polecateddy wrote:Alright muggins. I tell you what has improved. Marciano had a high work ethic, running 5-6 miles a day, walking 10 miles in the evening, running 12-15 miles as a fight got closer, hitting a very heavy bag for a half hour straight. It's the wrong training! Too one paced, too stamina based. It's not building speed, and it's certainly not building speed-endurance. There's no multi-paced approach. Not understanding of cross training and proper interval training. That's what boxers today understand. Train like a middle distance runner not a long distance runner!
Marciano if anything trained alot like the bare knuckle boxers of the 19th century and prior. He ran 10 miles a day, walked an additional 20 miles, sparred upwards of 40 rounds or more a day, hitting the THREE HUNDRED POUND heavybag for several rounds on end, etc. Marciano trained not just for endurance but for power. Jim Braddock, Max Schmeling, and many of his predecessors said that Marciano, for no bigger than he was when trained down, was easily the strongest heavyweight they had seen in the past 40 years. In sparring he was knocking guys like Tommy Jackson flat and he wasn't going full blast. Mind you, it was just his power and conditioning alone that ALMOST got him into the Olympics with just a dozen matches to his credit as an amateur. When Charlie Goldman got ahold of him he went from being a buller into an awkwardly hard to hit opponent who could get on the inside far more easily than people would originally think.
As far as this interval training nonsense you keep harping on, let's not forget in this day and age you don't see guys really doing calistentics save for the Fury family. You want to think that Marciano wasn't a limber man or was an athlete, but you happen to forget this man was good in most any sport before he went into boxing, he was a baseball player, football player, etc. If he existed today Marciano probably would be one of the more talked about athletes in the world because of his ability to mentally and physically adapt to any game, and any opponent. Whatever improvements there has been to training in the last forty years or better, cannot really be a whole hell of a lot to the boxing game. Nutrition? Strength training? All minimal. Like many a person has pointed out to you here several times is that you can take ANY heavyweight, or really any cruiserweight for that matter, and none of them come close to the work rate that Marciano did in the ring. Lightheavyweights and middleweights, maybe. But none of them could stand up to the kind of power Marciano had. Not to build anyone up but Archie Moore fell in nine one sided rounds and Harry Matthews in two rounds, and both of those men were damned good light heavyweights. I can't see someone like Hopkins, Tarver, Johnson, etc. being able to stand for too long with a Marciano type.
Never forget, for a short time the greatest boxer of all time Sugar Ray Robinson was offered a tremendous pay day to move to heavyweight and challenge Marciano, and he flat out refused saying that Marciano would have killed him. All this speed, reflexes, and all around athleticism you talk about is just not seen at LHW, CW, and HW. None of the present day men in those weight classes are as skilled as Walcott, as fast as Ezzard Charles, etc. I would argue that the elite men are more closer to Joe Louis's performances in old age than they were Marciano's more dangerous opponents.
Mind you, I do think Marciano probably wouldn't have beaten the Klitschko's, but at the same token how many men TODAY in the division can you name as being a favorite over Marciano as is? Dempsey proved time and time again, big men are big targets. Especially slow, plodding, low volume output type men. Which is what the majority of the heavyweight division is. Do you honestly think a man who averages out 20-40 punches a round, is going to distract and keep Marciano off them? I don't think so. There isn't anyone out there with enough ferocity and work ethic to make Marciano think twice. Even if they landed on him with their best Sunday punch, they wouldn't be able to follow it up. Too slow, too ponderous, too sloppy, and simply too damn lazy. I don't care how many crunches and abdominal work outs you do, you could look like you were cut out of marble, but when you have an ATG body puncher in Marciano hitting you with everything he has got non-stop you are going to get hurt, you are going to drop your guard, and you are going to get caught flush on the chin and go down in a big heap. Jesus bless.