Mike Tyson vs Joe Louis

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Post by dempseyfire »

JohnRuiz wrote:
Tantum wrote:Lots of reasons...

A) He was the champ, so he wouldn't be taking the fight on 2-3 weeks notice... So he would have been in good shape (210)

B) Holmes had every tool in the book, and if Buster Douglas could beat a "prime" Mike Tyson, Holmes would have stomped the hell out of him.
The Tyson who fought Buster Douglas wasn't exactly prepared. Even the cornermen didn't take it seriously by not even bring an endswell (spelling). People claim Tyson was in his prime but I think it's pretty obvious he wasn't his real self for that fight. And I am by no means a Tyson nuthugger.

Holmes was actually doing quite well against Tyson before he took a brutal right hand. Why couldn't that have happened against a younger Holmes?
Maybe b-c he was 38 years old, undertrained, and had lost much in reflexes and overall body strength. For someone saying that a 23 yr old 222 lb Tyson was out of his ´prime´ but then bringing up the Holmes fight . . that´s pretty contradictory.

Wasn´t his real self? How not . . b-c he was getting his ass beat? Douglas fought an absolutely perfect fight, double jabbing, tying Mike up, beating Mike on the inside exchanges . . no-one before that had boxed Tyson so well and sat on their punches (showing tons of balls) like Douglas did. Tucker and Biggs danced around and never set themselves on a disciplined fight plan . . Tubbs was too fat . . .Berbick couldn´t box to begin with. Tyson came out against Douglas fast and with lots of jabs but Douglas never let Mike get settled. He was 23, he was in shape, and he got his ass kicked. If you listen to his corner in between rounds they were actually giving Mike exact correct advice. Tyson just couldn´t do what he wanted to do. Too much is made of the condom ice pack. So they were a little unprepared. No-one and their grandmother thought that fight was gonna last 3 rounds . . . .
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Post by Lexus »

dempseyfire wrote:
JohnRuiz wrote:
Tantum wrote:Lots of reasons...

A) He was the champ, so he wouldn't be taking the fight on 2-3 weeks notice... So he would have been in good shape (210)

B) Holmes had every tool in the book, and if Buster Douglas could beat a "prime" Mike Tyson, Holmes would have stomped the hell out of him.
The Tyson who fought Buster Douglas wasn't exactly prepared. Even the cornermen didn't take it seriously by not even bring an endswell (spelling). People claim Tyson was in his prime but I think it's pretty obvious he wasn't his real self for that fight. And I am by no means a Tyson nuthugger.

Holmes was actually doing quite well against Tyson before he took a brutal right hand. Why couldn't that have happened against a younger Holmes?
Maybe b-c he was 38 years old, undertrained, and had lost much in reflexes and overall body strength. For someone saying that a 23 yr old 222 lb Tyson was out of his ´prime´ but then bringing up the Holmes fight . . that´s pretty contradictory.

Wasn´t his real self? How not . . b-c he was getting his ass beat? Douglas fought an absolutely perfect fight, double jabbing, tying Mike up, beating Mike on the inside exchanges . . no-one before that had boxed Tyson so well and sat on their punches (showing tons of balls) like Douglas did. Tucker and Biggs danced around and never set themselves on a disciplined fight plan . . Tubbs was too fat . . .Berbick couldn´t box to begin with. Tyson came out against Douglas fast and with lots of jabs but Douglas never let Mike get settled. He was 23, he was in shape, and he got his ass kicked. If you listen to his corner in between rounds they were actually giving Mike exact correct advice. Tyson just couldn´t do what he wanted to do. Too much is made of the condom ice pack. So they were a little unprepared. No-one and their grandmother thought that fight was gonna last 3 rounds . . . .
I admit it sounded a bit contradictory but my point is that since one right hand practically ended the Holmes vs Tyson fight, there would at least be a chance that he'd land that right hand against a younger Holmes. Another thing that leads me to believe Holmes would lose is his lack of punching power. How can he hurt Tyson with punches that didn't even drop Ken Norton?

