No one's ever called me an Ali fan before, much less an Ali shill. Here's how it's spelled, Gran...
O-B-J-E-C-T-I-V-I-T-Y. Can you say it?
Not an unreasonable response...You could certainly argue that point. Maybe it would be better if I simply asked you how you thought the fight proceeded after the knockdown and did YOU happen to see anything that seemed the least bit out of the ordinary. I thought there was a bit of a rally worthy of notice but others like granberry did not see it that way at all. Like you say Joe is a guy who usually wore down his opponents so that if they took a shot like that by round 15 it ought to do the trick.DaveV17 wrote:BoxBuzz wrote:
And of course many of us Ali "shills" think that Ali's performance in the wake of that devastating left hook is almost equal in it's remarkable nature as the KD itself. That shot would have put almost any other heavyweight in history both DOWN and OUT.
IMHO.
I am trying to remember a fight in which Joe Frazier knocked out an opponent with one left hook. I'm sure it happened but I can't think of any. I remember Ron Stander getting hit time after time with left hooks and I haven't checked, but I don't think he even went down. Joe was a great fighter but from memory he wore people down, I don't remember him knocking them out with one shot.
The guy had 15 knockouts in 77 fights. I can understand KO percentages not meaning much, but I think that figure means something. He scored no KO's in any of his Light Heavyweight title fights. And Conn was a Light Heavyweight, so compared to natural Heavyweights I can't imagine him being a big puncher in the first place. And he wasn't a former Light Heavyweight, mind you, he was still fighting Louis under the Light Heavyweight limit, reducing his power even further. At least other Light Heavyweight champions generally bulked up when they fought Heavyweights.Seamus wrote:Billy Conn wasen't a big puncher, but he certainly wasen't feather fisted either. In the earlier eras you just can't judge fighters by their KO percentage, because their are too many intangibles to consider. For one thing, Conn regularly fought solid opposition, so their's no way he'd have an impressive number of KO's.
"Panties in a snit" - WTF?? Is it even physically possible to have an article of clothing 'in a state of agitated irritation'?granberry wrote:The currently active members of the Religion of Ali (buzz, Irene, ifeelfine) have their panties in a snit.
What a pathetic repository of drivel the internet is.I Feel Fine wrote:That still doesn't make him a good puncher. And the four guys he knocked out weren't exactly great fighters.
More mindless gibberish from ifeelfine.I Feel Fine wrote:
Conn was a weak puncher, and the fact that he was at the Light Heavyweight limit and fighting among Heavyweights only made him an even weaker puncher by comparison.
granberry wrote:ONLY members of the Religion of Ali are ignorant of the fact that "judges" automatically declared Ali the "winner" of any fight that he was not knocked out in.
ONLY members of the Religion of Ali
don't know that one "judge" gave Jimmy Young THREE ROUNDS out of fifteen.
Ali could not lose a decision.
Sugar Ray Leonard could not lose a decision.
Leonard was knocked down TWICE by Hearns and got a "draw."
If Leonard had knocked Hearns down twice would Hearns have gotten a draw?
Swallow your horsesh*t, Religion of Ali members,
and whine in agony when anyone points out the raw horsesh*t that your hero's career is comprised of.
p4p1 wrote:y should we have to put up with this bloke
John Galt wrote:Ali certainly never had a close fight with Ken Norton and he won very few rounds. Norton dominated Ali in the ring, yet Ali got 2 decisions over the deserving Norton. There were others fights for Ali such as Young, Shavers, Spinks 2, Frazier 2, Evangelista, that Ali would have lost if he was not Ali.
Ali was allowed to hold and stall throughout his career. He was not penalized for those tactics as other fighters would have been. He was an attraction that bought people to boxing who normally would not have watched boxing so he was allowed to play the game by different rules. The favortism shown to Ali affects his legacy.