Well, let's examine Big George's career before the comeback.Ambling Alp II wrote:#14 is absurd.elmersalsa wrote:Let's say that the great George Foreman would've never made a comeback and stayed retired since 1977. Where would we put him in the all time heavyweight rankings? In 1987, at the time of his comeback.
Let's see:
1. Muhammad Ali
2. Joe Louis
3. Jack Johnson
4. Rocky Marciano
5. Jack Dempsey
6. Larry Holmes
7. Joe Frazier
8. Mike Tyson
9. Peter Jackson
10. Sonny Liston
11. John L. Sullivan
12. Ezzard Charles
13. James J. Jeffries
14. George Foreman
Is that the right ranking for Big George by 1987, in the time of his comeback?
I have him #3 and I ignore his second career. Granted there are several guys who are close whom you could argue for #3.
He was clearly better than Liston, Jeffries and Tyson. Rating Jackson, Sullivan and Charles ahead of him is unbelievable.
vs Sonny Liston: Many people dismiss Sonny because: One, he quit in first fight against Cassius Clay. Two, he didn't help himself in the rematch. That's OK. I could understand people's thinking. What we can't dismiss that before the Clay fiasco, Liston CLEANED UP THE WEIGHT CLASS OUTRIGHT. He beat all the top contenders before the crown...Something that Big George didn't do. As a matter of fact, he cleaned up the class way before his title match with Floyd Patterson. He was ducked for years for the heavyweight crown. At least for 3 years. Foreman beat the great Joe Frazier. Great win. Frazier was undefeated. He was 29. Still prime, right? Well, not so primmy. He looked bad against Ron Stander and the other cat that I forgot his name. He looked really bad. That wasn't Smokin' Joe before FOTC. Then, he beats Ken Norton, a guy I believe beat The Greatest 3 times in my view. He destroyed him in two. And after that? ALI regains his crown. Then, he struggles with Ron Lyle. And Jimmy Young gave him a boxing lesson in San Juan. That's it for Big George. Not enough to be #3 in my estimation. At least Liston had more longevity.
vs Jim J. Jeffries: Jeffries was considered tops by Nat Fleischer. He never lost the crown. He retired undefeated champion. Short career like Foreman. But, in my estimation, he held the title longer. And he beat good quality opposition just like Foreman "seemed" to do.
vs Mike Tyson: By 1987, Tyson, just 21 years old, cleaned up the heavyweights. He won the three titles. Held crown longer than Big George. At the time, in 1987, he was being compared with Ali and Louis as such a young age. No heavyweight was not compared with the past greats like that. By 1988, many people believed at the time that he was not just the best heavyweight champion ever, but the best fighter pound per pound ever. The people AT THE TIME, THOUGHT OF HIM LIKE THAT. Big George never had that sentiment by the people. The boxing world was around Mike Tyson. It was never around George Foreman. Tyson was the second best fighter pound per pound of the 80s decade in my estimation. Foreman? Hmmm.
vs Peter Jackson: Well, Big George could be ahead of him. Not so fast. Jackson had over 80 fights. Something unheard of from a heavyweight. He was the best fighter of the 1880s behind John L. He was a victim of circumstances. He was black. But, what he did, it was remarkable. He had a longer career than Big George. Let's check his record.
vs Ezzard Charles: Charles reign at the top was a remarkable one. He was not a heavyweight. We all know that. But being heavyweight champion, he defended it 9 times in 2 years. He could have been the first heavyweight champion to regain his crown. Unfortunately, because of some judges, (many people saw he beat the great Jersey Joe Walcott in fight #3). He gave the great Rocky Marciano fits in two memorable bouts.
vs John L. Sullivan: He was the best of his time, pound per pound, period. He drew the color line. But, should he get penalized for that? Maybe yes. Maybe not. We don't know. What we know is that he held the heavyweight crown longer than Foreman. He was considered a great fighter by the time he retired. Could we say that about Foreman when he retired? Not. Still, John L., because of the popularity he gave the sport of boxing, is a ring legend now days. Foreman first retirement was never considered as a legendary fighter but a bafoon by many. It was the second career that Big George got the adjective of all time great heavyweight and pound per pound. Not the first career.