Goodnight, Irene wrote:I think I would only consider the cases of Tunney, Langford, and Charles for greatest LHW ever.
Is this based on work they did "outside" of the LHW division?
Goodnight, Irene wrote:I think I would only consider the cases of Tunney, Langford, and Charles for greatest LHW ever.
Tunney didn't do enough to be classed as the "elite of the elite" - and certainly not in the same compnay and Robinson or Armstrong.DaveBoyMorrison wrote:Gene Tunney is up there too imo.
SaadOffTheDeck wrote:I've come ever so close to doing that with Langford. Beating Joe Gans & a Heavy likeHarry Wills is one of the more astounding feats I can think of. Imagine someone beating Marquez & Klitschko?
Agreed gents.Goodnight, Irene wrote:Its amazing to imagine. Wont see it ever again, though.
Crease wrote:Tunney didn't do enough to be classed as the "elite of the elite" - and certainly not in the same compnay and Robinson or Armstrong.DaveBoyMorrison wrote:Gene Tunney is up there too imo.
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As well you should, word has it Harry Greb might be a member of the strictly undercover Elmer Top 100. So as not to quote two insane posts, DelaHoya handily beat Molina, the only person who thought he didn't was Harold Ledderman and people like yourself that follow him blindly to support their hatred. Chavez was undoubtedly greater than Oscar, he was also much smaller and he nver beat anyone that good. That doesn't mean he couldn't, but your assertion that is a foregone conclusion is one of your sillier statements in a posting career full of them.BoxBuzz wrote:crap....I just realized I'm going to catch hell for my cavalier attitude concerning Harry Greb.
I may have a tidy sum of "hail mary's" to repeat for my indiscretion.
Not true. Billy Gibson tried to secure a fight for Gene with Harry Wills, but Wills' manager passed on it.scallum wrote:I just learned the Tunney opted not to fight the top colored fighters of his day. I was wondering if the same was true of Greb? I wonder why Ketchell fought Langford when he did not have to?
raylawpc wrote:Not true. Billy Gibson tried to secure a fight for Gene with Harry Wills, but Wills' manager passed on it.scallum wrote:I just learned the Tunney opted not to fight the top colored fighters of his day. I was wondering if the same was true of Greb? I wonder why Ketchell fought Langford when he did not have to?
He tried to secure Wills to force a elimination fight with the winner to meet Dempsey. But Wills' manager, believing Wills was the only logical challenger and that he had the boxing public on his side, declined.Boilermaker wrote:raylawpc wrote:Not true. Billy Gibson tried to secure a fight for Gene with Harry Wills, but Wills' manager passed on it.scallum wrote:I just learned the Tunney opted not to fight the top colored fighters of his day. I was wondering if the same was true of Greb? I wonder why Ketchell fought Langford when he did not have to?
Didnt he try to secure Wills when Wills was old and ripe for the picking, but at the same time openly refuse to fight Godfrey who was younger and considered more dangerous? Admittedly it was probably a risk vs reward thing but still.
raylawpc wrote:
He tried to secure Wills to force a elimination fight with the winner to meet Dempsey. But Wills' manager, believing Wills was the only logical challenger and that he had the boxing public on his side, declined.
barney who?scotto wrote:has everybody forgot barney ross?
Nope! I just don't put him quite in the "elite of the elite" category as Ray Robinson, Sam Langford, Harry Greb, Henry Armstrong, Benny Leonard and Willie Pep.BoxBuzz wrote:barney who?scotto wrote:has everybody forgot barney ross?
Peter Jackson - Corbett had a similar resume considering they both drew with each other. Neither could really argue against getting the shot at John L being fair because of this. Slavin and Goddard had reasonably similar claims to Jackson (obviously not quite as good) and neither got a shot at the title. Although, it must be noted, that for a long time before (and in many cases after) Peter Jackson actually was considered the World champion in most parts of the world. Obviously Corbett ducked Jackson, imo, alhtough there are certainly comments attributable to corbett around the time where he said he was not drawing the colour line. this is quite interesting actually and something i have never really considered much. I would like to see if Corbett draws the colour line after Jackson is eliminated as a main challenger (and before Fitzsimmons). If so, it would certainly add to what i was saying about the colour line.Chuck1052 wrote:You can bet that that Peter Jackson, Sam McVey, Sam Langford, Joe Jeannette, Harry Wills and the second version of George Godfrey would have had world championship bouts if they were white. Can you name one white heavyweight with a resume similar to that of the mentioned fighters who didn't have a world championship bout?
- Chuck Johnston
And Roy. :)Goodnight, Irene wrote:I think I would only consider the cases of Tunney, Langford, and Charles for greatest LHW ever.