Sugar Ray Leonard ----
-
NYDominican
- Light Heavyweight
- Posts: 326
- Joined: 18 Feb 2012, 14:04
Sugar Ray Leonard ----
Granted, Sugar Ray Leonards professional boxing career wasn't as long as Sugar Ray Robinsons or Henry Armstrongs.
How do you think Sugar Ray Leonard ranks at Welterweight?
What do you think Sugar Ray Leonards legacy is?
Would Sugar Ray Leonard been dominant in any of boxings eras?
How do you think Sugar Ray Leonard ranks at Welterweight?
What do you think Sugar Ray Leonards legacy is?
Would Sugar Ray Leonard been dominant in any of boxings eras?
Re: Sugar Ray Leonard ----
I think he would have to be in anyone's top 5, and most people would have him top 3. I don't think he would have been dominant in Robinson's era, though I can see him taking a decision or even a stoppage over Robinson on an off night. I believe Hearns would have taken a win if they'd fought more than once in prime (he would have won the first fight, had it been over 12). I think his legacy is that of a guy who really faced the best competition at Welter, even if he hand-picked thereafter, and a guy who could change his style, going swarmer/slugger at the end of the Hearns fight, and being much more elusive than usual against Duran the second time. I think that fight leads us to think of him as up there with Whittaker, Willie Pep and Mayweather as a defensive master when he rarely used those skills to the max in the rest of his career. He was so good that he didn't have to.
(To qualify my statements above, this is no Leonard hate; he's one of my 5 favourite fighters of all time)
(To qualify my statements above, this is no Leonard hate; he's one of my 5 favourite fighters of all time)
Re: Sugar Ray Leonard ----
A small point...The first Leonard-Hearns fight was scheduled for fifteen, That was the fight where Angelo Dundee told SRL prior to the start of the fourteenth round, who was behind on points "you're blowing it, son" and he went out and stopped him in the next round.SamWise72 wrote:I think he would have to be in anyone's top 5, and most people would have him top 3. I don't think he would have been dominant in Robinson's era, though I can see him taking a decision or even a stoppage over Robinson on an off night. I believe Hearns would have taken a win if they'd fought more than once in prime (he would have won the first fight, had it been over 12). I think his legacy is that of a guy who really faced the best competition at Welter, even if he hand-picked thereafter, and a guy who could change his style, going swarmer/slugger at the end of the Hearns fight, and being much more elusive than usual against Duran the second time. I think that fight leads us to think of him as up there with Whittaker, Willie Pep and Mayweather as a defensive master when he rarely used those skills to the max in the rest of his career. He was so good that he didn't have to.
(To qualify my statements above, this is no Leonard hate; he's one of my 5 favourite fighters of all time)
I make SRL even money against any welterweight who ever lived. Decent chin, lightning fast, good heart, and could crack...
-
SaadOffTheDeck
- Heavyweight

- Posts: 19602
- Joined: 04 Jun 2009, 07:38
Re: Sugar Ray Leonard ----
Decent chin & Good heart? He was absolutely upper echelon in both of those categories.ThatOne wrote:A small point...The first Leonard-Hearns fight was scheduled for fifteen, That was the fight where Angelo Dundee told SRL prior to the start of the fourteenth round, who was behind on points "you're blowing it, son" and he went out and stopped him in the next round.SamWise72 wrote:I think he would have to be in anyone's top 5, and most people would have him top 3. I don't think he would have been dominant in Robinson's era, though I can see him taking a decision or even a stoppage over Robinson on an off night. I believe Hearns would have taken a win if they'd fought more than once in prime (he would have won the first fight, had it been over 12). I think his legacy is that of a guy who really faced the best competition at Welter, even if he hand-picked thereafter, and a guy who could change his style, going swarmer/slugger at the end of the Hearns fight, and being much more elusive than usual against Duran the second time. I think that fight leads us to think of him as up there with Whittaker, Willie Pep and Mayweather as a defensive master when he rarely used those skills to the max in the rest of his career. He was so good that he didn't have to.
(To qualify my statements above, this is no Leonard hate; he's one of my 5 favourite fighters of all time)
I make SRL even money against any welterweight who ever lived. Decent chin, lightning fast, good heart, and could crack...
As for the question from the OP.
I think he rates with Armstrong, Gavilan & Griffith in the top 5.
One of the greatest fighters of all time(top 15-30), one of the most disingenuous personalities of all time. Shrewd negotiator that wasn't fond of rematches and forever my most hated fighter.
He didn't dominate his own, if you mean being one of the best in the world? Absolutely in any era.
-
Syntax Error
- Heavyweight

