Shortest primes ever
-
IronKidDynamite
- Heavyweight

- Posts: 109
- Joined: 28 Jul 2004, 09:19
Shortest primes ever
Pipino Cuevas and Mike Tyson seemed to have the shortest primes ever.
Name some other boxers who were great for a short period of time then their primes ended and they went into oblivion.
Name some other boxers who were great for a short period of time then their primes ended and they went into oblivion.
-
Guest
- Heavyweight

Re: Shortest primes ever
I wouldn't call Pipinoes 4 year and 12 title defences reign as world Welterweight champion as being amongst the shortest primes ever!.... Cuevas had one of the longest reigns amongst the Welterweights and while he was still young when he hit the slide he was world champion at just 18 years and 7 months old when he won the title.IronKidDynamite wrote:Pipino Cuevas and Mike Tyson seemed to have the shortest primes ever.
Name some other boxers who were great for a short period of time then their primes ended and they went into oblivion.
There are many other fighters who had very much shorter peaks and reigned for far less time, ....Leon Spinks, Al Singer, Randolph Turpin, John H Stracey, Barry Mcguigan, Mark Breland, Matthew Hilton.... all these fighters had comparatively short title reignes and far shorter 'peaks' than had been expected of them.
-
dempseyfire
- Heavyweight

- Posts: 5534
- Joined: 29 Oct 2003, 22:56
Exactly. The only way a fighter's prime can be truly cut short is if they either have a long layoff or go through a Taylor-Chavez type war which just takes the fight out of their bodies.tonyevs wrote:Shortest primes could be classed as just not being good enough to hold onto the title for long enough, or just lucky to win it in the beginning..
How the hell did Tyson suddenly 'get out' of his prime for the Douglas fight?? Cause he was having woman problems and had changed trainers??? Give me a break.
-
Johnny Carwash
- Heavyweight

- Posts: 59
- Joined: 28 May 2004, 20:10
There are a lot of champions who seemingly have had the talent to reign for a considerable time but do not due to an unexpected loss etc.... Barry Mcguigan comes to mind... many thought he would be champion for quite a while till he was upset by Cruz and then his career was never quite the same again. Often holding onto world titles is harder than winning them...... or rather it used to be before all these fake titles.... back in the days when most World title fights were just that.... hard competitive fights...
-
Sweet Scientist
- Heavyweight

- Posts: 815
- Joined: 13 Oct 2003, 18:19
Yes, Meldrick Taylor had his prime beaten out of him in that fight...if only he would have tried to use his incredible hand speed and reflexes as a boxer instead of a slugger...what a sad, sad waist of incredible talent...he could have been great...as it was, he still beat Chavez...Richard Steele should have been reprimanded for stopping a fight with 2 seconds left...not enought time for Chavez to cross the ring and throw another punch!dempseyfire wrote:
The only way a fighter's prime can be truly cut short is if they either have a long layoff or go through a Taylor-Chavez type war which just takes the fight out of their bodies.
-
Eric the Viking
- Heavyweight

- Posts: 1354
- Joined: 03 Apr 2003, 21:40
-
knockout artist
- Heavyweight

- Posts: 1482
- Joined: 03 Sep 2003, 13:18
-
Eric the Viking
- Heavyweight

- Posts: 1354
- Joined: 03 Apr 2003, 21:40
-
Guest
- Heavyweight
