Assuming Mike Tyson was at his prime for the first 37 bouts of his career (before he was defeated by ‘Buster’ Douglas), the average weight of his opponents was 212lbs.IKSRTFO wrote:Of course Foreman could when you consider Tyson was only 5'10 and routinely walked through bigger guys not named Douglas until he was washed up and old. Punching power is punching power and it doesn't always rely on size. Some of the hardest HW punchers weren't always that big. And just because fighters are big doesn't mean they have a "big" chin. Foreman walkes through Wladmir 9 times out of 10 and makes Tyson Fury who isn't a hard puncher for his size look like poo.Enlightened-One wrote:In one of your other "fantasy" David vs. Goliath type threads, I went into great statistical detail about how today's best big men would be much bigger than the fighters who competed 40+ years ago.ValMar wrote:
I've never told that size didn't matter, it would be meaningless....On the other side, everyone has to admit that size is not only and decisive factor.
Please, list present day decent HWs 6'6'' /250 lbs. I will attempt to help you : Klitschko & Joshua...The end of story...
So I've answered your question, and I refuse to repeat myself.
If size doesn't matter, how would a 185lb Rocky Marciano fare against the current crop of light heavies (as in 175lb-ers), would surely outweigh him once rehydrated?
How would Marciano fare against the likes of Klitschko, Joshua, Wilder & Fury?
Would a 217lb 1973 version of George Foreman be able to decimate today's 250lb-ers like he did against the 205lb-ers that competed 44 years ago? Nostalgia might compel you to say "yes", but reality would surely be the polar opposite.
Would a 207lb version of Larry Holmes be able to out-jab much taller and 40lbs heavier opponents, who would also enjoy a reach advantage, coupled with possessing a similar work-rate?
Do people truly forget how often Holmes got hurt and decked by smaller men than himself? So why do they also believe that much bigger men would be incapable of hurting him?
Size really does matter. It's not simply a mere inconvenience. And there's a reason why there's a saying that claims "a good big 'un nearly always beats a good little 'un".
George Foreman’s average weight from the start of his career until the end of 1973 was 217lbs. During the same time period, the average weight of his opponents was 206lbs.
Almost every single one of the "victims" of Foreman or Tyson would be competing at cruiserweight had they been in their physical prime and active today.
Check the stats for yourself.