- Posts: 9011
- Joined: 22 Apr 2005, 08:00
Re: Sugar Ray Leonard ----
There have been so many great welterweights that it can sometimes be difficult to place them.
Leonard on his best night was a match for any 147 lber that ever lived.
I personally have him in the top 5 of welterweights & he probably would have been higher had he had more fights at the weight after unifying the title.
I would love to have seen him up against Donald Curry in 1983 for example, but we will never get to know how he would have fared after '82 properly.
Leonard on his best night was a match for any 147 lber that ever lived.
I personally have him in the top 5 of welterweights & he probably would have been higher had he had more fights at the weight after unifying the title.
I would love to have seen him up against Donald Curry in 1983 for example, but we will never get to know how he would have fared after '82 properly.
Re: Sugar Ray Leonard ----
Leonard was a truly amazing fighter. He had a devastating left hook and put combinations together as good as anyone who ever lived. And I'm not talking about the Hagler fight but at 147 when he would end the combo with a left hook that he could get full power on.
I believe he was a great defensive fighter but he relied on his footwork most of the time and as he got older his defence failed him quicker than we might have expected.
He had underrated killer instinct and could finish the job quickly when he needed to. The attack he puts on Hearns in round 6 of their first fight was frightening in its speed and ferocity.
Barry McGuigan a year or so ago rated him as the greatest fighter of all-time. And he didn't say it flippantly but said he know he'd take a lot of flak for saying it.
At welterweight he could have beaten anyone. I don't think he'd beat Robinson. But he'd be at least even money with the likes of Gavilan, Griffith, Walker, Napoles, Hearns...
I don't think there's been a welterweight since Leonard who would have beaten him in a series of fights.
I do believe though that he had preferential treatment in his second career which annoyed me at the time.
He's definitely a top 20 p4p guy.
I believe he was a great defensive fighter but he relied on his footwork most of the time and as he got older his defence failed him quicker than we might have expected.
He had underrated killer instinct and could finish the job quickly when he needed to. The attack he puts on Hearns in round 6 of their first fight was frightening in its speed and ferocity.
Barry McGuigan a year or so ago rated him as the greatest fighter of all-time. And he didn't say it flippantly but said he know he'd take a lot of flak for saying it.
At welterweight he could have beaten anyone. I don't think he'd beat Robinson. But he'd be at least even money with the likes of Gavilan, Griffith, Walker, Napoles, Hearns...
I don't think there's been a welterweight since Leonard who would have beaten him in a series of fights.
I do believe though that he had preferential treatment in his second career which annoyed me at the time.
He's definitely a top 20 p4p guy.
Re: Sugar Ray Leonard ----
SaadOffTheDeck wrote:Decent chin & Good heart? He was absolutely upper echelon in both of those categories.ThatOne wrote:A small point...The first Leonard-Hearns fight was scheduled for fifteen, That was the fight where Angelo Dundee told SRL prior to the start of the fourteenth round, who was behind on points "you're blowing it, son" and he went out and stopped him in the next round.SamWise72 wrote:I think he would have to be in anyone's top 5, and most people would have him top 3. I don't think he would have been dominant in Robinson's era, though I can see him taking a decision or even a stoppage over Robinson on an off night. I believe Hearns would have taken a win if they'd fought more than once in prime (he would have won the first fight, had it been over 12). I think his legacy is that of a guy who really faced the best competition at Welter, even if he hand-picked thereafter, and a guy who could change his style, going swarmer/slugger at the end of the Hearns fight, and being much more elusive than usual against Duran the second time. I think that fight leads us to think of him as up there with Whittaker, Willie Pep and Mayweather as a defensive master when he rarely used those skills to the max in the rest of his career. He was so good that he didn't have to.
(To qualify my statements above, this is no Leonard hate; he's one of my 5 favourite fighters of all time)
I make SRL even money against any welterweight who ever lived. Decent chin, lightning fast, good heart, and could crack...
As for the question from the OP.
I think he rates with Armstrong, Gavilan & Griffith in the top 5.
One of the greatest fighters of all time(top 15-30), one of the most disingenuous personalities of all time. Shrewd negotiator that wasn't fond of rematches and forever my most hated fighter.
He didn't dominate his own, if you mean being one of the best in the world? Absolutely in any era.
I agree but if I start using hyperbole it invites pissing matches. SRL was a marvelous fighter.
The only knock if it's a knock is he was a reflex fighter and reflex fighters have relatively short peaks. However I tend to evaluate boxers at their best and not their worst.
-
SaadOffTheDeck
- Heavyweight

