This will be countered, or equated to the level of Charles losing numerously in his later years.dempseyfire wrote: If Jones Jr had great boxing skills he would've never gotten beaten up by Glen Johnson.
Assuming, of course.
And by the time Charles was Jones's age he'd scored as many knockouts as Jones had total fights. The difference in mileage was extreme to say the least.nobudius wrote:This will be countered, or equated to the level of Charles losing numerously in his later years.dempseyfire wrote: If Jones Jr had great boxing skills he would've never gotten beaten up by Glen Johnson.
Assuming, of course.
I wouldn't pick Jones against any of those guys but to say he wouldn't have a remote chance of beating any of them...thats retarded. With the speed, reflexes and power he possessed in his prime, Jones would have a chance against ANY fighter in history from light heavy on down.Anyone who says Jones would have remotely had a chance against the likes of Tunney, Moore, Foster, Spinks, Conn, let alone Ezzard Charles is not only Jones' biggest nut hugger, he/she is practically retarded and wearing too dim of rose colored glasses and obviously ignorant of past eras.
I totally stand by the statement. Cerdan was a very good all around fighter but there was nothing extraordinary about him. I've watched enough fight film of Cerdan to come to my own conclusion that Jones at his best would have an easy time with him. Jones was unlike any fighter Cerdan had ever stepped foot in the ring with. Cerdan gets owned.As to the post that Cerdan gets "owned" by Jones wow some of the things you read on here are just too much.
Haha, ok. One guy was losing almost every round and ended up on the canvas looking like a dead man . . .I would say that was beaten up.Senya13 wrote:Charles was 34 years old in 1955. You can look it up yourself who he was losing to by that time. And "beaten up" is a word that cannot really describe the Glen Johnson fight, if you actually had taken time to watch some of it in slow motion, which you obviously never did. It can be seen at normal speed too, if you have a trained eye for such things and watch it without prejudice and without listening to commentators. Alas, most people can't do even such simple thing.
Also, Charles was fighting a lot of cruiserweights, not heavyweights by modern standard.
Well at least the first of the half the people are right...Diamond WEAPON wrote:Seriously, that's the truth...Goodnight, Irene wrote:"Jones, like Tyson somewhat, is one of the most underrated/overrated fighters I've seen in recent years. He is either a fighter wearing a cape that is faster than a speeding bullet, or a glass jawed hype job fighting can cans..." - Nobudius
Judge: Gerald Deming 74-78 | Judge: Dan McLellan 75-77 | Judge: Fred Steinwinder III 75-77dempseyfire wrote:One guy was losing almost every round
Compubox stats for punches that landed is most of the time wrong, but punches thrown is usually pretty close to reality. Johnson was throwing about 53 punches per round, if we exclude 1st round, he threw 50 punches per round, whereas light-heavyweight average, according to compubox is 54 punches per round. In 2nd and 3rd rounds Johnson was throwing about 43.5 punches per round after he found out he couldn't land much on Jones on the ropes despite throwing over 80 punches almost all of the power punches in the 1st round (my memory was wrong about 100+ punches).It doesn't matter how accurate Johnson was. He's never been particularly accurate vs anybody . . his game is to put on continual pressure and force the other guy to work. He was completely successful vs Jones Jr.
Fact: according to today's standards, anything from 175+ to 200 is a cruiserweight.And Charles was fighting Heavyweights . . maybe a bunch of guys who actually got in shape and weighed in the 190s but they were HWs.
Jones is naturally smaller than Charles too.And Jones got spanked by two 175lbers, not cruiserweights.
How much did it affect his skills, which he was supposed to use to outpoint the tomato cans he lost to? It had nothing to do with number of fights, but with natural slowing down and to Charles' boxing style, which consisted mostly of slugging at mid and close range, with not very good defense at these ranges (again based on film).And I see you completly disregarded by comment about number of fights and again went to age, which is made completly irellevant.
It has nothing to do with number of fights, because simple evaluation of careers of all time great fighters with, going by consensus, excellent skills, shows that absolute majority of them started getting worse and worse slightly past 30 years of age, after they began slowing down, because their boxing style did depend on speed, reflexes and coordination as much as it did for Jones. No matter how skillful and clever you are, when you are always a fraction of a second too late reacting to everything and not as precise with your moves anymore, you are going to have a lot less success in the ring, it's natural (exceptions can be counted on fingers of one hand).A fighter can be shot by 30 after 80 pro fights, whereas a safety first guy with half of that number (like Roy) can be doing ok through his mid 30s.
Roy had the benefit of boiling down (not sure when the weigh in time changed so won't comment on that). Diet and technology for doing this has vastly improved over the years.Senya13 wrote:1) Jones started at 154.
2) Jones was a natural super middleweight. Charles wasn't.
Number of fights does have something to do with it. The aging process does too. How well an athlete maintains their physical prowess when past their peak is to do with age, wear and tear (number of fights), lifestyle outside the sport, how they train, psychological outlook, their style (some styles e.g. swarmers tend to go down hill quicker) and the basic luck of the draw, which is genes.Senya13 wrote: It has nothing to do with number of fights, because simple evaluation of careers of all time great fighters with, going by consensus, excellent skills, shows that absolute majority of them started getting worse and worse slightly past 30 years of age, after they began slowing down, because their boxing style did depend on speed, reflexes and coordination as much as it did for Jones. No matter how skillful and clever you are, when you are always a fraction of a second too late reacting to everything and not as precise with your moves anymore, you are going to have a lot less success in the ring, it's natural (exceptions can be counted on fingers of one hand).
