Archie Moore vs. Bob Foster

Collins2000
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Re: Archie Moore vs. Bob Foster

Post by Collins2000 »

BroughtonRulesRefuge wrote:
Marciano Frazier wrote:There's a sort of "trickle-down" effect at work, here; guys who fought in Marciano's time period tend to have their resumes poo-pooed, while ones from Ali's are pretty much automatically accredited with having faced great opposition and having numerous big wins to prove their pedigree, even when this is not the case..
- Ali in particular gets a golden pass, though Rock has his fair share of blind fans also.

Rock takes heat for giving title rematches to aging Walcott and Charles after they gave him tough fights, and then criticized for the Moore bout. Doesn't seem to bother them that Ali faces Moore almost a decade later in building his career.

Liston around the same age as Walcott quits on his stool, so there's Ali giving him a rematch with zip criticism. Fans instead tout him up as Ali's biggest wins. Now, I do like that he gave Williams and Folley their shots, but at that phase in their careers, they were no longer relevant, particularly Williams. Patterson was a very unhealthy version of the knocked out former champ Charles. LaStarza and Cockell easily a class overall above London, Mildenberger and Cooper.

DaveV hates Ali too, BRR.

Expect an "I'll support your daft posts if you support my daft posts" offer via PM soon. It will be signed "John Galt" as we laughed him out of town 6 months ago and he had to come back under an alias.

:D
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Re: Archie Moore vs. Bob Foster

Post by BoxBuzz »

Correct Answer is: Archie Moore. And Thanks for playing!
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Re: Archie Moore vs. Bob Foster

Post by I Feel Fine »

I think Archie Moore would probably win, but its really a coin toss. Some fights are impossible to predict, and I think this is one. I would only say that they were the two best Light Heavyweight champions of all time.
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Re: Archie Moore vs. Bob Foster

Post by BrocktonBlockbuster49 »

Marciano Frazier wrote:
Ambling Alp wrote:Well, I'm glad you don't hold what Foster did above 175 against him when rating him as at 175. It really is common sense. I was staring to think that there a special "Bob Foster" law.
Foster could do things that were effective against guys at 175 that weren't against bigger fighters.
Most importantly, his power wasn't nearly as devastating against against bigger men. He also usually had less of a height and reach advantage against heavyweights than against light heavyweights.
This is really fairly simple. He wasn't able to use his major strengths against heavyweights. However, that doesn't diminish what he did at lightheavyweight. He had those strengths against lightheavyweights.
I agree that Foster couldn't "fall back on his crutch" against many heavyweights. However, my point is that he could against light heavyweights.