- Posts: 19602
- Joined: 04 Jun 2009, 07:38
Re: Sugar Ray Leonard ----
Fair enough, I detest him but his chin was granite and his heart was immense. If he had a weakness I don't think he was great defensively, but he was very good.ThatOne wrote:SaadOffTheDeck wrote:Decent chin & Good heart? He was absolutely upper echelon in both of those categories.ThatOne wrote:
A small point...The first Leonard-Hearns fight was scheduled for fifteen, That was the fight where Angelo Dundee told SRL prior to the start of the fourteenth round, who was behind on points "you're blowing it, son" and he went out and stopped him in the next round.
I make SRL even money against any welterweight who ever lived. Decent chin, lightning fast, good heart, and could crack...
As for the question from the OP.
I think he rates with Armstrong, Gavilan & Griffith in the top 5.
One of the greatest fighters of all time(top 15-30), one of the most disingenuous personalities of all time. Shrewd negotiator that wasn't fond of rematches and forever my most hated fighter.
He didn't dominate his own, if you mean being one of the best in the world? Absolutely in any era.
I agree but if I start using hyperbole it invites pissing matches. SRL was a marvelous fighter.
The only knock if it's a knock is he was a reflex fighter and reflex fighters have relatively short peaks. However I tend to evaluate boxers at their best and not their worst.
Re: Sugar Ray Leonard ----
In his 8 fights above 147 he was dropped 6 times...
He had an excellent chin but when his reflexes dulled he could be dropped. Though they were all pretty much flash knockdowns. He was rarely separated from his senses. I'd say Duran's punch in their first fight was the only time he was really on rubber legs.
He had an excellent chin but when his reflexes dulled he could be dropped. Though they were all pretty much flash knockdowns. He was rarely separated from his senses. I'd say Duran's punch in their first fight was the only time he was really on rubber legs.
-
SaadOffTheDeck
- Heavyweight

- Posts: 19602
- Joined: 04 Jun 2009, 07:38
Re: Sugar Ray Leonard ----
I attribute that more to the less than exceptional defense.Ezzard wrote:In his 8 fights above 147 he was dropped 6 times...
He had an excellent chin but when his reflexes dulled he could be dropped. Though they were all pretty much flash knockdowns. He was rarely separated from his senses. I'd say Duran's punch in their first fight was the only time he was really on rubber legs.
Re: Sugar Ray Leonard ----
I would argue his defense was a function of his reflexes. As his reflexes declined so did his defense as opposed to defensive fighters who rely more on technique.
Re: Sugar Ray Leonard ----
That was my point. After 12, Tommy was winning on my card, but it was close enough at the end of the 11th that Dundee might not have told him to go knock him out. Over 12, I can see Tommy having won that fight, but of course, we'll never know how they would have managed their energy levels different for a 12 rounder.ThatOne wrote:A small point...The first Leonard-Hearns fight was scheduled for fifteen, That was the fight where Angelo Dundee told SRL prior to the start of the fourteenth round, who was behind on points "you're blowing it, son" and he went out and stopped him in the next round.SamWise72 wrote:I think he would have to be in anyone's top 5, and most people would have him top 3. I don't think he would have been dominant in Robinson's era, though I can see him taking a decision or even a stoppage over Robinson on an off night. I believe Hearns would have taken a win if they'd fought more than once in prime (he would have won the first fight, had it been over 12). I think his legacy is that of a guy who really faced the best competition at Welter, even if he hand-picked thereafter, and a guy who could change his style, going swarmer/slugger at the end of the Hearns fight, and being much more elusive than usual against Duran the second time. I think that fight leads us to think of him as up there with Whittaker, Willie Pep and Mayweather as a defensive master when he rarely used those skills to the max in the rest of his career. He was so good that he didn't have to.
(To qualify my statements above, this is no Leonard hate; he's one of my 5 favourite fighters of all time)
I make SRL even money against any welterweight who ever lived. Decent chin, lightning fast, good heart, and could crack...
-
SaadOffTheDeck
- Heavyweight

- Posts: 19602
- Joined: 04 Jun 2009, 07:38
Re: Sugar Ray Leonard ----
How is that an argument?ThatOne wrote:I would argue his defense was a function of his reflexes. As his reflexes declined so did his defense as opposed to defensive fighters who rely more on technique.
Re: Sugar Ray Leonard ----
SaadOffTheDeck wrote:How is that an argument?ThatOne wrote:I would argue his defense was a function of his reflexes. As his reflexes declined so did his defense as opposed to defensive fighters who rely more on technique.
Because it's different than arguing his defense rested on his technique.
-
SaadOffTheDeck
- Heavyweight

