I am guessing that you are not familiar with the term "double standard".Ambling Alp II wrote:Broomhall wrote:How do you ignore? Seriously? Just count the guys with experience. He had plenty of fights against opponents with experience.
His only loss during his prime was a 4 round decision. The draws were over 4 rounds as well. They were for 4 rounds because of a State law at the time. You shouldn't put too much stock in fights that tied 2 rounds to 2.
Ok lets ignore ignore the 10 and 6 round draw to the renowned jonny Sudenberg 5-7-9 and john lester Johnson 12-3-0 over 10 rounds and the one round ko loss to fireman Jim Flynn in a 15 round bout, the 10 round draw to Billy Miske where most reports indicated Miske was the winner, the two losses to Gene Tunney when Dempsey was still a young man etc etc
Is anyone seriously going to argue that Ali would have drawn or lost to the guys above at any point in his career?
You don't want to give Dempsey credi for winning fights when he was experienced and his opponent was not. (btw I agree with that).
However, you then want to count losses/draws when he was inexperienced.
the reason nobody talks about the Sudenberg fights is because Dempsey was very inexperienced. He had bee a pro for less than a year, with almost no Amateur career. He didn't have a real manager or trainer. He was just a 19 yer old kid taking fights whenever and against almost whomever he could get them. Same with the Johnson draw.
He only had a bout 3 years experience when he fought Flynn. Flynn was a seasoned veteran who had been in the ring with several top pros.
Billy Miske? First of all, Miske was a very good fighter in his own right. The fight was a no-decision, which means there was no official verdict. It is considered a newspaper decision draw. Not exactly damming evidence against someone.
Dempsey wasn't remotely the fighter he would become when he fought Sudenberg, and Johnson. He was getting closer to his prime when he fought Flynn, and Miske, but still wasn't his best. He fought Flynn and Miske later and beat them easily.
Would Ali or some other great heavyweight have lost or drawn with these guys with that little experience, no team around him? Who knows. Doesn't really matter. It's irrelevant.
Tunney? More evidence of your double standard reasoning. You mentioned that Willard had been off for a long time when Dempsey beat him. Then you rip Dempsey for losing to Tunney. Dempsey was off for 3 years before fight Tunney.
No, I don't know if even Ali could have taken off 3 years and then beat Gene Tunney in his first fight back.
Yes Dempsey was less rusty in the rematch with Tunney, but he clearly wasn't the fighter that he had once been.
Stop using double standards, and start using commonsense.[/quote]
Me use common sense? you are talking about a small cruiserweight (at most) who was not experienced enough to win over 16 of his fights, was KO d once, drubbed by a light heavyweight twice whilst in his prime as a heavyweight at 32, knocked down 9 times in one fight, won his title off an inactive 40 year old and you are saying that this man would have beaten one of the greatest fighters to grace the ring?
And you say I dont use common sense.....