Shliprock,Sherlock wrote:In tapes Johnson is fast, quick handed, fight controller, and powerful. He rips Burn's head from shoulder to shoulder with uppercuts. Battered Burns and Jeffries into bloody pulps. Take in mind, though Jeffries was old and Burns was short and lighter, Johnson was over 30, no spring chicken himself. We don't have the benefit of seeing Johnson in his prime, but he is in no way overrated. To say Marciano, Moore, Frazier, and Ali beat him easliy shows your ignorance.zuru wrote:Joe Louis would have violently K.O.ed the overrated Johnson.Johnson had his way with plodders.It didn't matter Jeffries was who he was,he was old,far past his prime,and again a plodder.Oh sure if you stood your ground,he would take your head off.But the slightest movement is enough to offset this,especially considering,advanced age,lack of conditioning etc.Joe Louis was one of THE GREATS.It may have taken him a couple of rounds to figure Johnson,but after that,Louis would be on him throwing deadly combinations,that most surely would have Johnson OUT by the 10th rd.(and that's being generous to Johnson)Johnson was big,long armed,and presumably tough,HOWEVER,he was far from the Great that many "experts"dream him to be.Many,Many fighters of the past,and present would have beaten Johnson,among them,Dempsey(don't buy that worn out "Dempsey was afraid,so he used skin color to avoid it"),Marciano,Cassisus Clay,Archie Moore,Frazier,and on & on,and yes even both KlitschkosBrocktonBlockbuster49 wrote:Joe Louis KO 11 Jack Johnson
what are your thoughtsJohnson just benefitted from being among the most agile of the big men of his time.The ones who were his equal,either beat him,OR were avoided.You don't believe me,look back at the film that is available on him,and TRUTHFULLY compare it to other fighters that I have mentioned.
zuru
It is obvious that Ali, Louis, and even Tyson learned from Johnson. Louis wanted Johnson wanted Johnson in his corner, but to save his image Johnson was barred. Johnson also pointed out that Louis was susceptible to the overhand right, which Schmeling battered him with.
But back to the fight. A point that should be taken is that Louis was not a good infight adapter. When he had trouble with a fighter, he struggled with that fighter to the end. Johnson was a two pronged fighter. He could fight inside and box on the outside, and would have given Louis fits. I wouldn't agrue a close Louis decision, but no way does Louis, or any heavyweight in history for that matter, easily handle Johnson.
But, maybe those "experts" are wrong. Nat Fleischer, who called Johnson the greatest heavyweight ever, is nobody compared to Zuru.
Calm down.Everyone gave their opinions,I gave mine.None of this is set in stone. I agree with theone,"Louis was so far advanced & skilled compared to ANYONE Johnson had faced".And I would hope that ANY heavyweight Champion fighting Any middleweight Champion,especially with those height & reach discrepancies,would be snapping their heads as if they were on swivels from side to side.Maybe,just maybe, Johnson WAS the best,in his era.But to place him in the company you do is absurd,to me.He may be high ranking in historical signifigance,but not overall greatness.And you have to remember,just about all of the old-timers,from fighters to trainers,to commentators always thought the old guys were better.I NEVER said ,nor thought that I was an expert,I was just giving my views.You're the one making the wise-ass remarks.If you have such a major crush on Johnson,maybe you could invent a time machine,go back to his era,and be his boyfriend.And as for ignorance,yeah,i'm ignorant like a fox.Don't include me with your arm-chair quarterback buddies,as you sit around drinking warm beer,stroking your egos,"commentating"on the pay-per-view fights that you chip in for.I don't fantasize about it,or give MY PERSONAL EXPERT view, and direct qoutes that I read,without ever having laced up a glove.So remember,this is just letters & words typed on a keyboard,nothing for you o get all worked up about,and start hyperventilating over.
zuru