Regarding Tyson vs Douglas: Do you really think he was in shape? Sure he weighed the same as he'd done for previous fights but I think he looked disinterested and actually, a bit soft around the midsection. Add marital problems, the loss of close friends and overconfidence and I think you'll realize Tyson wasn't in for it that particular night. This is perhaps unfair to Buster Douglas, who fought the fight of his life but when you look at his career before and after the upset, I feel pretty confident saying that he just got hold of a bad Tyson.
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Post by Tantum »

Holmes got up from a much bigger punch against Shavers, and knocked Shavers out.

When did Tyson ever face someone w/ speed, power, ability, and mental toughness?

Oh yeah, Douglas, Holyfield, and Lewis.
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Post by Lexus »

Tantum wrote:Holmes got up from a much bigger punch against Shavers, and knocked Shavers out.

When did Tyson ever face someone w/ speed, power, ability, and mental toughness?

Oh yeah, Douglas, Holyfield, and Lewis.
But Shavers didn't have the chin of Tyson nor the handspeed. He had a bigger punch, for sure, but Tyson used combinations and a good stiff jab to set up his punches while Shavers just stalked his opponent in an effort to land the big right hand. In my opinion, if Shavers could do it, Tyson could as well.
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Post by barry »

It's pretty funny to see a few clueless people try to make an argument that the Tyson who fought Douglas was prime because he was 23. Hell Pipino Cuevas was past his prime at 21, so was Terry McGovern! In fact, there have been several fighters that burned out early! Fernando Vargas is a recent example. As to Holmes getting up from Shavers, true he did get up, but unlike Tyson, Shavers was on fumes if the fight went past four rounds, kind of like the present day Tyson, and Shavers had no where near the speed, accuracy, or ability that Tyson did. In Holmes' own words, he said that he felt Shavers' punch and it hurt like hell, but he did not feel Tyson's punch, why, because he was out and completely in la-la land. What are the ages of those that argue post 1988 Tyson was prime Tyson, humor me! If Renaldo Snipes could do it, a young Tyson certainly could!
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Post by wouter »

Anyone that picks Tyson over Louis is crazy
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Post by dempseyfire »

barry wrote:It's pretty funny to see a few clueless people try to make an argument that the Tyson who fought Douglas was prime because he was 23. Hell Pipino Cuevas was past his prime at 21, so was Terry McGovern! In fact, there have been several fighters that burned out early! Fernando Vargas is a recent example. As to Holmes getting up from Shavers, true he did get up, but unlike Tyson, Shavers was on fumes if the fight went past four rounds, kind of like the present day Tyson, and Shavers had no where near the speed, accuracy, or ability that Tyson did. In Holmes' own words, he said that he felt Shavers' punch and it hurt like hell, but he did not feel Tyson's punch, why, because he was out and completely in la-la land. What are the ages of those that argue post 1988 Tyson was prime Tyson, humor me! If Renaldo Snipes could do it, a young Tyson certainly could!
CUevas was burned out b-c he started fighting professional at friggin´14 years old and was in tons of wars and got knocked out several times as well. Tyson was brought along very nicely, had money, support, and top training, and got his ass kicked. Marital problems my ass . . .you think Tyson is the first boxer to fight with personal problems? Jack Johnson was recievivng death threats from the KKK that there would be snipers in the crowd to take him out while he was in the ring, but boo hoo Robin Givens and Don King just corrupted angelic Tyson . . .Tyson was a thug in 85 and a thug in 1990. He never had mental discipline, he was always too insecure. And please show me how the Tyson who fought Stewart, Ruddock, and Tillman was ´past his prime´ . . better yet, show me the fight reports which show how people saw that Tyson had slipped and was forever ruined after the Spinks fight . . .

Thatçs right, you won´t find them b-c with those fights everyone was saying ´´Tyson is back´´ and even ´´better then before.´´ He looked just like he did in 1987 in those fights, but at the same time none of those opponents fought Tyson like Douglas did in Tokyo.
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Post by Tantum »

barry wrote:It's pretty funny to see a few clueless people try to make an argument that the Tyson who fought Douglas was prime because he was 23. Hell Pipino Cuevas was past his prime at 21
Cuevas fought alot of wars, and then got obliterated by Thomas Hearns...