1) Jones' handspeed is coming from genetics, obviously.Ezzard wrote:Put these guys on a level playing field and take away Roy's pep pills and look at what both men proved they could do.
Then, why he did not fight them back in the 90s? Those are just SPECULATIONS that Jones would easily beat those guys...He really was not seriously matched or tested with the VERY BEST.dr_devious wrote:Micalcewski might have given Jones a go at LH, but I think Jones wins wide on points. Out of the others, Benn and McClellan and Jackson would have a punchers chance, the rest no chance against Joneselmersalsa wrote:Hopkins win was good, but nothing extraordinary...Plus BHop was NOT THE SAME FIGHTER THAT BEAT FELIX "TITO" TRINIDAD 8 years later. Jones vs Hopkins and Hopkins vs Tito were 2 different fighters.dr_devious wrote: He beat Hopkins and Toney, who were the next best of his era. Who did he duck that were better than Hopkins and Toney, and who could have beaten him?
There were excellent competition for Roy to face in the 90s: Nigel Benn, Dariuz Michaelweski, Gerald McClellan, Chris Eubanks and Michael Nunn...Do not forget Steve Collins, Tim Littles and Julian Jackson
Pernell Whitaker instead, fought the VERY BEST: Julio Cesar Chavez, Buddy McGirt, Felix "Tito" Trinidad, Oscar De La Hoya, Julio Cesar Vazquez, Rafael Pineda and guys like Harold Brazier and Anthony Jones![]()
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That is 2 guys for Jones, but 8 for Sweet Pea.
WOW, where do I start??Senya13 wrote:Had Charles been fighting today, because of the difference in nutrition and training methods, he'd be more of a natural cruiserweight, than light heavyweight.
Prime Jones was a 168-pounder, he bulked up to light heavyweight not because he couldn't make weight anymore, but seeking for new challenges. Charles was at his best at 175 (after the WWII) because he grew up naturally by that time.
There is little dependancy between number of fights and starting to go downhill, while there is a clear dependancy between that process and the age of 30-32 (possibly slightly later for heavyweights) for pretty much everyone, and in different sports too, not just in boxing.
I agree with you 100%, brotherdempseyfire wrote:Haha, ok. One guy was losing almost every round and ended up on the canvas looking like a dead man . . .I would say that was beaten up.Senya13 wrote:Charles was 34 years old in 1955. You can look it up yourself who he was losing to by that time. And "beaten up" is a word that cannot really describe the Glen Johnson fight, if you actually had taken time to watch some of it in slow motion, which you obviously never did. It can be seen at normal speed too, if you have a trained eye for such things and watch it without prejudice and without listening to commentators. Alas, most people can't do even such simple thing.
Also, Charles was fighting a lot of cruiserweights, not heavyweights by modern standard.
It doesn't matter how accurate Johnson was. He's never been particularly accurate vs anybody . . his game is to put on continual pressure and force the other guy to work. He was completely successful vs Jones Jr.
And Charles was fighting Heavyweights . . maybe a bunch of guys who actually got in shape and weighed in the 190s but they were HWs. Cruiserweight is a bogus division primarily for lazy light HWs who don't cut weight. And Jones got spanked by two 175lbers, not cruiserweights. And I see you completly disregarded by comment about number of fights and again went to age, which is made completly irellevant.
A fighter can be shot by 30 after 80 pro fights, whereas a safety first guy with half of that number (like Roy) can be doing ok through his mid 30s.
To be fair to Jones, he didnt get the chance to move into this arena because there werent too many Ezzard Charles' fighting between 1990-2005!Ezzard wrote:I totally believe Jones would give Charles or any other great LHW major problems but I can't take seriously anyone who picks Jones to win. At this level Roy is unproven.
He was a fabulous talent but he chose not to step into this arena.
Put these guys on a level playing field and take away Roy's pep pills and look at what both men proved they could do.
No, Jones is not better than Whittaker p4p but he dominated for more of the 90s. Whittakers peak years were late 80s-early90s.elmersalsa wrote:Then, why he did not fight them back in the 90s? Those are just SPECULATIONS that Jones would easily beat those guys...He really was not seriously matched or tested with the VERY BEST.dr_devious wrote:Micalcewski might have given Jones a go at LH, but I think Jones wins wide on points. Out of the others, Benn and McClellan and Jackson would have a punchers chance, the rest no chance against Joneselmersalsa wrote: Hopkins win was good, but nothing extraordinary...Plus BHop was NOT THE SAME FIGHTER THAT BEAT FELIX "TITO" TRINIDAD 8 years later. Jones vs Hopkins and Hopkins vs Tito were 2 different fighters.
There were excellent competition for Roy to face in the 90s: Nigel Benn, Dariuz Michaelweski, Gerald McClellan, Chris Eubanks and Michael Nunn...Do not forget Steve Collins, Tim Littles and Julian Jackson
Pernell Whitaker instead, fought the VERY BEST: Julio Cesar Chavez, Buddy McGirt, Felix "Tito" Trinidad, Oscar De La Hoya, Julio Cesar Vazquez, Rafael Pineda and guys like Harold Brazier and Anthony Jones![]()
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That is 2 guys for Jones, but 8 for Sweet Pea.
IN THE OTHER HAND, Whitaker, he fought the VERY, VERY BEST OF HIS TIME, and Jones is better than he?![]()
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