Now my opinion is that Hearns anhiliates Trinidad with no problem, but I hear alot of people compare the 2.
So who wins and why?
Trinidad vs. Hearns at 147
I tend to agree - at 147 Hearn's KO's Trinidad inside of 6 rounds -
Hearn's was more of an assasian, search and destroy type then Trinidad - Hearn's jab would have allowed him to pin point (set up) his right hand...and then good night!
Trinidad never had to compete with someone with Hearn's jab or search in destroy type manner -
Of course Trinidad would always have a punchers chance....but I see a Hearn's KO in this one -
Hearn's was more of an assasian, search and destroy type then Trinidad - Hearn's jab would have allowed him to pin point (set up) his right hand...and then good night!
Trinidad never had to compete with someone with Hearn's jab or search in destroy type manner -
Of course Trinidad would always have a punchers chance....but I see a Hearn's KO in this one -
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tiredoldngrey
- Heavyweight

- Posts: 442
- Joined: 23 May 2005, 12:36
Trinidad wasn't what I would call a slow starter; he was a guy that took is time to get started, but if you wanted to kick it in gear early he'd go right with you. Ask Blocker and Garcia and Waters etc... At 147 Felix still did things like jab, move around the ring, practice defense (and he was good at it- very underrated) and throw punches other than the left hook. Tommy at 147 could potentially win any fight at any time during the first 9 minutes, his chances decreasing steadily thereafter. I don't believe he was "great"; great right hand, good jab, height and reach advantages, but not great. He didn't develope his jab into the weapon it became untyil later when he hurt the right and had all those fights w/o scoring a KO. He developed that ripping hook to the body at the same time, so at 147 he was tall and a dangerous 1-2 combo, emphasis on the '2'. Felix had more tools; he could box fight work inside or out and punch with both hands. 147 was his peak while Hearns got better later. Trinidad by ko round 4-7
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ringsider
- Heavyweight

re
From what I remember Trinidad was mostly susceptiple to left hooks and not right hands, but I think Hearns would be too much for Trinidad to handle. Since both were seek & destroy types of fighters...It would be a case of who lands the best shot first.
tiredoldngrey wrote:Trinidad wasn't what I would call a slow starter; he was a guy that took is time to get started, but if you wanted to kick it in gear early he'd go right with you. Ask Blocker and Garcia and Waters etc... At 147 Felix still did things like jab, move around the ring, practice defense (and he was good at it- very underrated) and throw punches other than the left hook. Tommy at 147 could potentially win any fight at any time during the first 9 minutes, his chances decreasing steadily thereafter. I don't believe he was "great"; great right hand, good jab, height and reach advantages, but not great. He didn't develope his jab into the weapon it became untyil later when he hurt the right and had all those fights w/o scoring a KO. He developed that ripping hook to the body at the same time, so at 147 he was tall and a dangerous 1-2 combo, emphasis on the '2'. Felix had more tools; he could box fight work inside or out and punch with both hands. 147 was his peak while Hearns got better later. Trinidad by ko round 4-7
Are you Puerto Rican? j/k.
Maybe it's just me but none of Trinidads punches looked straight, even when he jabbed it looked like a hook to me.
IMO.