Who is nat fleischer>

Discussion in 'Classic Boxing Forum' started by fg2227, Nov 8, 2007.


  1. LeonMcS

    LeonMcS The Mayor of Kronkton Full Member

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    Was the editor of the Ring for something like 60 years? The other guys will know better than me.
     
  2. Lampley

    Lampley Boxing Junkie banned

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    Because he was one of the few who saw virtually all of the major HWs from the early 20th Century, his opinions carry a lot of weight.

    I appreciate his exprience, but having followed various opinions from him over the years, I think his perspective is overvalued. He struck me as a romantic, just like Sugar and the rest of those guys.
     
  3. hobgoblin

    hobgoblin Active Member Full Member

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    I completely agree with teh second paragraph. His opinion does NOT carry a lot of weight for me but I do acknowledge all the fights he has seen. Just seeing a lot of fights doesn't mean you have the insight, impartiality, etc. to make great analysis. There are fighters out there as analysts who have lots of experience but lack in others and make sketchy judgments (according the fans - for me, Foreman was one of my favorites but he is just an example). Same goes for Nat Fleischer. He definitely had an agenda that skewed his analysis. I am also not sure how pleased I am with his tampering of Clay-Liston II as he was not a time keeper, a judge, or a ref.
     
  4. DavidPayne

    DavidPayne ***.boxingwriter.co.uk Full Member

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    Nat is the godfather.

    Didn't like his piece on Ali in 1971, available on the Ring website. Very ivory tower.
     
  5. ChrisPontius

    ChrisPontius March 8th, 1971 Full Member

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  6. hobgoblin

    hobgoblin Active Member Full Member

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    that is precisely what i was referring too! ;)
     
  7. janitor

    janitor VIP Member Full Member

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    As others have said he tends to favour fighters from earlier periods.

    It must be stresed however that he brings a unique and valuable perspective to the table. He also provides a thread of continuity.
     
  8. mr. magoo

    mr. magoo VIP Member Full Member

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    I find it shameful that Fleischer never had the opportunity to rate an all time great like Chuck Wepner.
     
  9. fg2227

    fg2227 Guest

    Is it true that he met john l sullivan? Thats incredible if true
     
  10. janitor

    janitor VIP Member Full Member

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    He saw the fight of the century so he nearly made it into the Wepner era.
     
  11. janitor

    janitor VIP Member Full Member

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    One thing that you must give Fleischer credit for whatever you think of him is being even handed between black and white in an era when it wasnt fashionable.

    It is down to him in no small part that great black fighters in the lower weight classes, from the early 20th century, like Barbados Joe Walcott were legends later on.
     
  12. Lampley

    Lampley Boxing Junkie banned

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    Exactly. It's a baby and bathwater situation.

    You don't want to dismiss Nat completely, yet you must avoid ever using his opinion to say Fighter A is better than Fighter B. He's great for detail of the respective older eras, but qualitative assessments of fighters are best made without his opinion, IMO.
     
  13. Lampley

    Lampley Boxing Junkie banned

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    Excellent point. He was a huge fan of Jack Johnson, which at least provided a little counter-information to the mainstream opinions of him. If nothing else, Geoffrey Ward leans on him a bit in the excellent Unforgivable Blackness.
     
  14. TBooze

    TBooze Obsessed with Boxing Full Member

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    Fleischer was also a very bitter and petty man who held a grudge well, and although he made The Ring very influential, but he also help ruin it. I guess the old saying is true:

    Total power corrupts, totally.