Ambling Alp wrote:A fighter's record is just a small part of career?
I'm not just going by a fighter's win/loss record. I look at every fight he had, compare it to how good his opponent was at the time. Then judge his career as a whole, not by a couple of big wins or losses.
Sure there is a lot of value in watching the fights themselves. I have watch many, many fights and love doing it.
You say I should watch more fights and judge more by that(Even though you rate Elmer Ray in your all time top 30 and have never seen him fight. Coincidentally, he fought in the 1940's and 1950's.)
I have seen many heavyweight fights from the 1940's and 1950's and don't see why you are so obsessed with this era. It was mediocre at best.
The heavyweights era the 1970's were far superior, and the 1960's and 1990's was better as well.
You certainly can learn a lot by watching film.
However there are couple of things that you remember when doing that:
1. You can only watch a small % of the fights. Even with a big name like Marciano or Louis, most of there fights aren't available to actually see. It's very easy to only see a fighter once or twice and assume that was their typical performance. However a lot depends on how good he was that particular night and the ability and style of his opponent.
Pretend you only saw Felix Trinidad fight once and it was against Mayorga. You might think he was a great fighter. However, what about if the only time you ever saw him was against Winky Wright? Then you might think he was awful.
As I've said, film is important, but you have to look at their records as well, especially with guys you haven't seen much.
As far as Nino Valdes and Bob Satterfield, I stand by earlier comments that they were at the same level as a Jesse Ferguson.
I have to see Satterfield on film to appreciate him?
I have seen him a couple of times and wasn't impressed. I look at his record and it's not imopressive at all. You point a few "big" wins over Valdes,Johnson,Baker and Cleveland Williams as evidence that he was great.
Well, Valdes was nothing special himself, Johnson was lightheavyweight (and he also got beat twice by Johnson)Baker, another overrated fighter from this era that you are trying to hype up. Oh, and Cleveland Williams? You count that when Williams took the fight literally at the last minute? But in another post you claim Jerry Quarry was out of shape when he had "only" 3 weeks to fight Ken Norton.
Bob Satterfield (50-25-4, 35 ko's). Why don't you want to discuss Satterfield embarrasing losses? Are there too many? How about guys like John Holman,Julio Mederes,Harold Carter,Bert Whitehurst,Joe Linday, Charley Williams, Lee Oma, Wasbury Bascom, Henry Hall.
Have you seen film of Satterfield losing to all of these guys? Maybe you wouldn't think so highly of Satterfield if you had.
Are all of these guys in the top 100 as well? Would they all have beaten the "alpha " Champs as well?
What about Valdes? You say he was better than his record indicated, (48-19-2) I would say he was even worse. Outside of the win over Charles, there aren't really any other huge wins. He got knocked out by Eddie Machen who wasn't a hard puncher at all. He lost to Alonzo Johnson, Charley Powell (who was awful), Alex Miteff, Billy Gillian amoung others. Are all of these guys in the top 100 of all time? Have you seen Valdes lose to all of them? Why don't we talk about them at all?
Valdes and Satterfield were way, way better than Jesse Ferguson? Why? I have seen Ferguson fight quite a bit. In his early days he was a tough guy, a fringe contender.
His record was only 26-18, but take a hard look at it. He rarely fought a tomato can. Unlike Valdes and Satterfield, he only had one embarrasing loss (Anders Ecklund). 12 of his losses were when was over 35. 10 of his losses were to world champions. He also beat Buster Douglas and Ray Mercer.
I'm not trying to prop Ferguson up as a great fighter. He was decent for awhile, then was basically a stepping stone when he got older.
What I'm saying is that Valdes and Satterfield weren't anything special at all either. They shouldn't be remembered as great or even very good fighters because they weren't.
Why don't we rate Archie McBride as an all time great? Who is he? Just a journeyman who went 24-20. He did however beat both Valdes and Satterfield. You might not have seen it on tape, but it happened.
You say I should watch more fights and judge more by that(Even though you rate Elmer Ray in your all time top 30 and have never seen him fight. Coincidentally, he fought in the 1940's and 1950's.)
yes you should watch more film. luckily, i have studied rays style and i have seen common opponents hes beaten like walcott, charles on film in 1947.
