Ambling Alp II wrote:
Why? Because it this happened when he was 50. You don't know how this affected his fighting when he was just 29. This kind of thing happened with other fighters and nobody goes back to their twenties and say he was already washed up by then.
He didn't wake up at 50 suddenly realizing he couldn't tie his own shoes, he was diagnosed with brain damage in 83. And yes people do go back in fighters careers to examine turning points in their careers. You are fixated on quarry being 29 but he was at the end of his career for effs sake, he retired following the fight.
Ambling Alp II wrote:If it was affecting his performance why was he still ranked highly going into the fight?
If he was washed up by them how come we did not hear this in 1980 ? 1985? 1995? 2000? I saw and read plenty of this fight and never heard that Quarry was considered washed up by anybody going into the fight.
"You never heard" being the operative words here.
Ambling Alp II wrote:It wasn't until 2005 and I started hearing about it on BOTP.
Yeah, I'm sure you picked up the first time this was ever mentioned and it was in 2005.
Ambling Alp II wrote:How desperate are you, bringing up his amateur career? Do we do that with any other fighter? I have never heard about anyone else , his career as a pro was cut short because he had a lot of amateur fights?
Are you seriously saying amateur fights have no effect on a fighter, never mind 1960's amateur fights with no head gear and plenty of knockouts? You have got to be kidding! You have never heard it said that a fighter had too many amateur fights and that it effected his longevity as a pro?
Ambling Alp II wrote:Sparring? Seriously? Literally everybody spars.
Yeah, and they all spar exactly the same don't they? I mention sparring because it was widely recorded that Quarry sparred a lot and very hard, often with no head gear.
Ambling Alp II wrote:How about George Chuvalo?
Yes, how about him? Is he the rule or the exception?
Quarry died punch drunk at 53. You say he didn't have many fights and that neither his long amateur career nor the years of sparring affected him so what was it then?
According to you he was close to peak in 75, having his best years from 73 to 75. Can you watch the first round of his first fight with Frazier and honestly say he looked just as good against Norton, same speed, same reflexes, same snap in his punches?