The reason they aren't any good HWs right now weighing 190-220 ( with the big exceptions of Chris Byrd, Monte Barrett and if he was fighting Juan Carlos Gomez) is that they are too lazy to get in proper shape. If Rahman, Tua, Kirk Johnson, James Toney had the discipline and work ethic of the old schoolers, they'd all be under 220. Moorer in the rematch came into the fight weighing 225, and this is a guy who should be weighing 210. Holyfield beat many of his opponents on heart and conditioning and not skill. Moorer showed in the 1st fight and parts of the 2nd he could outbox Evander, but Holyfield outgutted him.alrightjim wrote:Hi Dempseyfire. There is no reason for assuming that. There are dozens of boxing message boards and I find that this is what drives people's passions. Before there were message boards or computers, my father's generation used to brag ugly on Marciano. They revered him, they said, "Man, the Rock, he sure is some kind of person killer." Even as a tiny boy I winced at such remarks. So the good users of this board are not above this type of thinking, neither are the two of us. Every person can let emotive agendas taint their fundamental assessments of anything, but particularly prizefighting.Dempseyfire: Of course they're people who overtly romantisize Marciano, some for ethnic and racial reasons. But let's assume the good users of this board are beyond any of that.
I will be the first to say Holyfield has a better resume then Marciano.
That's good, because he does.
But I think saying "oh. b/c Holyfiled beat 235 lb Bowe, he'd surely beat 185 ;b Rocky" is really bad comparison.
I agree. But I never said this, and if any other person did say or imply this, i agree with you. I think Holyfield beats Rocky because he's better than Rocky, and being bigger and more skilled are aspects of why he is better.
Rocky may have never beaten a good big HW, but what great small HW did Holyfield ever beat??
There are no great small heavyweights today, as being big in this era is a bedrock prerequisite to being great. Tyson is really only 5-10. Sure, he's stout, but I would call him a small heavy, and Holyfield beat him twice.
One of Holyfield's big attributes was that he could outspeed and importantly out-stamina his bigger and more bulky opponents, thus his success vs Lewis, Foreman, Tyson, Moorer 11.
Sorry, Dempseyfire, but Moorer came out of the Kronk at lightheavy. He had murderous power at that weight. He was a smallish heavy, by any standards.
Charles was truly great at lightheavy, perhaps the best that ever lived, but he would have his hands full with Michael Spinks, forget Tyson or Bowe or Foreman! We'll just have to agree to disagree on this one. Charles would have a great plan for the young Tyson, but like Tyson used to say, they all got a plan, until they get hit. Charles had a suspect chin, to put it politely.I think on the other end I believe a 195 lb Ezzard Charles beats Tyson, Foreman, Bowe worse then Holy ever did.
While Marciano's style would serve him bad against guys like Holmes or Liston, Evander would also find more trouble in the era of 195 lb HWs who came to fight for 15 rounds.
Not because these heavyweights were smaller, but just because they were generally better. But Marciano would have had more trouble, too, which is why he really retired. Looming on the horizon were Patterson, Williams, Liston, Folley, Machen. And they were young and starving for success. I wouldn't wish that murderer's row on the Rock.
Holyfield took a hard right from Cooper, but he was never really in trouble in that fight. Coop had no bottom, all Holyfield had to do is hang tough and let the rounds bring Cooper to him. As far as Toney goes, why not say Louis couldn't handle Marciano. That was an old and spent Louis. Fighting to pay off his tax debt. That was an old Holyfield. The Holyfield of 1990 knocks Toney cold.Hell, minus your Hepatitis C instance in the 3rd Bowe fight, Holyfield was in the greatest trouble of his career vs little Bert Cooper and James Toney. The era and size thing works both ways.
Thanks for the post, Dempseyfire.
I admit Marciano is tough to judge. 49-0 but not against the toughest of opponents. I do believe the late 50s crew of Machen, Williams, and def. Liston would be his toughest tests and some would stain that perfect record. But I think as much as some people raise him up too high they are others who put him down too low.