I have seen many heavyweight fights from the 1940's and 1950's and don't see why you are so obsessed with this era. It was mediocre at best.
in your opinion it is. However I believe they are very underated and understudied eras by a lot of historians and fans.
mediocre?
do u think the 1980s were mediocre?
The heavyweights era the 1970's were far superior, and the 1960's and 1990's was better as well.
i agree these are all better eras. but they certianly are not "far superior".
however the top heavyweights of the 40s-50s louis, marciano, liston, patterson, walcottt, charles would all be top contenders/champions in the 70s. especially in the mid 70s when a well past his prime slow, boring ali was champion.
1. You can only watch a small % of the fights. Even with a big name like Marciano or Louis, most of there fights aren't available to actually see. It's very easy to only see a fighter once or twice and assume that was their typical performance. However a lot depends on how good he was that particular night and the ability and style of his opponent.
Pretend you only saw Felix Trinidad fight once and it was against Mayorga. You might think he was a great fighter. However, what about if the only time you ever saw him was against Winky Wright? Then you might think he was awful.
yes good point, however it was clear u could look at certain fighters record if there past there prime or not, and then read newspaper articles and see if they mention them being washed up or looking as good as ever. so its important to identify the fighters prime before watching the fight, then after see what some of the newspaper reports said about the fight and how the fighter looked. sometimes, just by looking at a record, you can tell if hes a hot/cold fighter by the fact that he beats great fighters but sometimes loses to bums.
As far as Nino Valdes and Bob Satterfield, I stand by earlier comments that they were at the same level as a Jesse Ferguson.
ridiculous! fergusson was a unranked journeyman. nino valdes and bob satterfield were top rated contenders, that alone qualifies them above fergusson.
I have to see Satterfield on film to appreciate him?
I have seen him a couple of times and wasn't impressed
what fights did u see of him?
just watch the way satterfield unleases his arsenal of punches . He keeps his hands chest high, throws very fast and fluent coordinated punches, had huge explosiveness and aggresivesss, his combinations are fast and wild but they consist of many punches in a row and his technique as a puncher is great. when he wants too, he has good boxing skills(like demonstrated in nino valdes and harold johnson fight). his trouble is he has a glass jaw, and his wildness leaves him open for big shots.
satterfield is like a smaller more aggresive version of cleveland williams. satterfield may be too wild at times, which makes him very predictable, but he throws punches in correct form.
Well, Valdes was nothing special himself, Johnson was lightheavyweight (and he also got beat twice by Johnson)Baker, another overrated fighter from this era that you are trying to hype up.
valdes himself was nothing special? well i would say hes better than some of the alpha champs of the 80s.
valdes held his hands high in modern style, and had a very good jab(80" reach) to go along with his powerful punches and combinations.
u say harold johnson was a light-H, BUT you failt to mention harold johnson beat most of the top contender heavyweights of the 1950s.
even in 1961, and far past his prime, harold johnson beat top 50 heavyweight of all time eddie machen. a well past it machen beat one of the best fighters of the "incredible 70s era" jerry quarry.
satterfield managed to outpoiint a prime and very consistent harold johnson, which is an incredible feat!
well past it harold johnson even nearly shutout doug jones over 15 rounds. the same doug jones who went on to knockout zora folley and fight muhammad ali to 10 very close rounds.
you say bob bakers overated because u dont know much about him. he was 6'2 210-220lb top contender heavyweight who at his best was a very good fighter. baker for a big man possesed very good boxing skills, and had a decent punch as well. baker possessed VERY fast handspeed and thats very valuable for a man of baker's size.
roy harris said baker had "the fastest handspeed for a heavyweight i have ever seen". and that was a over the hill baker.
bob baker would box circles around a man like gerry cooney IMO
Bob baker was a top contender for a lot of years in the 1950s, and hes certainly above the level of an unheralded journeyman like jesse fergusson.
poster john garfield who saw bob baker LIVE and knows a lot more about him than you spoke very highly of baker as contender. Garfield said a motivated baker at his best was very good legit top contender, and would be a tough fight for anyone. It apperas baker was a bit of a mental case, cause he said as Baker would lose confidence and get unmotivated and not train as hard, and would have bad preformances in the ring.