Some guys adapt better than others when moving up in weight.
Archie Moore was a great lightheavyweight as well. However, he lost to worse lightheavyweights than Foster had several close calls as well, was decked several times. A great lightheavyweight would have a serious chance against Moore.
At 175, a Foster-Moore fight is a pick 'em. If there is no weight limit, than I would go with Moore. That's my main point.
I don't know that it is quite that simple. An underlying point I am suggesting, here, is that it may be possible even at light heavyweight for an opponent with the right skills and know-how to exploit the same weaknesses that prevented Foster from succeeding at heavyweight. For example, as you discuss, Foster was heavily reliant on his height/reach and power (which both became much smaller advantages when he moved up in weight)- because of his heavyweight exploits, it seems evident that Foster did not have a great deal to fall back on when these advantages went away. Now, if he is facing someone. even at light heavyweight, who is very good at taking away opponents' height and dealing with their power, I think these heavyweight fights are very informative and do have what would have to be negative connotations about Foster's chances in such a match.
As for Folley-Williams-Machen vs Baker-Valdes-Satterfield (Which is not really on topic, but anyway):
The Williams-Satterfield fight is meaningless. Williams took the fight literally at the last minute. He didn't prepare at all for a fight. For all we know, he didn't have his normal trainer, his normal equipment, hadn't been in the gym for awhile, just ate a meal, etc. Even if he didn't have any of those problems, just the fact of taking a fight at the last moment you aren't going to be mentally prepared.
Satterfield was knocked by I believe 13 different guys. That's just embarrassing. Valdes and Baker also lost way too often. Take away Valdes win over a fading Charles and you don't have much. (This the part when Brocton lists heavyweights mediocre guys they beat and makes a big deal about it.) They weren't the best contenders of their era. They were are all overrated and apparently still are by some people.
Machen and Folley all had some good wins. Agree that Williams doesn't have a lot of quality wins but atleast he seldom lost to ordinary fighters like Satterfield, Baker, and Valdes often did. None of these three were legends but they were pretty good.
Which of Machen and Folley's wins distinguish their resumes as being better than Valdes' or Baker's? Machen's best wins would be: Hurricane Jackson (who Valdes also beat), Valdes (who was past his best), Mike DeJohn (who Valdes also beat), Doug Jones (who was a light heavyweight and who you would dismiss if he were on an early '50s heavyweight's resume) and what could be seen as a rather green Quarry. No, frankly, I don't believe Machen has a better resume than a Valdes or Baker- maybe not even as good. I admit that he does have something going for him, though, in that he didn't have as many ugly losses as some of the other guys being discussed here.
Folley, in turn, has maybe a little better resume, with wins over Machen, Cooper, Jones, Chuvalo, and a green Bonavena, and on the second tier Cleroux and DeJohn, but if you're adverse to ugly losses, he's not your man, as he also lost to the likes of Cooper, Jones, journeyman Young Jack Johnson, Johnny Summerlin and Moore KO victim Alejandro Lavorante. In large part, these guys seem to get credit for strength of resume by virtue of having fought in the same era as Ali. There's a sort of "trickle-down" effect at work, here; guys who fought in Marciano's time period tend to have their resumes poo-pooed, while ones from Ali's are pretty much automatically accredited with having faced great opposition and having numerous big wins to prove their pedigree, even when this is not the case. In reality- and you should agree with me on this if you objectively examine their records- guys like Folley, Machen and Williams (especially Williams) have pretty padded records and relatively shallow resumes when it actually comes to beating top fighters of their eras. On the other hand, guys like Valdes, Baker and Satterfield have uglier win-loss averages, but by and large this is a result of the fact that they were actually mixing it up with the other top guys on an extremely consistent basis, and in a sort of trade-off for the sparkling records their successors would boast, they do, in fact, have deep resumes (though people tend to scoff at this claim, at least in large part because it's the "Marciano era"). I absolutely believe, for example, that it is a reasonable claim that Jimmy Bivins (even an older one), Joe Baksi, Coley Wallace (twice), Rex Layne (three times), Nino Valdes (twice), and George Chuvalo- all wins of Bob Baker's- constitute a winning resume at least as strong as any of the late '50s through '60s guys we've brought up here.
There is a reason why Moore fought many heavyweights in the late 1950's but none of these three. (Though he found the time to fight journeyman heavyweight Howard King 5 times.)I don't think Moore would have beat them and he knew it.
Well, gee, Folley fought Howard King three times himself. Why do you assume that if a fight between Moore and a given top heavyweight didn't happen, it must be because Moore was doing the ducking and not the other way around? Have you looked through the kind of opposition Williams and Folley were fighting through most of the late '50s? You're not talking about some kind of dream team by a long shot, here; in fact, by and large, you're talking about a long string of ham-and-eggers, while Moore was at least facing gatekeepers at heavyweight and top contenders in defending his light heavyweight title.
Think about it: you're a young top heavyweight in the late '50s through early '60s, and there's a fellow around who is an extremely old light heavyweight, who already cleaned up on about half the top heavyweights of the previous generation and is still successfully defending his light heavyweight title and battering any heavyweights who will get in the ring with him. The guy is very old and relatively small, yet still extremely capable and dangerous. Think, then, from a risk/reward standpoint- if you should win, your win will be derided as picking on an extremely old smaller guy, and if you should lose, to much of the public it will be like a millstone around your neck to have been beaten by an extremely old small guy. Unless you're extremely confident you're a champ and can take him out (though even then it won't be good for your public image), the wise choice is to stay the heck away from the guy. Given Archie Moore's track record- the guy was fighting anyone and everyone from clear back in the mid-1940s into the mid-50s and was even fighting future Hall-of-Famers through the last three fights of his career- it seems extremely presumptuous and unfair to assume that Moore was ducking someone else.
As to whether he would have beaten them, I would be confident in Moore beating these guys at his best (c. 1949-56), but he was slowing up some by this stage. Even still, Moore did as well or better than these guys did against pretty well every common opponent you can muster and is superior in resume, consistency and longevity to all of them. Even into the '60s, Moore brutalized Alejandro Lavorante within a year of Lavorante's KO over Zora Folley. Certainly a fair examination of his career indicates that- at heavyweight, not in some general sense- Moore was a superior fighter overall to any of these three, all of whom were vulnerable to defeat by journeymen, gatekeepers, and lesser contenders within that division, while Moore was astoundingly dominant over the field of heavyweight journeymen and contenders, though he fell to the absolute cream of the crop.

