Tuan_Jim wrote:jbizzle20 wrote:Tuan_Jim wrote:
There has always been giants in the heavyweights. They always came unstuck against a mobile, human-sized heavyweight who could employ speed & technique to work around the massive size disadvantage. Of course with technique (and apparently peak fitness) now extinct among the heavyweights, size of course wins out. There isn't the skill anymore to negate size.
Anyone who can look at Lewis/Vitali or Fury/Wladimir and believe that technique has advanced in time with weight training and nutrition has a better imagination than I do. It seems like one has come to completely replace the other.
In fact Lewis' bulk seemed a massive handicap when the 36 year old beer barrel Ray Mercer outjabbed him and roughed him up. He didn't even have the energy to produce a big finish in the 10th round. His bulk didn't look like some brilliant sports advancement when Zeljko Mavrovic, a man in the early stages of a wasting disease, set a fervid pace and pushed Lewis to the brink of exhaustion. These giants must be relieved they came after the days of the 15 rounders.
Haha, lots of challengers can make themselves look competent for a few rounds. Mercer gave his all, against Lewis. Lewis handled it like a boss and returned the favor with killer 3 hit combos and rocket uppercuts that would've removed Mercer's head had he not had a neck thicker than a tree stump. Mavrovic set a fervid pace and that's about it. He got outclassed by Lewis' superior technique. Wepner gave Ali all he could handle. Ali could barely throw a punch against Holmes or Berbick. Lewis never looked as horrible as Ali did in those fights. And yes, I do give Lewis a break against Klitschko but Lewis probably didn't even need one. Lewis actually fought decently and screwed up Klitschko's face horribly but Klitschko barely put a dent in Lewis'. Lewis' punches just did more damage than Klitschko's. Tyson and Holyfield could barely land a punch against Lewis.
Btw, don't bother with the Parkinson's argument for Ali. He chose to win by taking hits and outlasting the opponent, that was his style and he suffered the consequences of it. He didn't have to do that. Lewis chose to NOT get hit but still hit the other guy. Lewis upheld boxing's title as the sweet science, not just some toughman competition.
"Don't bother with the Parkinson's argument for Ali."
It's always telling when a man requests you don't debate the facts with him. 'I want to hold the Holmes and Berbick fights against Ali, but I don't want us to draw attention to his poor health because it will expose the flimsiness of my argument.'
"Tyson and Holyfield could barely land a punch against Lewis." Would that have anything to do with Tyson and Holyfield being closer to 40 than they were even to 30? Oh that's right, you skirt around the facts.
Since we're burying our heads in the sand at any sign of context then Lewis' two one-punch knockout losses to McCall and Rahman become even more damning. What great heavyweight champ in
history got stretched for the 10-count, losing his title to a man as limited as Hasim Rahman?
Lewis was 33 and 34 against Holyfield and 36 against Tyson. Yeah, age was really a factor there, NOT! Lewis, who was 37, and took the fight on 2 weeks notice, by the time he stepped into the ring against Klitschko (an ATG), f----d up Klitschko's face and gave him the worst beating of his career (a career that would include an 87% KO percentage and never being behind on a score card, ever). Ali was 38 against Holmes and 39 against Berbick. Due to the accumulation of punishment from years of his "take punches but outlast the other guy" strategy, Ali developed Parkinson's. Lewis did not take such punishment on a regular basis. Instead, he chose to avoid getting hit but hit the other guy. See the difference? Lewis chose the smarter path that enabled him to last longer at peak form than the other. No, Lewis didn't have Ali's chin but Ali lost to his share of sub-par competition (Spinks, Berbick). Lewis returned the favor, in epic fashion, against Rahman and sent the Rock into irrelevancy. Ali lost to a guy who would get TKO'd in the 1st round by Gerrie Coetzee. It's called luck, ever heard of it? On another note, Ali had a celebrity image and mouth, Lewis did not. It's why people think that Ali would actually be favored over Lewis. American celebrity status often inflates a fighter beyond their true capabilities (See Tyson, Mike). If you actually sized up Ali and Lewis based on career performance and size, you'd see that Ali would be a long shot against Lewis but, sadly, celebrity trumps reality with too many people when it comes to Ali.