competitive fight but he just outlands Joe 3 to 1 anytime there is any distance between them & Joe doesn`t cut him off & corner him anywhere near as much as he did the slower footed, less stamina version of 1971... hell Joe had trouble cornering the 74 version for 12 rounds once Ali had shaken off the ring rust, the 60s version was far superior when employing that strategy.

    Ali W15 UD Frazier
     
  8. PowerPuncher

    PowerPuncher Loyal Member Full Member

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    Ali probably wins a close decision, maybe giving a rematch, where he wins wider. There's the possibility Frazier walks through fire again to pull off a FOTC win for Ali to adapt to win the ud
     
  9. Bill Butcher

    Bill Butcher Erik`El Terrible`Morales Full Member

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    Much better ?... sure he was... & Ali was much better in 71 than he was in the 60s too, right ? :rofl
     
  10. Stevie G

    Stevie G Obsessed with Boxing Full Member

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    :good
     
  11. Stevie G

    Stevie G Obsessed with Boxing Full Member

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    Frazier and Norton would still have been the 1967 Ali's toughest opponents had he met prime versions around that time.
     
  12. Titan1

    Titan1 Boxing Junkie Full Member

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    Ali wins 10 out of 15 rounds for a unanimoud decision, but Frazier would be more than a live underdog.
     
  13. HOUDINI

    HOUDINI Boxing Addict Full Member

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    If you look at fight one what turned the fight to Fraziers favor was Ali not having the legs to continue outboxing Joe. Instead he stayed on the ropes and gave rounds away culminating in that huge hook in round 11 and the hook that put him down in round 15. This was IMO prime Frazier...he never was so pumped for a fight...extremely motivated and he was in top condition at 26 years of age. Ali although still not yet 30 was 6 months shy from a 4 year layoff. He was obviously not the fighter he was prior to that layoff. This cannot be dsputed.

    My feeling is a fight with Ali in say 68 or 69 Frazier would be in the ring with an Ali we never saw...prime Ali at his absolute best. Ali would be boxing at high speed for 15 rounds...moving all that time. Frazier with that hook would def have his moments but he would miss many more shots than in fight one.

    Ali wins the first 5-6 rounds...Joe comes on and it's back and forth the next 5-6...however Ali closes well with all the punches Frazier had received doing there damage. Ali by U decision....9-6 in rounds.
     
  14. choklab

    choklab cocoon of horror Full Member

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    Too much is made of Ali hitting an "even higher peak" had he been active in 1968 and 1969. Muhammad fought only once in 1964, twice in 1965, five times in 1966 and twice in 1967 the final year before his exile. Without his political problems Ali possibly would have only fought 2 times in 1966 a year that built him up into a peak because he was so active. If anything he peaked then. With a two fight year his peak would have been delayed some, perhaps he could have had less of an easy time against Terrell? After all muhammads preparation for the Terrell showdown could not have been better, still razor sharp off a 6 title fights 12 month schedule compared with Ernnies one fight in 13 months.

    I believe Frazier would have been due a shot about 1968 at the latest and by then Frazier still represented a stronger test than any of Ali's previous challengers. ALI was so commanding against Folley that he almost appeard lackadaisical, happy to give rounds away in order for zora to expose himself later on. Frazier would have taken advantage of an ALi in that mood. The Ali he did fight in 71 started quite fast, faster than he had against any earlier chalengers, and yet Joe still had what it took to overcome Ali at full flight. Remember the 15 rounds with bonnavena was excelent prep for Ali to shake off rust.

    I think Frazier was good enough to take Ali in 1968. He was always good enough to take one of a 3 fight serries off Ali no matter when they fought.
     
  15. Anubis

    Anubis Boxing Addict

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    Joe wouldn't have been ready to challenge him until 1969. Chuvalo's made it pretty clear how much exile took away from Ali's athleticism [supported by Patterson's concurring opinion].

    For me, the irony of Manila is that Muhammad stopped Joe precisely because he WAS past his best, needing to punch it out because the legs weren't there anymore.

    In 1969, Ali sticks, runs and clinches his way to a decision which is hectic for him and frustrating for Joe. However, this is easily the most competitive defense Ali's had, and Frazier becomes the first [and possibly only] challenger to earn a second World Title challenge of Ali. It's entirely possible that Ali-Frazier II in 1970 or 1971 would be the more anticipated event, and I don't see Ali-Frazier I in 1969 physically depleting Smoke as the FOTC did.