King Carlos wrote:I've seen them. As I mentioned, I believe very strongly upon viewing pretty much all available footage of him that he began to deteriorate as a technician prior to facing Sanchez. Post-Zarate, really. Those fights took place during that sort of transitional period for him. From about the Davila fight at age 19 to the Zarate fight at age 22 Gomez was as complete a technician as I've ever seen.SaadOffTheDeck wrote:King Carlos wrote: You've either not seen much of a young Gomez (he started to deteriorate technically post-Zarate in my opinion, when he went the way of so many others who fall in love with their power) or haven't properly analyzed his bouts. He was one of the most silky-smooth defensive attackers I've ever seen, on par with Duran, except that he had far superior lateral movement (not to say he was more effective, as lateral movement simply wasn't a part of Duran's method). A complete technician. Never have I seen a fighter more beautiful to watch.
Give him a watch in some of this footage. This is the Gomez I'm talking about, not the bomber he became later in his career:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d3kWnH-3IFg
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uCvtOZRnO0M
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wuoP5L2YnKY
I grew up watching Gomez, he is one of my favorite fighters. I've seen every bit as much as you have and have no issue analyzing his bouts. He wasn't a great defensder, no if's ands or buts about it. That's not to say he led with his face, but nobody had trouble finding him. they had trouble beating him.
Give a watch to Carlos mendoza and Derrick Holmes. They both touched him up plenty.
Of course you're going to get hit more than a purely defensive specialist if you're primarily an offensive fighter, that goes without saying. That doesn't mean an offensive fighter can't have great defense. Gomez was, along with Duran, one of the best at alternating between offensive and defensive positions seamlessly. A naturally smooth and aggressive counter-puncher who was wonderfully well-schooled in his art. His footwork, head and upper-body movement in general were all fanastic, and he used them very well when on the attack, utilizing the angles and momentum he gained from his shifts in movement to generate power and openings for his punches.
If you grew up on him, has it perhaps been a while since you've seen him fight? I suggest going back and analyzing some of his early bouts. The ones I posted being among his finest performances, in my opinion.
I have many of his fights in my library and no it hasn't been a long time since I've watched him fight. Perhaps you should just accept that we disagree on it and we always will? It isn't always about somebody not knowing what they are talking about. You're coming off as a massive fan that sees no holes. I'm a big fan who thinks Bazooka is overrated in some departments. Not a huge puncher and certainly not a "silky smooth" defender.
Gomez wasn't in Duran's league as a defender. Obviously being an attacking fighter doesn't mean you can't have great defense. I never said Wilfredo was Jerry quarry. But he wasn't better than Robinson, which is what I initially took issue with anyway.