- Posts: 19602
- Joined: 04 Jun 2009, 07:38
Re: Sugar Ray Leonard ----
His technique was lacking, as his athleticism dimmed his short comings came more to light. Even in his prime his defense was a tad overrated, he had great legs, but technically he could always be hit when engaging.ThatOne wrote:SaadOffTheDeck wrote:How is that an argument?ThatOne wrote:I would argue his defense was a function of his reflexes. As his reflexes declined so did his defense as opposed to defensive fighters who rely more on technique.
Because it's different than arguing his defense rested on his technique.
Re: Sugar Ray Leonard ----
I agree...
-
Hairy Arse
- Super Middleweight
- Posts: 68
- Joined: 01 Jun 2013, 05:56
Re: Sugar Ray Leonard ----
His run from 1978 to 1981 was quite possibly the toughest, strongest run over such a period of any elite fighter of the last fifty years. To establish yourself as one of the greatest fighters in history - especially in the modern era - by the age of 25 is quite astonishing.
Quality over quantity, every single time.
Quality over quantity, every single time.
-
elmersalsa
- Heavyweight

- Posts: 15700
- Joined: 02 Feb 2003, 03:50
Re: Sugar Ray Leonard ----
From 1979 to 1982, the great Sugar Ray Leonard was at his very best. Too bad he had to retire for a detached retina. But in that time frame, I believe that he could beat any welterweight of any era, including the great Sugar Ray Robinson. I think he was BETTER complete fighter than the original Sugar Ray.
Because of lack of durability, I ranked him above the top 20 all time p4p. A top 25 fighter no doubt.
At welterweight, he is a top 5 behind Robinson, Armstrong, Griffith and Gavilan in that order.
Because of lack of durability, I ranked him above the top 20 all time p4p. A top 25 fighter no doubt.
At welterweight, he is a top 5 behind Robinson, Armstrong, Griffith and Gavilan in that order.
-
SaadOffTheDeck
- Heavyweight

- Posts: 19602
- Joined: 04 Jun 2009, 07:38
Re: Sugar Ray Leonard ----
elmersalsa wrote: Because of lack of durability, I ranked him above the top 20 all time p4p
Your stupidity never ceases to amaze.
-
Syntax Error
- Heavyweight

- Posts: 9011
- Joined: 22 Apr 2005, 08:00
Re: Sugar Ray Leonard ----
Are you talking about Sugar Ray Leonard?elmersalsa wrote:From 1979 to 1982, the great Sugar Ray Leonard was at his very best. Too bad he had to retire for a detached retina. But in that time frame, I believe that he could beat any welterweight of any era, including the great Sugar Ray Robinson. I think he was BETTER complete fighter than the original Sugar Ray.
Because of lack of durability, I ranked him above the top 20 all time p4p. A top 25 fighter no doubt.
At welterweight, he is a top 5 behind Robinson, Armstrong, Griffith and Gavilan in that order.
-
Counter-puncher
- Heavyweight

- Posts: 39141
- Joined: 20 May 2008, 11:41
Re: Sugar Ray Leonard ----
any chance he meant longevity/number of fights, rather than questioning SRL's durability? or am i being generous?
Re: Sugar Ray Leonard ----
SaadOffTheDeck wrote:elmersalsa wrote: Because of lack of durability, I ranked him above the top 20 all time p4p![]()
Your stupidity never ceases to amaze.
Ha.
SRL's peak was relatively short. Ring has him at #15
http://bleacherreport.com/articles/5578 ... me/page/87
It's a interesting list.
-
SaadOffTheDeck
- Heavyweight

- Posts: 19602
- Joined: 04 Jun 2009, 07:38
Re: Sugar Ray Leonard ----
I'd have him right around there too.ThatOne wrote:SaadOffTheDeck wrote:elmersalsa wrote: Because of lack of durability, I ranked him above the top 20 all time p4p![]()
Your stupidity never ceases to amaze.
Ha.
SRL's peak was relatively short. Ring has him at #15
http://bleacherreport.com/articles/5578 ... me/page/87
It's a interesting list.
-
elmersalsa
- Heavyweight

- Posts: 15700
- Joined: 02 Feb 2003, 03:50
Re: Sugar Ray Leonard ----
fornicate youSaadOffTheDeck wrote:elmersalsa wrote: Because of lack of durability, I ranked him above the top 20 all time p4p![]()
Your stupidity never ceases to amaze.
-
elmersalsa
- Heavyweight

- Posts: 15700
- Joined: 02 Feb 2003, 03:50
Re: Sugar Ray Leonard ----
Durability in the sense of career length. He had to retire multiple times and he only had 40 fights. He did not had enough longevity.Syntax Error wrote:Are you talking about Sugar Ray Leonard?elmersalsa wrote:From 1979 to 1982, the great Sugar Ray Leonard was at his very best. Too bad he had to retire for a detached retina. But in that time frame, I believe that he could beat any welterweight of any era, including the great Sugar Ray Robinson. I think he was BETTER complete fighter than the original Sugar Ray.
Because of lack of durability, I ranked him above the top 20 all time p4p. A top 25 fighter no doubt.
At welterweight, he is a top 5 behind Robinson, Armstrong, Griffith and Gavilan in that order.