Oh, and Cleveland Williams? You count that when Williams took the fight literally at the last minute? But in another post you claim Jerry Quarry was out of shape when he had "only" 3 weeks to fight Ken Norton.
now u feel the need to dismiss the cleveland williams victory, because you know it would be detrimental to your case against satterfield.
cleveland williams was 31-1 when he fought satterfield, and though he was still very young, he wasnt that green considering his record. williams certainly had his full power and youthness when he fought bob. satterfield easily knocked out williams in 3 rounds actually knocking cleveland williams out cold for over 1 minute. makes u wonder if any version of cleveland williams could deal with satterfield.
williams may have been a last minute substitute, but he fought just 14 days earlier, and his weight was 201lb actually a bit lighter than in his previous fights.
quarry on the other hand was clearly battle worn, and looked noticeabley slower on film. that was defintley not a prime quarry. quarry weighed in at 207lb, thats 10-15lb over his best fighting weight. that tells u hes out of shape.
Bob Satterfield (50-25-4, 35 ko's). Why don't you want to discuss Satterfield embarrasing losses? Are there too many? How about guys like John Holman,Julio Mederes,Harold Carter,Bert Whitehurst,Joe Linday, Charley Williams, Lee Oma, Wasbury Bascom, Henry Hall.
Have you seen film of Satterfield losing to all of these guys? Maybe you wouldn't think so highly of Satterfield if you had.
Are all of these guys in the top 100 as well? Would they all have beaten the "alpha " Champs as well?
first off, off those mentioned above...........satterfield was past his prime when he lossed to harold carrter, bert whitehurst, julio mederos, john holman
notice how when he fought john holman the first two times, he knocked out holman. only the 3rd time, did holman finally beat a older satterfield. not to mention the suspicious events that happened pre fight that lead u to believe a fixed fight.
- the wasbury bascom fight was sketchky hometown split decision.
- notice how in the only fight where mederos fights a prime satterfield, satterfield knocks him out in 2
- lee oma beat satterfield in the rematch. oma was also a highly experienced top 10 contender at the time who in his next fight would go on to challenge charles for the world title. however, satterfield also knocked the durable lee oma out COLD in the fight before!
joe lindsay is a odd guy. i dont know why he retired at such a young age. but he was considered a big young prospect in the late 40s-early 50s and if u look at his resume you will see he beat a lot of other top young prospects who went on to become somebody. but his career seemed to drift off into nowhere and he became nothing but a journeyman.
satterfield was very inconsistent and had a glass jaw, plus he fought a lot. dont expect your record to be good.
however look at satterfields win resume and u will be very impressed
What about Valdes? You say he was better than his record indicated, (48-19-2) I would say he was even worse. Outside of the win over Charles, there aren't really any other huge wins. He got knocked out by Eddie Machen who wasn't a hard puncher at all. He lost to Alonzo Johnson, Charley Powell (who was awful), Alex Miteff, Billy Gillian amoung others. Are all of these guys in the top 100 of all time? Have you seen Valdes lose to all of them? Why don't we talk about them at all?
Valdes had a short prime 52-55 so whe u look at his record, focus most of ur intention on those years.
valdes was better than his record indicated. get some film of him........ you will find he was better than u think. valdes certainly would have left the likes of jesse fergusson out on the canvas after 4 short rounds.
valdes at 6'3 210lb possesed good all around skill for a big man. he had a very good jab, and was a very powerful puncher.
valdes was past his best when the machen and folley fights took place. plus, machen was no powerpuff puncher.
- valdes was shot when he lost to alonzo johnson and charles powell. thats all he had left was his power. everything else was gone. should we count alis loss to leon spinks?
