Tuan_Jim wrote:
The first thing I should say is that Evander Holyfield got title shots because he was a box office superstar who always gave his all in thrilling fights and, because of that, generated tens of millions of dollars .
Thats exactly my point, just because a guy is popular doesn't mean he is more deserving than the top ranked contenders.
Evander got chance after chance because of who he is.
Tuan_Jim wrote:
Lost to Bowe: Gets another shot in his 2nd comeback match. Holyfield/Bowe 1 was hailed as one of the greatest heavyweight title fights in decades. It was a huge fight, and Holyfield more than earned a rematch in his heroic defeat. .
This one is fair enough
Tuan_Jim wrote:
Lost to Bowe 2: Gets a shot at Tyson in his 2nd comeback match. You actually mean Bowe 3, but anyway. Holyfield got a Tyson shot because he was an icon, big box office - go check the PPV figures. Whether Holyfield was deserving of the shot, well . . . the fight speaks for itself. .
No re-read it.
Lost to Bowe 2 That refers to his 2nd loss to Bowe, not their 2nd match.
Tuan_Jim wrote:
Lost to Lewis: Gets a WBA title match in his very next match. Blame Lennox Lewis. .
I'm sure you do blame Lennox.
Surely Evander could have had a couple of warm up fights first?.... having an immediate rematch after losing a title I can understand, but losing the title, and then having another title shot with somebody else in his very next match? This is because its Evander, if it would have been say Michael Moorer would he have been given this immediate opportunity?
Tuan_Jim wrote:
Ibragimov, Valuev, these fights were down to Holyfield being the last superstar standing in an awful era of low public interest.
Exactly my point, he was granted them on popularity and not on merit. Because its Holyfield... hey lets give him another title shot! we want to build him into a 5 time world champion for the sake of history.
Tuan_Jim wrote:
It's hard to point out the bad names on Holyfield's record 1990-1999. Cooper? Sub for a sub for Tyson. Bean? Mandatory forced on him. After that, who do you have?
Not disputing Evanders achievements at Cruiserweights. I've never brought that into this argument.
But in his first HW reign.... Foreman & Holmes were great names but both in their 40s. It could well have been a different outcome if that was their primes.
Cooper had already lost 7 pro fights BEFORE he even boxed Evander.
And his subsequent reigns, he never put a good run of defences together....
In 4 title reigns he made only 7 successful defences (one of which was the Lewis draw, that Evander really lost)
That is why I referenced his record to being spotty... win, win, loss, win, loss.
Tuan_Jim wrote:
And who did Lewis beat 1990-99 that Holyfield wouldn't have? Morrison? Bruno? Golota? Mercer? Holyfield decked him and won a clear decision. What did Mercer do with Lewis next time out?
Golota was seen as a dangerous opponent in 1997. Though he was DQ'd, he was dominating Riddick Bowe in both fights.
Lewis destroyed him in 90 seconds.
And turning the tables.... looking at Evanders HW title fights, who would beat Lewis?
Bowe wanted no piece of him and vacated his WBC title (worried that a pro fight would end up the way the '88 Olympics went). Tyson was not the fighter he was in the 80s.
Lennox would have boxed cautiously against the older versions of Foreman/Holmes and boxed to a UD.
Tuan_Jim wrote:
Who fights Douglas, Foreman, Bowe thrice, Moorer twice, Mercer, and Tyson twice and comes out spotless? Certainly not Lennox Lewis who was struggling with Bruno, McCall, and, in life & death, Mercer.
Evander looked hurt when Bowe KO'd him. And being outboxed by Moorer (1994) is nothing to write home about.
I'm just having fun watching you bite!
I do think Evander is a great fighter.... but he was very fortunate to be granted so many opportunities.
When Lewis lost his first title he was frozen out of the title picture for 3 years. (Before you say anything about Rahman, it took a legal fight to get a rematch).
Evander kept getting chance after chance and immediate opportunities without having to climb the ladder again.
Because of his American hero status rather than on merit