What the fornicate is Tysons "excuse" for being past prime at 23?

That is such a load of horse shit it's pathetic.... If he was past prime at 23, he wouldn't be able to talk straight right now after the beatings he's taken recently.
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Post by Eric the Viking »

barry wrote:Just one example, but what kind of actual ring accomplishments did Liston have better over Tyson?
I'm not saying Liston's accomplishments are light-years ahead of Tyson's, but here's why he deserves to be ranked higher on the ATG list:

1) Liston beat more quality HWs on his way to the title than Tyson did:

Liston: 10 opponents leading to 1st title fight summary: 10-0-0 (9 KOs), opponents' combined record: 387-93-31 (combined winning percentage: 81%). Notables: Cleveland Williams (TKO3 and KO2), Nino Valdes (KO3), Zora Folley (KO3), Eddie Machen (UD12).

Tyson: 10 opponents leading to 1st title fight summary: 10-0-0 (8 KOs), opponents' combined record: 188-39-2 (combined winning percentage: 83%). Notables: James Tillis (UD10), Mitch Green (UD10), Marvis Frazier (KO1), Jose Ribalta (TKO10).

The opps' win % are very similar, but Tyson's opposition is on average much less experienced, and he didn't dominate them as thoroughly - sure, he blew out the green, overhyped-and-overmatched Marvis Frazier, but had a less easy time against guys who were halfway-decent and not totally psyched out before the fight even started.

2) Liston beat a better title holder to gain his title than Tyson did to gain his:

Floyd Patterson was a much better fighter than Trevor Berbick - and Liston KO1ed Patterson not once but twice - Patterson had only ever been KOed by Ingo Johansson in the first of their epic trilogy, and having beaten Ingo twice in a row, was again on top of his game when he faced Liston.

Now you can argue that at least Tyson *defended* his title more times - that's probably the single strongest argument that can be made to rank Tyson higher than Liston. I'd argue that the guys he defended against were less than HOF-quality (Smith, Thomas, Tucker, Biggs, Tubbs, Bruno), past their prime (Holmes) or mentally psyched out before the fight even started (Bruno, Spinks), but all in all, not a terrible bunch, with some guys like Tucker that had decent skills. However, IMO the 1964 Liston would've mowed through the same gallery with similar or even greater ease, he simply had the misfortune of facing a brash young upstart named Cassius Clay in his second title defense.

3) In his prime, Liston only lost to a prime Cassius Clay, generally considered to be the greatest heavyweight of all time.

The early-to-mid-60s Clay was younger, faster and sharper than any version of Ali we saw later, including the one who had the famous wars with Frazier and beat the until-then-unstoppable George Foreman. Tyson lost to ... Buster something-or-other. Even if you wriggle your way out of that one by making any of the dozens of common excuses we hear about it, there's the losses to Holyfield (who was considered more washed-up than Tyson at the time, after his brutal wars with the much-bigger Bowe). Which leads up to what is for me the most telling fact about Tyson's career...

...Last but not, least, with regard to Tyson, I keep saying it, it's undeniably true, but the Tysonites keep pretending it's irrelevant:

***) Mike Tyson NEVER beat an all-time-great heavyweight close to his prime. Every time he faced such a fighter, he LOST BADLY.

(Beating a fresh-out-of-retirement Larry Holmes doesn't mean shit.)

So to summarize, maybe I've overrated Liston's accomplishments due to his association with ATGs like Patterson and Ali (and as mentor to a young Foreman), but to me that means that perhaps Liston should be ranked lower than I have him, not Tyson ranked higher.

