Rank These Fighters In Order P4P
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SUGARRAYSMELEE
- Light Heavyweight
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Rank These Fighters In Order P4P
Marvin Hagler
Thomas Hearns
Gene Fullmer
Carmen Basilio
Bernard Hopkins
Jake Lamotta
Pernell Whitaker
Oscar De La Hoya
Roy Jones Jr
Carlos Monzon
Thomas Hearns
Gene Fullmer
Carmen Basilio
Bernard Hopkins
Jake Lamotta
Pernell Whitaker
Oscar De La Hoya
Roy Jones Jr
Carlos Monzon
Re: Rank These Fighters In Order P4P
P4P = h2h who beats who more often than not at their absolute best... all things equal of course size, weight etc!
Marvin Hagler - and Hearns could be replaced by LaMotta & Fullmer, wouldn't argue.
Thomas Hearns
Jake Lamotta - Fullmer could be reversed the lesser %, as Gene was most durable and pressing.
Gene Fullmer
Carmen Basilio - Basilio all things even p4p, h2h might surprise
Carlos Monzon - Monzon might do better, but I think the 40s & 50s were tougher.
Roy Jones Jr
Bernard Hopkins
Pernell Whitaker
Oscar De La Hoya
Marvin Hagler - and Hearns could be replaced by LaMotta & Fullmer, wouldn't argue.
Thomas Hearns
Jake Lamotta - Fullmer could be reversed the lesser %, as Gene was most durable and pressing.
Gene Fullmer
Carmen Basilio - Basilio all things even p4p, h2h might surprise
Carlos Monzon - Monzon might do better, but I think the 40s & 50s were tougher.
Roy Jones Jr
Bernard Hopkins
Pernell Whitaker
Oscar De La Hoya
Re: Rank These Fighters In Order P4P
All top fighters… In a P4P sense… My stab would be
Monzon
Hearns
Hagler
Hopkins
Whittaker
Basilio
DLH
La Motta
Fullmer = Jones
Monzon
Hearns
Hagler
Hopkins
Whittaker
Basilio
DLH
La Motta
Fullmer = Jones
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SaadOffTheDeck
- Heavyweight

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Re: Rank These Fighters In Order P4P
Whitaker
Hearns
Hopkins
Hagler
Monzon
Jones
Basilio
Fullmer
LaMotta
Oscar
Oscar being last is the only definitive one. The rest are all closely grouped. I just went where I would rank them on an all time great list. It hurts my head too much to make them the same size.
Hearns
Hopkins
Hagler
Monzon
Jones
Basilio
Fullmer
LaMotta
Oscar
Oscar being last is the only definitive one. The rest are all closely grouped. I just went where I would rank them on an all time great list. It hurts my head too much to make them the same size.
Re: Rank These Fighters In Order P4P
Alltime Great list ARE NOT the same as P4P...SaadOffTheDeck wrote:Oscar being last is the only definitive one. The rest are all closely grouped. I just went where I would rank them on an all time great list. It hurts my head too much to make them the same size.
achievement based rankings devalues P4P, which is supposed to be ALL Things considered equal, "who bests who more often than not" - h2h mano, mano!
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SaadOffTheDeck
- Heavyweight

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Re: Rank These Fighters In Order P4P
LOL, I know it's not the same. That's why I specified what my list was.
P4P is stupid. I just read you saying they are all the same size. So Hearns doesn't have height and reach advantages p4p?
P4P is stupid. I just read you saying they are all the same size. So Hearns doesn't have height and reach advantages p4p?
Re: Rank These Fighters In Order P4P
No, it's always been "an all things equal" sort of scenario,
then any fighter anyweight can be considered one against the other based on their actual skill and ability - so you can envision the greatest fighters competing.
I admit it gets very hard and impossible among most great fighters, because at the end of the day ALL Top fighters can beat one another. But it is away to "try" and consider who might actually be better than the other.
I too don't go for it, but I go for achievement based lists even less!
for me it's better to divide Boxing into Greatest periods, one ahead of the next and then figure out who were the best champions and contenders from greater periods and thier "longevity" at the top... those are the real greatest fighters!
then any fighter anyweight can be considered one against the other based on their actual skill and ability - so you can envision the greatest fighters competing.
I admit it gets very hard and impossible among most great fighters, because at the end of the day ALL Top fighters can beat one another. But it is away to "try" and consider who might actually be better than the other.
I too don't go for it, but I go for achievement based lists even less!
for me it's better to divide Boxing into Greatest periods, one ahead of the next and then figure out who were the best champions and contenders from greater periods and thier "longevity" at the top... those are the real greatest fighters!
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SaadOffTheDeck
- Heavyweight

