Kalan wrote:The things that drives really fast combination punches are muscles in the arms, shoulders, back, and chest - particularly the arms... At his peak, and for his size (and Tyson's hands were very small for a Heavyweight) Tyson had some of the most pronounced upper body musculature of any boxer ever. Foreman was 6'3" X 217 in his best condition ever for Foreman-Frazier 1.. Tyson was 5'11" X 218 for probably his best condition ever vs Michael Spinks.. Four inches shorter and ripped to the gills - and his weight was virtually the same as Foreman's at his peak condition.
Tyson wasn't a real great boxer and he wasn't really big on boxing skills.. "Boxing isn't too complicated, you just walk out there and hit him." What he did have is speed and power.. A funny thing about power is that speed is one of major components needed to generate it, and Tyson had a lot of it.
disagree on almost every thing. first,
muscle more often than not is in the
way of speed rather than promoting
it. second, mike tyson was tremendous
at his peak in his early twenties. he was
extremely fast and extremely difficult to
hit due to his upper body movement and
both of these on top of being a devastating
puncher.
no, he was no "boxer" in terms of "boxing".
he obviously was a puncher rather than a
boxer. but goodness he
was great. it was
not only psychology that made him the most
feared fighter since foreman before ali. i do
not think many boxers in history where that
feared, literally feared by their top opponents
as much as mike was. i have yet to see another
spinks, who seemed to be almost shivering
with fear. and people were afraid for a reason.
tyson's career was overshadowed by obscurity
and his legacy suffered big time from his weird
life. he might have been overrated back in the
day, but now he seems underrated to me. he is
in my top ten of all time and nobody stands in
front of 22 year old mike tyson and believes he
has an easy night ahead.