Tantum wrote:Holmes of 1980 would have whooped Tyson a new one.
Yep. Even past his prime and on a couple weeks' notice, he was leading on points vs. Tyson before getting caught. Hell, as late as 1992 (and this time with time to prepare) Holmes was still good enough to beat a young Ray Mercer and be somewhat-competitive with a prime Holyfield. As late as '95 he only lost by close SD to Oliver McCall in a fight for the WBC title. Hah - you can actually make a halfway-decent argument that Holmes had a better career in the 1990s than Tyson did! :D
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Post by Lexus »

dempseyfire wrote:
barry wrote:It's pretty funny to see a few clueless people try to make an argument that the Tyson who fought Douglas was prime because he was 23. Hell Pipino Cuevas was past his prime at 21, so was Terry McGovern! In fact, there have been several fighters that burned out early! Fernando Vargas is a recent example. As to Holmes getting up from Shavers, true he did get up, but unlike Tyson, Shavers was on fumes if the fight went past four rounds, kind of like the present day Tyson, and Shavers had no where near the speed, accuracy, or ability that Tyson did. In Holmes' own words, he said that he felt Shavers' punch and it hurt like hell, but he did not feel Tyson's punch, why, because he was out and completely in la-la land. What are the ages of those that argue post 1988 Tyson was prime Tyson, humor me! If Renaldo Snipes could do it, a young Tyson certainly could!
CUevas was burned out b-c he started fighting professional at friggin´14 years old and was in tons of wars and got knocked out several times as well. Tyson was brought along very nicely, had money, support, and top training, and got his ass kicked. Marital problems my ass . . .you think Tyson is the first boxer to fight with personal problems? Jack Johnson was recievivng death threats from the KKK that there would be snipers in the crowd to take him out while he was in the ring, but boo hoo Robin Givens and Don King just corrupted angelic Tyson . . .Tyson was a thug in 85 and a thug in 1990. He never had mental discipline, he was always too insecure. And please show me how the Tyson who fought Stewart, Ruddock, and Tillman was ´past his prime´ . . better yet, show me the fight reports which show how people saw that Tyson had slipped and was forever ruined after the Spinks fight . . .

Thatçs right, you won´t find them b-c with those fights everyone was saying ´´Tyson is back´´ and even ´´better then before.´´ He looked just like he did in 1987 in those fights, but at the same time none of those opponents fought Tyson like Douglas did in Tokyo.
Well, I have no answer to that. Damn it! I admit defeat :TU:
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Post by JC »

[quote="dempseyfire]CUevas was burned out b-c he started fighting professional at friggin´14 years old and was in tons of wars and got knocked out several times as well. Tyson was brought along very nicely, had money, support, and top training, and got his ass kicked. Marital problems my ass . . .you think Tyson is the first boxer to fight with personal problems? Jack Johnson was recievivng death threats from the KKK that there would be snipers in the crowd to take him out while he was in the ring, but boo hoo Robin Givens and Don King just corrupted angelic Tyson . . .fight . . .[/quote]

Excellent points.

It's true that Tyson's prime was short but people seem to make alot more allowances for him based on this fact than they would any other fighter. Even if we except the arguement that he was past his best when he fought Douglass (which I don't argee with), surely by definition buring out so quickly must detract from his legacy anyway.

Going back to the point about personal problems around the Douglass fight don't forget Douglass had his own shre of problems on his mind if your gonna use that as a reason for Tyson's loss.
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Post by barry »

Mike Tyson isn't Jack Johnson and he never will be, so any analogies of that sort are about as ridiculous as the argument that Tyson was prime after losing, which continues to be the fights that dempseyfire and others continue to list. I have said all along that the Tyson of 1986-1988 was prime Tyson and no one has been able to given any legitimate, or logical argument against it! I've always said that the Tyson who fought Douglas and after was no where near the fighter that he was, whether he was younger than 23 doesn't make one difference at all. People can argue all they want about this beat Tyson, or that beat Tyson, but in the end it is all bullshit, Tyson beat Tyson. As to Listoin have better accomplishments, it's all subjective! Patterson was better than Berbick, but Spinks, who was the actual world champion until Tyson beat him, was equal to Patterson. Tyson had a lot more and better defenses than Liston, who had what...one defense against Patterson (scorching world title record of 2-2) and overall Tyson beat a better level of competition throughout his career than Liston did! From 1959 thru 1960 Liston defeated some good heavyweights, but over the next three years the only worthy heavyweight that he fought was Patterson, so in reality Liston's prime was even shorter than Tyson's, if you want to look at it that way! As to the argument that Holmes had a better 90s than Tyson, what everyone either did not know to begin with, or forgot, the only reason that Holmes reappeared in the 90s was because Tyson was locked up...he certainly never wanted to get no where near another ring that Tyson was around and the crap about Holmes was winning is like Brando's "I could have been a contender" speech! Could'va, should'va, would'va, but didn't!
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Post by Tantum »

You're actually trying to convince us that Tyson was shot when he fought Douglas? Does Tyson use Hersheys syrup, or cool whip on his nuts when he puts them in your mouth?