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Re: Rank These Fighters In Order P4P
I'm not going to get into a P4P argument. But your definition is crazier than the premise is to begin with. LMAO that Hearns is 5'6 to fight Whitaker. You can't take away a fighters dimensions or advantages that are God given.
That's why I don't bother with P4P fights. You need someone plugging in numbers to find out the average dimensions in the weight class and then work out the advantages in size that would still be there.
If you're saying they are the exact same size. You may as well give them the same hand speed and punching power. Throw in chin while you're at too. Hell, lets just have Pernell fight himself.
That's why I don't bother with P4P fights. You need someone plugging in numbers to find out the average dimensions in the weight class and then work out the advantages in size that would still be there.
If you're saying they are the exact same size. You may as well give them the same hand speed and punching power. Throw in chin while you're at too. Hell, lets just have Pernell fight himself.
Re: Rank These Fighters In Order P4P
Pernell Whitaker
Thomas Hearns
Carlos Monzon
Roy Jones Jr
Marvin Hagler
Bernard Hopkins
Oscar De La Hoya
Jake Lamotta
Gene Fullmer
Carmen Basilio
Thomas Hearns
Carlos Monzon
Roy Jones Jr
Marvin Hagler
Bernard Hopkins
Oscar De La Hoya
Jake Lamotta
Gene Fullmer
Carmen Basilio
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elmersalsa
- Heavyweight

- Posts: 15690
- Joined: 02 Feb 2003, 03:50
Re: Rank These Fighters In Order P4P
In the pound per pound sense:
Carlos Monzon
Pernell Whitaker
Marvin Hagler
Bernard Hopkins
Carmen Basilio
Thomas Hearns
Jake LaMotta
Roy Jones, Jr.
Gene Fullmer
Oscar De La Hoya
Fullmer and De La Hoya, in my book, don't enter in my list of 100 greatest pound per pound boxers of all-time. The rest? are sure ins.
Carlos Monzon
Pernell Whitaker
Marvin Hagler
Bernard Hopkins
Carmen Basilio
Thomas Hearns
Jake LaMotta
Roy Jones, Jr.
Gene Fullmer
Oscar De La Hoya
Fullmer and De La Hoya, in my book, don't enter in my list of 100 greatest pound per pound boxers of all-time. The rest? are sure ins.
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SaadOffTheDeck
- Heavyweight

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Re: Rank These Fighters In Order P4P
If there are 100 greater fighters than Fullmer, I must not have seen, or even heard of, 30 or 40 of them. He would easily be in the 50-75 range for me. Very underrated.
Re: Rank These Fighters In Order P4P
Tough list to make
1. Roy Jones Jr.
2. Carlos Monzon
3. Marvin Hagler
4. Thomas Hearns
5. Bernard Hopkins
6. Pernell Whitaker
7. Jake Lamotta
8. Gene Fullmer
9. Carmen Basilio
10. Oscar De La Hoya
1. Roy Jones Jr.
2. Carlos Monzon
3. Marvin Hagler
4. Thomas Hearns
5. Bernard Hopkins
6. Pernell Whitaker
7. Jake Lamotta
8. Gene Fullmer
9. Carmen Basilio
10. Oscar De La Hoya
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Ambling Alp
- Heavyweight

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Re: Rank These Fighters In Order P4P
This is a tough list to make.
Monzon is the clear #1. After that, it's probably between Hagler and Hearns. I have recently began to think Hearns should be higher.
Fullmer has to be above Basilio. Basilio has to be #10. Fullmer won the head to head, had a better record against common opponents, beat better overall compeition and had less losses.
There are a lot of close calls. These guys are all typical Hall of Famers. At first glance, I am going to go with:
1. Monzon
2. Hearns
3. Hagler
4. Whitaker
5. De La Hoya
6. LaMotta
7. Jones
8. Hopkins
9. Fullmer
10. Basilio
Monzon is the clear #1. After that, it's probably between Hagler and Hearns. I have recently began to think Hearns should be higher.
Fullmer has to be above Basilio. Basilio has to be #10. Fullmer won the head to head, had a better record against common opponents, beat better overall compeition and had less losses.
There are a lot of close calls. These guys are all typical Hall of Famers. At first glance, I am going to go with:
1. Monzon
2. Hearns
3. Hagler
4. Whitaker
5. De La Hoya
6. LaMotta
7. Jones
8. Hopkins
9. Fullmer
10. Basilio
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Goodnight, Irene
- Heavyweight

- Posts: 9463
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Re: Rank These Fighters In Order P4P
Under-rated definitely, but potentially top-50 of all-time? That's pretty extreme, as I see it.SaadOffTheDeck wrote:If there are 100 greater fighters than Fullmer, I must not have seen, or even heard of, 30 or 40 of them. He would easily be in the 50-75 range for me. Very underrated.
As for this thread, as long as Whitaker sits atop it, the rest can sort themselves out. Man was just a freak.
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SaadOffTheDeck
- Heavyweight

