Let me ask you a question ? Can you envision Ray Robinson as a lightweight beating Roberto Duran ?Goodnight, Irene wrote:Pretty sure thats the definition of invincible...elmersalsa wrote:Not from 1 to 6. He is from 1 to 2. And that's about the right place we should put him. The great Roberto Duran was so dominant at lightweight that I just cannot place him lower than #2. Nobody is invincible, but I cannot see no lightweight of any era beating him.Goodnight, Irene wrote:Give me a break.
LW, for me, is THE deepest weightclass EVER. Duran is a legitimate choice anywhere from 1-6, but he gets too much credit relative to 135's other best and brightest.
Of course you can...Well Benny Leonard who ruled the greatest array of lightweight contenders fo SEVEN unbeaten years was considered every bit as good a LW as Ray Robinson was at WW.
A master boxer and thinker, a deadly two-handed puncher, who had a great set of wheels, Leonard beat more better lightweights than Duran, such as Lew Tendler, Freddy Welsh, Johnny Kilbane,
Charley White, Ritchie Mitchell, Joe Welling, Rocky Kansas, Ted Kid Lewis, Ever Hammer etc.
They didn't call him Leonard the Magnificent, for nothing...H2H I believe the uncuffed Ike Williams
would have beaten Duran, both at 135 pounds. And how can we rule out the Old Master Joe Gans
in this LW debate ?