unbelievable post :TU:
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Re: Archie Moore vs. Bob Foster

Post by dempseyfire »

Marciano Frazier wrote:
Ambling Alp wrote:Well, I'm glad you don't hold what Foster did above 175 against him when rating him as at 175. It really is common sense. I was staring to think that there a special "Bob Foster" law.
Foster could do things that were effective against guys at 175 that weren't against bigger fighters.
Most importantly, his power wasn't nearly as devastating against against bigger men. He also usually had less of a height and reach advantage against heavyweights than against light heavyweights.
This is really fairly simple. He wasn't able to use his major strengths against heavyweights. However, that doesn't diminish what he did at lightheavyweight. He had those strengths against lightheavyweights.
I agree that Foster couldn't "fall back on his crutch" against many heavyweights. However, my point is that he could against light heavyweights.

Some guys adapt better than others when moving up in weight.
Archie Moore was a great lightheavyweight as well. However, he lost to worse lightheavyweights than Foster had several close calls as well, was decked several times. A great lightheavyweight would have a serious chance against Moore.
At 175, a Foster-Moore fight is a pick 'em. If there is no weight limit, than I would go with Moore. That's my main point.
I don't know that it is quite that simple. An underlying point I am suggesting, here, is that it may be possible even at light heavyweight for an opponent with the right skills and know-how to exploit the same weaknesses that prevented Foster from succeeding at heavyweight. For example, as you discuss, Foster was heavily reliant on his height/reach and power (which both became much smaller advantages when he moved up in weight)- because of his heavyweight exploits, it seems evident that Foster did not have a great deal to fall back on when these advantages went away. Now, if he is facing someone. even at light heavyweight, who is very good at taking away opponents' height and dealing with their power, I think these heavyweight fights are very informative and do have what would have to be negative connotations about Foster's chances in such a match.
As for Folley-Williams-Machen vs Baker-Valdes-Satterfield (Which is not really on topic, but anyway):
The Williams-Satterfield fight is meaningless. Williams took the fight literally at the last minute. He didn't prepare at all for a fight. For all we know, he didn't have his normal trainer, his normal equipment, hadn't been in the gym for awhile, just ate a meal, etc. Even if he didn't have any of those problems, just the fact of taking a fight at the last moment you aren't going to be mentally prepared.
Satterfield was knocked by I believe 13 different guys. That's just embarrassing. Valdes and Baker also lost way too often. Take away Valdes win over a fading Charles and you don't have much. (This the part when Brocton lists heavyweights mediocre guys they beat and makes a big deal about it.) They weren't the best contenders of their era. They were are all overrated and apparently still are by some people.
Machen and Folley all had some good wins. Agree that Williams doesn't have a lot of quality wins but atleast he seldom lost to ordinary fighters like Satterfield, Baker, and Valdes often did. None of these three were legends but they were pretty good.
Which of Machen and Folley's wins distinguish their resumes as being better than Valdes' or Baker's? Machen's best wins would be: Hurricane Jackson (who Valdes also beat), Valdes (who was past his best), Mike DeJohn (who Valdes also beat), Doug Jones (who was a light heavyweight and who you would dismiss if he were on an early '50s heavyweight's resume) and what could be seen as a rather green Quarry. No, frankly, I don't believe Machen has a better resume than a Valdes or Baker- maybe not even as good. I admit that he does have something going for him, though, in that he didn't have as many ugly losses as some of the other guys being discussed here.