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Re: Rank These Fighters In Order P4P
I imagine I would have him somewhere between 50-75, he would definitely be well inside the Top 100. My best guess is between 60-70.
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Goodnight, Irene
- Heavyweight

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Re: Rank These Fighters In Order P4P
Where is he on your all-time MW list, then?
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SaadOffTheDeck
- Heavyweight

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Re: Rank These Fighters In Order P4P
I don't really have lists other than a Heavyweight one because I've posted in so many threads over the years.
This would be my Top 5
Hagler
Greb
Monzon
Robinson
Hopkins
I'd have to look over the records to go any further with conviction. But fullmer fits with any of the others I can think of. Fitzsimmons, O'Dowd, Flowers, Zale, Valdez, Tiger, etc..
Edit: I forgot Holman and Burley, both of them would be ahead of him for sure. I probably forgot some others as well. Middle is loaded.
This would be my Top 5
Hagler
Greb
Monzon
Robinson
Hopkins
I'd have to look over the records to go any further with conviction. But fullmer fits with any of the others I can think of. Fitzsimmons, O'Dowd, Flowers, Zale, Valdez, Tiger, etc..
Edit: I forgot Holman and Burley, both of them would be ahead of him for sure. I probably forgot some others as well. Middle is loaded.
Re: Rank These Fighters In Order P4P
1. Pernell Whitaker
2. Marvin Hagler
3. Thomas Hearns
4. Carlos Monzon
5. Carmen Basilio
6. Jake Lamotta
7. Gene Fullmer
8. Roy Jones Jr.
9. Bernard Hopkins
10. Oscar De La Hoya
2. Marvin Hagler
3. Thomas Hearns
4. Carlos Monzon
5. Carmen Basilio
6. Jake Lamotta
7. Gene Fullmer
8. Roy Jones Jr.
9. Bernard Hopkins
10. Oscar De La Hoya
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elmersalsa
- Heavyweight

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Re: Rank These Fighters In Order P4P
Too many great and exceptional fighters for Fullmer or De La Hoya make it in the top 100 p4p. I will give Fullmer more of a chance to make it than DLH. It is a matter of opinion.SaadOffTheDeck wrote:I imagine I would have him somewhere between 50-75, he would definitely be well inside the Top 100. My best guess is between 60-70.
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elmersalsa
- Heavyweight

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Re: Rank These Fighters In Order P4P
I think Middleweight and bantamweight are the toughest divisions to rate the ATG. So many great fighters in those two divisionsSaadOffTheDeck wrote:I don't really have lists other than a Heavyweight one because I've posted in so many threads over the years.
This would be my Top 5
Hagler
Greb
Monzon
Robinson
Hopkins
I'd have to look over the records to go any further with conviction. But fullmer fits with any of the others I can think of. Fitzsimmons, O'Dowd, Flowers, Zale, Valdez, Tiger, etc..
Edit: I forgot Holman and Burley, both of them would be ahead of him for sure. I probably forgot some others as well. Middle is loaded.
Re: Rank These Fighters In Order P4P
Totally agree. Although i respect everyone's opinion here, Whitaker seems to me to be the clear, no doubt about it top choice here.As for this thread, as long as Whitaker sits atop it, the rest can sort themselves out. Man was just a freak.
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SaadOffTheDeck
- Heavyweight

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Re: Rank These Fighters In Order P4P
Of course it's subjective, but you're talking about a guy who beat Robinson close to his better days at Middleweight and stopped Basilio twice in dominant fashion. There aren't many who can claim that. He also beat ray again later, Florentino Fernandez & drew with Tiger. That's just off of the top of my head, his ledger is quite impressive.elmersalsa wrote:Too many great and exceptional fighters for Fullmer or De La Hoya make it in the top 100 p4p. I will give Fullmer more of a chance to make it than DLH. It is a matter of opinion.SaadOffTheDeck wrote:I imagine I would have him somewhere between 50-75, he would definitely be well inside the Top 100. My best guess is between 60-70.
I wouldn't have a problem with Oscar in the 90-100 range. He was better than people want to give him credit for.
Re: Rank These Fighters In Order P4P
Monzon
Hearns
Hagler
Whittaker
La Motta
Fullmer
DLH
Basilio
Jones
Hopkins
Hearns
Hagler
Whittaker
La Motta
Fullmer
DLH
Basilio
Jones
Hopkins
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Ambling Alp
- Heavyweight

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Re: Rank These Fighters In Order P4P
Monzon was a combined 7-0 against Griffith, Benvenuti, Naploes, and Valdes. He never lost when he was close to his prime. No one else on this list can match his career.
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SaadOffTheDeck
- Heavyweight

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Re: Rank These Fighters In Order P4P
Whitaker never lost in his prime. Neither did hagler or Hopkins for that matter. Carlos is an acceptable answer in the top slot. To state it as a fact is your typically biased behavior.