BoxBuzz wrote:No offense taken really. I like the way you just put that. Good description from a "pop" point of view.
Occams razor may well favor my take.
It is the context that makes it so interesting. But I think a good CSI sort of dismantling takes some of the "romance" out of the moment. As interesting as we all would like it to be, I think it's a bit more boring than that.
I think the first fight can reduced down to something far more basic as well. But let's just take the second fight, Liston got taken out of his rhythm early, he had already been reduced to a bit of a laughing stock (from Liston's perception) last time he fought this man. Now he just got good and buzzed by that blow in the very first round....I suggest he could not "imagine" how he could win, and he simply choked in the clutch. Liston provided some pretty good proof in his life that he did not have a state of the art warrior mentality...even as tough as he was physically. And I would say he was one of the toughest.
A dive? Sure if you want to call it that, I would not disagree. But that word usually attributes some sort of "advance intent" and it is my belief that it had no other strings connected to it than Liston's own decision process. His own lack of faith developed at that moment, in his ability to carry on. Also, we all know how good Ali ended up proving himself to be. Seems to me Liston was just ahead of many of us (and he was in the best position to assess lol) in coming to this same conclusion.
I always thought the first fight was more of a perception issue. Truth was Ali was an Olympic HW gold medallist and back then, if you were American, it almost guaranteed you holding the title for at least a little while. Ali was a much better fighter than people perceived from the Jones, Banks and Cooper fights. And it would become apparent later in his career that, like say Dempsey, he often struggled more with smaller guys than he did with the big boys.
So Ali was very underrated.
The you have Liston who had fought about 8 rounds in 4 years (can’t be bothered to look it up exactly). He had a big rep after having KO’d a small HW who already had a history of being KO’d. Add to this that Liston liked a drink etc…and you have a guy who was overrated, rusty and probably older than his years.
Public perception was way off kilter. When Ali beat him people thought it couldn’t be real.
Story goes that Liston trained like a Spartan for the rematch. It got cancelled due to injury and he lost his head of steam. There were threats and the rest…but I think Ali caught him with a flash shot…he went down legit…
After that I don’t know. On film it looks like Liston play acted being out…but maybe I’m wrong…it wouldn’t have changed the result had he got up. Liston had decided it was game over. And Ali was both better than Liston and Liston’s style was made for him.