Folley, in turn, has maybe a little better resume, with wins over Machen, Cooper, Jones, Chuvalo, and a green Bonavena, and on the second tier Cleroux and DeJohn, but if you're adverse to ugly losses, he's not your man, as he also lost to the likes of Cooper, Jones, journeyman Young Jack Johnson, Johnny Summerlin and Moore KO victim Alejandro Lavorante. In large part, these guys seem to get credit for strength of resume by virtue of having fought in the same era as Ali. There's a sort of "trickle-down" effect at work, here; guys who fought in Marciano's time period tend to have their resumes poo-pooed, while ones from Ali's are pretty much automatically accredited with having faced great opposition and having numerous big wins to prove their pedigree, even when this is not the case. In reality- and you should agree with me on this if you objectively examine their records- guys like Folley, Machen and Williams (especially Williams) have pretty padded records and relatively shallow resumes when it actually comes to beating top fighters of their eras. On the other hand, guys like Valdes, Baker and Satterfield have uglier win-loss averages, but by and large this is a result of the fact that they were actually mixing it up with the other top guys on an extremely consistent basis, and in a sort of trade-off for the sparkling records their successors would boast, they do, in fact, have deep resumes (though people tend to scoff at this claim, at least in large part because it's the "Marciano era"). I absolutely believe, for example, that it is a reasonable claim that Jimmy Bivins (even an older one), Joe Baksi, Coley Wallace (twice), Rex Layne (three times), Nino Valdes (twice), and George Chuvalo- all wins of Bob Baker's- constitute a winning resume at least as strong as any of the late '50s through '60s guys we've brought up here.
There is a reason why Moore fought many heavyweights in the late 1950's but none of these three. (Though he found the time to fight journeyman heavyweight Howard King 5 times.)I don't think Moore would have beat them and he knew it.
Well, gee, Folley fought Howard King three times himself. Why do you assume that if a fight between Moore and a given top heavyweight didn't happen, it must be because Moore was doing the ducking and not the other way around? Have you looked through the kind of opposition Williams and Folley were fighting through most of the late '50s? You're not talking about some kind of dream team by a long shot, here; in fact, by and large, you're talking about a long string of ham-and-eggers, while Moore was at least facing gatekeepers at heavyweight and top contenders in defending his light heavyweight title.
Think about it: you're a young top heavyweight in the late '50s through early '60s, and there's a fellow around who is an extremely old light heavyweight, who already cleaned up on about half the top heavyweights of the previous generation and is still successfully defending his light heavyweight title and battering any heavyweights who will get in the ring with him. The guy is very old and relatively small, yet still extremely capable and dangerous. Think, then, from a risk/reward standpoint- if you should win, your win will be derided as picking on an extremely old smaller guy, and if you should lose, to much of the public it will be like a millstone around your neck to have been beaten by an extremely old small guy. Unless you're extremely confident you're a champ and can take him out (though even then it won't be good for your public image), the wise choice is to stay the heck away from the guy. Given Archie Moore's track record- the guy was fighting anyone and everyone from clear back in the mid-1940s into the mid-50s and was even fighting future Hall-of-Famers through the last three fights of his career- it seems extremely presumptuous and unfair to assume that Moore was ducking someone else.
As to whether he would have beaten them, I would be confident in Moore beating these guys at his best (c. 1949-56), but he was slowing up some by this stage. Even still, Moore did as well or better than these guys did against pretty well every common opponent you can muster and is superior in resume, consistency and longevity to all of them. Even into the '60s, Moore brutalized Alejandro Lavorante within a year of Lavorante's KO over Zora Folley. Certainly a fair examination of his career indicates that- at heavyweight, not in some general sense- Moore was a superior fighter overall to any of these three, all of whom were vulnerable to defeat by journeymen, gatekeepers, and lesser contenders within that division, while Moore was astoundingly dominant over the field of heavyweight journeymen and contenders, though he fell to the absolute cream of the crop.

