Idisagree wrote:elmersalsa wrote:Idisagree wrote:
Yea right, Pedroza only fought bums or way past their prime like Olivares. Pedroza considered a top 10 in featherweight in his class, not in my book. There are plenty of fighters that I will rank ahead of him. He makes a top 20, possibly but no way top ten. Just look at his resume. Even Trinidad at 147 fought better competition than Pedroza at feather. I supposed if Trinidad would’ve stayed at 147 destroying bums he would’ve been considered better than Robinson, according to your opinion. The quality of the fighter is often measure by who he fought and Pedroza did not fight anyone of consequence. Olivares is the best name in his resume but he was way past his prime. Pedroza was the one doing the ducking not the other way around. Look at the others resumes they were fighting each other, and Pedroza was hand picking his opponents. Like I said before Pedroza’s career is very similar to that of Serrano.
Salvador Sanchez, Willie Pep, Sandy Sadler, Marco A. Barrera, Pacquiao, Saldivar, Ramos, Kid Chocolate, Morales, Mcgovern, were better fighters than Pedroza and a few others could easily be ranked ahead of Pedroza.
You claim that Tito and Oscar were sooooooooo overrated, but what that makes of Pedroza’s career that fought way lesser competition, and that only stayed on one weight class hand picking bum to fight? Then Pedroza’s career is even more overrated. You can’t have it both ways no matter how you look at it.
It seems to me that you have never seen Eusebio Pedroza fight. That is the first thing I see. Second, You said that Tito at welter had better opponents than Pedroza? I got to question that. Rocky Lockdrige, Patrick Ford, and Juan LaPorte were excellent challengers. Pedroza beat Lockdrige twice, one time in Lockridge's backyard being behind on points. Lockridge became world champion after that. Some people said that he got robbed in a fight with the great Julio Cesar Chavez. I have never seen the fight, but it was controversial decision in favor of Chavez in his prime. LaPorte beat Lockridge and also became world champion. He gave the great Salvador Sanchez and Chavez a run for their money when they fought him. I BELIEVE that Ford got ROBBED in the fight with Sanchez. Pedroza not only beat Ford, he knocked him out.
Pedroza was not Ray Leonard in handpicking opponents. He openly shouted for a match with Sanchez. He openly shouted for a match with the great Azumah Nelson. I saw it on TV. He called them. I considered Pedroza as one of the MUST DUCKED FIGHTERS EVER. He is reminding me of Mike McCallum, Aaron Pryor, Shane Mosley, Antonio Margarito, Paul Williams and Celestino Caballero, now. Nobody wanted a piece of him. Sanchez opted to fight the great Alexis Arguello, a fighter that was slowing down in his abilities, than to face a tough and skilled opponent like Pedroza to see who was the real featherweight world champion. He was already planning a fight with Arguello instead before he died.
Pedroza is an all-time top 10 great featherweight no matter how you look at it. His record speaks for itself. He was champion for 7 years, made 20 title defenses, 10 of them in opponents backyards. Nobody has ever come close in that. That is a WORLD RECORD, my man. To defend a title in some opponent backyard is very hard. It requires a lot of concentration and preparation. Pedroza did it excellently.
You could say that Sanchez was a better champion because of his resume against top notch opposition that Pedroza did not had the opportunity to show his skills against the very best. I could live with that. But Sanchez NEVER PROVED IT IN THE RING for a fight with Pedroza. HE NEVER PROVED IT. The great Roberto Duran proved it with Esteban De Jesus. Leonard proved it against the great Thomas Hearns. The great Muhammad Ali proved it against Ernie Terrell. The great Joe Frazier proved it against Ali. And the great Carlos Monzon proved it against Rodrigo Valdez. The great Ezzard Charles proved it with the great Joe Louis. You see the point?
You could say that this featherweight and that other featherweight were better than Pedroza. I could live with that. But Tito nor Oscar cannot be seen in the top 10 all-time in none of boxing's ORIGINAL WEIGHT CLASSES. If they are not featured in the top 10 in any of boxing's ORIGINAL weight classes, I cannot see them in the list of 100 greatest pound per pound fighters, either.