I Feel Fine wrote:Of course, it's not quite Louis.
Louis' defense record is one of the great achievements in boxing history, but it is overblown in this context. The difference of six-eight defenses doesn't make Hopkins a more accomplished Middleweight than Monzon and Hagler. Ali was hardly Buster Douglas, he beat about as many title challengers as Louis did, nineteen vs. twenty, the difference being that Louis fought rematches against Conn, Godoy, Simon, Baer, and Walcott. Would Ali be more accomplished if he had fought rematches against London and Folley, or Wepner and Lyle to inflate his number? Not really. Politics also enters into it, as Ali was stripped and exiled hence his wins over Quarry and Bonavena aren't counted as defenses, while Louis' four post-WWII defenses are.
Belts have lost much of their mystique for me. Ali's non-title fight wins over Quarry and Bonavena mean more than title defenses against shot Lewis and Paycheck, just as Louis' win over Max Baer means more than Ali's defense against, say, Coopman. What matters is who you beat, not the window dressing; Ali beat better opponents, and is therefore more accomplished. Foreman and Frazier are top ten all-time Heavyweights, Liston is borderline, while Louis' best victims probably only rank a few slots higher than Floyd Patterson. Only someone overcome by nostalgia would argue that their general opposition is comparable.
The longevity argument borders on mythology. They were both challengers and champions from their early 20s to their late 30s; the difference in longevity is marginal. Ali won the title at the same age that Louis was KO'd by Schmeling, while Louis retired earlier and thus had fewer losses. So where is this great difference in longevity? If Ali retires at 34 and then for good at 37 while Louis makes two ill-advised comebacks at 38 and 39 then Ali probably has fewer losses, and Louis fans would concede nothing. And because Ali was fighting better fighters, he had more wear and tear as he got older.
Neither Ali or Louis shied away from the spotlight against great opponents, and they rarely disappointed. The difference is that Ali cleaned out the best era in Heavyweight history, passed his prime, after having already cleaned out the prior era, so he is therefore #1. And As great as Marciano was he doesn't really belong in the conversation, I would rate Jeffries, Johnson, Holmes and maybe one or two others higher.
Very good post, and I agree with it.
There is just so little between these two, IMO. I give Louis a tentative edge head-to-head, but I slightly lean in the direction of this post in rating what Ali did above what Louis managed. The remark about Ali cleaning out the division during his prime, then emerging as the foremost figure of the next decade, when he was past his best and which happened to be the best era in division history is supremely salient.
Louis did that with successive eras too, mind, but the 30's werent as deep as the 60's, and the 40's not as deep as the 70's.