King Carlos wrote:Ambling Alp II wrote:
Laguna beat Ortiz once out of three and has little else.
Ramos, Ishimatsu, Hernandez, Carmona, Garcia, Urbina, Espinoza, Narvaez, a "draw" with Locche in Argentina, and a disputed loss to Saldivar. Along with his razor close fights against Buchanan.
That's 5 champions beaten, with disputed decisions against 3 others, and 4 more wins against top contenders. Not too shabby.
He lost badly every other time he fought a great fighter.
He was never stopped in his entire career. What fights are you suggesting?
Beating those "champions" looks good, until you compare that to what truly great fighters did. (I should amend the statement about losing badly. Take out the word badly.) Outside of Ortiz, none of those "champions" would have been a champion in era where there was just one champion. Angott, McFarland, and Ross all beat several fighters of that level that most people don't remember.
Plus they all beat great fighters:
Angott beat Arizmendi, Pep and Jenkins.
McFarland beat Welsh, draw with Britton. Never lost a fight.
Ross beat Battalino, Petrolle, and Canzoneri twice.
Ring Magazine must have been out of their mind having Buchanan, Laguna, and DeJesus ahead of greats.
Boxing News has Buchanan #19 and Laguna #21, which is pretty charitable. They don't have DeJesus in their top 25.
They have McFarland, #10, Ross # 12, Angott #13.
The IBHOF:
Buchanan did not make it until 2000.
Laguna didn't make it until 2001.
DeJesus still isn't in.
Angott made it in 1998.
McFarland made it in 1992.
Barney Ross made it in the very first class of 1990.
Our own Boxrec Hall of Fame after 20 elections:
Buchanan never made it.
Laguna never made it.
DeJesus never made it.
Angott made it on our 16th election.
McFarland made it on 8th.
Ross made it on our 2nd election ever. Same time as Benny Leonard and Joe Gans made it.