- valdez was over the hill in 1958 when he lost a close decision to alex miteff
Outside of the win over Charles, there aren't really any other huge wins.
the charles fight was a huge win. charles basically had not lossed since the walcott fight( since johnson and layne decisions were robberies) and valdes an unheard of journeyman at the time scored a huge upset over an out of shape overconfident charles.
TKO 2 tommy hurricane jackson- this is a big win. jackson was a top contender at the time, and nino destroyed hurricane jackson in 2 one sided rounds. nino was a very good puncher. it took floyd 10 rounds of beatings to finally finish off hurricane, and that was after hurricane had taken floyd to a very close 12 round decision.
KO 4 Heinz Neuhas- 215lb Neuhas was a top 10 contender and european champ who was considered a potential challenger to marcianos crown. valdes wiped neuhas out in 4 one sided rounds.
TKO 4 Karel Sys- former european champ and contender 215lb sys was wiped out in 4 easy rounds by valdes
you got to realize, valdes wasnt just beating some of these contenders, he was dominating them
W 10 james J parker - 6'3 210lb parker a good canadian heavyweight and fringe contender who was easily outpointed over 10 rouns by nino.
W 10 john holman- valdes wins wide decision over this 6'3 205lb hard hitting B level contender
W 10 Mike De john- De john was a 6'3 205lb hard hitting top 10 contender. valdes was well past it when he beat him.
W 10 wayne bethea- a good top 10 contender
TKO 1 Pat Mccurity- ever heard of him? he was a bright young prospect who was 30-2 at the time he fought nino. entering the valdes fight, mccurity was coming off a 10 round boxing lesson win over george chuvalo, one of the better heavies of the 60-70s.
even well past his prime nino managed to wipe out the european heavyweight scene..........
TKO 8 dick richardson
KO 1 Joe Erskine- erskine was the british champ and 29-0 at the time,
TKO 3 Don cockell- cockell was over the hill and out of shape, but valded got him out of there fast
TKO 7 Brian london- valdes was shot entering this fight too
also in 55, valdes was very competitive in his title elminator vs archie moore. moore clearly won but the fight was close and valdes had his moments. this loss to moore really seem to ruin valdes, and take the sparks out of nino. he knew this loss meant moore would get the title shot, and nino had been trying ever since he beat charles in 53, to get a shot at marciano.
so though valdes didnt mean any quality fighters outside of charles, he beat many good contenders and not only beat them HE DOMINATED THEM proving he belonged in a different class. when valdes was at the height of his career from a win over charles, he was avoided by some of the other top heavyweights for 2 years because he was very dangerous.
I think valdes was certainly in the class of a zora folley
cus D amato avoided valdes during his title reign. even though patterson would have whupped nino, Cus saw nino as much of a threat as williams, folley, machen and liston
Valdes and Satterfield were way, way better than Jesse Ferguson? Why? I have seen Ferguson fight quite a bit. In his early days he was a tough guy, a fringe contender.
he was tough, but he never beat any world class fighter outside of ray mercer which was a fluke win. i understand he beat douglas, but douglas was overweight and out of shape and was mentally unprepared due to his father being fired right before the fight by the camp.
back then, it was a lot easier to lose because u fought a lot more and fought against quality opponents very often so off nights were bound to happen.
a fighter now a days with fergussons record, is unnacceptable
satterfield at his best was far too powerful and skilled for fergusson to handle.
valdes at his best would have busted up fergusson with his jab and if valdez couldnt put jesse away with his heavy artillery, i expect nino to outbox jesse over 12 and work behind his jab and solid skills to win a unanimous decision.
I'm not trying to prop Ferguson up as a great fighter. He was decent for awhile, then was basically a stepping stone when he got older.
What I'm saying is that Valdes and Satterfield weren't anything special at all either
he was a unranked journeyman basically his whole career.
valdes and satterfield were dangerous top contenders rated highly by ring magazine in 50s and they were considered threats to patterson and marciano.
they were certainly more special than jesse fergusson
by saying fergusson was as good as valdez and satterfield, then ur saying fergusson would have been a top contender during marcianos era since valdes was the # 1 ranked contender in 53 and 54 and satterfield was ranked in the top 10 early-mid50s.