If Tyson was shot in 1990... He'd be BRAIN DEAD from fighting all these years. And he sounds exactly the same now as he did then...

Shot / Over the hill - Physical (age or trauma) or neurological deterioration... Tyson had neither when Buster Douglas whooped his ass.
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Post by barry »

>>>You're actually trying to convince us that Tyson was shot when he fought Douglas?<<<

You are completely delusional! Show me one time where I, or anyone else for that matter ever mentioned that Tyson was shot when he fought Douglas! You don’t have a rational argument that answers, or reputes anything that I have said, so you try to make up shit! No one has ever said that Tyson was shot and what I have said all along is that the Tyson who fought Douglas and all opponents after, was not prime-Tyson and anyone who thinks he was in his prime at that time either are complete idiots, or really just don’t know anything about Tyson except the little that they have read, or watched, almost all of which pertains to his career after prison, no one has given any good examples otherwise!
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Post by Tantum »

barry wrote: I have said all along that the Tyson of 1986-1988 was prime Tyson and no one has been able to given any legitimate, or logical argument against it! I've always said that the Tyson who fought Douglas and after was no where near the fighter that he was, whether he was younger than 23 doesn't make one difference at all.
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Post by barry »

Again, show me where I said that Tyson was shot! Not being the fighter that one once was is a lot different than saying one is shot!
Last edited by barry on 12 Apr 2005, 18:11, edited 1 time in total.
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Post by Tantum »

No where near what he was, means shot.... What else does it mean?
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Post by barry »

You just reaching into thin air, and it's beginning to turn into stupidity!
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Post by Tantum »

What the hell else does "no where near what he was" mean?

Please apply this to another boxer who isn't shot.
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Post by barry »

O-Kay, Fernando Vargas is "no where near the fighter he once was."

Erik Morales is ""no where near the fighter he once was."

The Ali who fought and beat Leon Spinks for the world heavyweight title was "no where near the fighter he once was."

The Sugar Ray Robinson who won his last four title was "no where near the fighter he once was."

The Egander Holyfield that won his second world heavyweight title was "no where near the fighter he once was."

The Mike Tyson who lost to Buster Douglas was "no where near the fighter he once was."

Can't get any clearer than that!
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Post by Tantum »

All those fighters are/were shot or worn out, from fighting many wars... Unlike Tyson.
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Post by barry »

Perhaps that is how you would mis-use the phrase, but I explained how I use it, I can't help you if you just don't understand!
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Post by dempseyfire »

Barry, all of those guys you mentioned were in their mid 30s cept Vargas, and Fernando didn´t so much falter but get exposed and now is not the fighter he was before b-c he suffered several back injuries that kept him inactive and out of training in and out for over 2 years. Tyson was young, active, and suffered no injuries. He was in his prime. And you have yet to show me how the Tyson vs Stewart and Ruddock was different from the Tyson vs Berbick and Holmes.
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Post by barry »

So what if they are in their 30s! The Terry McGovern of 1902 was "no where near what he used to be!" McGovern was 21, or 22 at that time!

For starters you never asked me to say anything about Berbick and Holmes, or Stewart and Ruddock. Stewart lasted what 30 seconds, Ruddock was stopped in the first bout and went the distance in the next. Tyson obliterated Berbick and did the same to Holmes, like no one had ever done before, but I know, Holmes was old and past his prime...right? Well the biggest difference was Tyson was on the downslide when he faced both Stewart and Ruddock, but he was climbing toward his best when he faced Berbick and Holmes! Stewart was beat before he left the dressing room!
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Post by Tantum »

There's a gift in the mail for you, just to show there's no hard feelings.

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