man wrote:the only thing in your post that i find questionable.Evander wrote:... ,Jones Jr was damn near unbeatable in all weight classes ...
just imagine jones versus ... tyson ... no, m'me, john
ruiz was the upper limit in terms of hws for rjj ... up
to cruiser i agree. above that ... ney ...
I understand what you are saying.
Perhaps I should take a moment to explain what I mean in reference to Roy Jones Jr and being almost unbeatable in any weight class.
Unbeatable just prior and post the John Ruiz fight.
Firstly I'm of the opinion that Jones could have beaten anyone from Cruiserweight all the way down at the time of the John Ruiz bout.
As for Heavyweights.
Lennox Lewis had two fights between June 2002 [Mike Tyson] and June 2003 [Vitali Klitschko].
Lennox clearly won the Tyson bout and struggled with Klitschko.
Evander Holyfield had two fights between December 2002 [Chris Byrd] and October 2003 [James Toney].
He lost both,one by stoppage.
Chris Byrd fought twice between December 2002 [Evander Holyfield] and September 2003 [Fres Oquendo].
Chris beat Evander quite handily but was given a run for his money against Fres as I remember it even though the scorecards didn't suggest so.
Others
David Tua and Hasim Rahman fought one another to a draw and Wladimir Klitschko was knocked out by Corrie Sanders both in the same month Roy Jones beat John Ruiz.
There were a number of boxers around at that time,some on the way up and some on the way down.
Weights
Look at the weights of the potential Roy Jones Heavyweight competition between 2002 - March of 2003 and slightly beyond.
This is a give or take in pounds on average between the above dates and not entirely accurate.
Lennox Lewis - 253
Evander Holyfield - 220
Chris Byrd - 212
Mike Tyson - 230
Vitali Klitschko - 247
David Tua - 248
Hasim Rahman - Tough Call,Weight Varied
James Toney - 190
Wladimir Klitschko - 247
Corrie Sanders - 230
All of the above boxers could have been considered as opponents for Roy Jones at Heavyweight be it for a belt or not.
The obvious question persists.
Why did Roy not fight one of the bigger challengers ?
For one thing Roy Jones was barely a decent size Light Heavyweight,you saw some of the monsters he was fighting at 175 most of whom made Jones look very small.
A Cruiserweight would have dwarfed Roy let alone a small Heavyweight.
It's boxing not suicide.
I believe Roy Jones had a higher skill level than almost all of the boxers listed above,but punch resistance is another thing.
When you can barely put your chin out against big Light Heavyweights,how you are going to get away with it against 230 pounders and up is beyond even me.
One shot will put you in intensive care no matter how many slick rounds you boxed previously.
I think Jones went as far as he could possibly go without seriously endangering his life,I believe Roy could have challenged the bigger weights and done very well.
Still the power was too great between himself and the opponents,a 175 guy taking shots from natural 230's is a 55 pound weight advantage.
Those are among the reasons I said " Jones Jr was damn NEAR unbeatable in all weight classes".