I would strongly disagree Baker and Valdez have better resumes than Folley or Machen, but I agree with the general assertion that they were top, quality heavyweights and impressive wins for Moore.
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Re: Archie Moore vs. Bob Foster

Post by BrocktonBlockbuster49 »

I have Machen-Valdez II on film. Machen looks great, hits valdez with a huge left hook in the 8th Valdez falls against the ropes than machen explodes with a lightning fast 3-4 punch combo finishing it with a CRIPPLING left hook to the liver and Valdez drops like he been shot, in agony out cold holding his side. it took 5 minutes to get him off the canvas. This was late 1956.
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Re: Archie Moore vs. Bob Foster

Post by Robinson »

The fights I have of Valdes...he seems hot and cold. Very inconsistent.

Sometimes he looks good, big, strong and powerful and other times
he looks awkward, hesitant, easily out worked.
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Re: Archie Moore vs. Bob Foster

Post by BrocktonBlockbuster49 »

Robinson...what fights do you have of Valdes? I have him vs Baker I, Machen, Jackson, and Satterfield.

Also, what do you think marciano would have done to him if that fight had come off in 1955?
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Re: Archie Moore vs. Bob Foster

Post by Robinson »

I have him vs Brian London, Satterfield and a Hl of him against Baker.

I think the Rock would have stopped him. He seems to be a good sized
guy for the erar, but im confident Marciano would have caught up
with him after some good even rounds, then it would be a better
conditioned Marciano winning.

Would have been a good fight, while it lasted.
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Re: Archie Moore vs. Bob Foster

Post by Cojimar 1945 »

Is it possible that the late 1950s-early 1960s version of Harold Johnson was better than the younger version that fought Archie Moore? Putting aside the losses to Moore, Johnson has a knockout loss against Oakland Billy Smith and another kayo loss to Julio Mederos which was changed to a no-contest. However, Johnson did not suffer any terrible losses such as these from 1956 to 1964 despite facing some good opponents.
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Re: Archie Moore vs. Bob Foster

Post by Robinson »

Harold Johnson to me seems to be an extremely talented fighter
who could be inconsistent with some of his performances. I
think this was due to the fact that he took some bouts under
prepared.
Johnson of that era has a good chance of beating a tip top Moore,
but it seems that Moore did have that magic number that belonged
to Johsnon.
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Re: Archie Moore vs. Bob Foster

Post by BrocktonBlockbuster49 »

Is it possible that the late 1950s-early 1960s version of Harold Johnson was better than the younger version that fought Archie Moore? Putting aside the losses to Moore, Johnson has a knockout loss against Oakland Billy Smith and another kayo loss to Julio Mederos which was changed to a no-contest. However, Johnson did not suffer any terrible losses such as these from 1956 to 1964 despite facing some good opponents
Good question. I mean by 1960s on film Harold's reflexes started slowing down, but he was still tremendous fighter. I always thought his losses to moore in early 50s but his later wins in 1960s shows you just how talented both moore and the era was in the early 1950s. I have film of Harold in 1953 vs Charles and he looked phenominal, and he looked amazing vs moore, ahead on points..he also recorded some great wins in early 1950s Harold certainly in my judgement looked his best on film during the 53-54 period in my view and i have watched some great performances from him over doug jones in 62.... sure he did get caught by oakland smith in 55 but thats one bad loss, the mederos loss was a joke changed to a NC johnson was poisoned by an adulterated orange before the fight and they found barbituates in his urine afterward..something was wrong with him. archie moore did duck harold johnson in late 50s early 60s but that was because archie was getting old and knew he couldn beat him anymore, plus he had already fought him 5 times and used that as an exuse not to have to fight him anymore, but johnson was rated # 1 so long they finally stripped moore.

I would say no he was not a better fighter 1956-1964,
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Re: Archie Moore vs. Bob Foster

Post by BrocktonBlockbuster49 »

Harold Johnson was scheduled to fight a Young Sonny Liston in 1954, but got hurt in sparring and pulled out 4 days before the fight. Honestly, I cannot see how very green 7-0 Sonny would have won this fight, too much experience for Liston. Harold used to beat Liston up in the gym in mid 1950s before Liston got mature and developed
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Re: Archie Moore vs. Bob Foster

Post by Robinson »

He looks damned good in that era, though.

Re- the drugged orange...what happened to the
guy that 'spiked' his fruit ? Thats a pretty dangerous
thing to do to some one.
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