Sharkey screwed himself agaisnt Dempsey. He made a drastic mistake in ignoring boxing's number one rule: protect yourself at all times. He thought it was a good idea to complain instead of concentrate on Dempsey and BOOM!!!, its all over. I didn't see the ref breaking Dempsey and Sharkey. Like I said, Sharkey screwed himself.BrocktonBlockbuster49 wrote:tunney did not accomplish enough at heavyweight
* tunney beat a green risko who didnt peak until the late 20s-early 30s
*sharkey got screwed vs dempsey, he showed he was better than the 1927 dempsey. did i mention tunney was down for 14 seconds vs dempsey?
* weinhert beat a 8-3 and 10-4 sharkey, weak arguement alp. sharkey was very green
Jeffries, Tunney, Marciano
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Ambling Alp
- Heavyweight

- Posts: 3627
- Joined: 15 Jul 2005, 22:31
Decagon, I understand what you are saying, but I have to mention a couple of things.Decagon wrote:Foreman twice beat Frazier, who beat Ali.
Foreman destroyed Norton, who beat Ali.
Foreman beat Cooney, who beat Norton, who beat Ali.
Foreman beat Lyle, who beat Shavers, who got robbed against Ali.
Foreman beat Savarese, who beat Douglas, who beat Tyson, who beat Holmes, who beat Ali.
Foreman beat Moorer, who beat Holyfield, who beat Holmes, who beat Ali.
Yet, as strange as it sounds, Ali beat Foreman.
Your first couple of examples concerning Foreman/Frazier/Norton/Ali are legitimate.
The others I have to mention some flaws.
Norton was well past his prime when Cooney beat him.
Ali was well past his prime when he fought Shavers, and I don't agree that shavers was robbed anyway.
Douglas was well past his prime when Savarese beat him, and Ali was completely washed up when Holmes beat him.
Holmes was well past his prime when Holyfield beat him.
When comparing Sharkey and Tunney, their common opponents were all fairly close in age when each of them fought them. So I believe it's a more valid comparison than most of the examples that you gave.
I undertand what you are saying about this guy beating this guy. If fighter A beats fighter fighter B, and B beats C, then it isn't automatci that A will also beat C.
However, usually this is the case. Think of this way. You are about to go against someone (pick a sport, boxing tennis, basketball, whatever). You have 4 common opponents. You beat them all. The guy you are playing lost to 3, and tie the other. Don't you think that you would probably beat him? The odds would heavily be in your favor.
Sure you can come up with exceptions to this rule. But for every exception, you can find 10 times when the rule works.
Of course styles make fights. But usually, the better fighter wins.
With Tunney-Sharkey, I'm not just talking about one common opponent. This is 4 common opponents. there are no common opponents that Sharkey won and Tunney lost.
As for a head to head matchup, Sharkey wouldn't really even have much of punchers chance even. Tunney had a good chin, was hard to hit, and Sharkey wasn't that hard of puncher anyway.
I'm not saying that Tunney was the best heavyweight of all time.I know a lot of people have a hard time getting a handle on where to rank him. I just think he deserves to be rated a lot higher than Sharkey.
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BrocktonBlockbuster49
- Heavyweight

- Posts: 4900
- Joined: 29 May 2005, 00:32
When comparing Sharkey and Tunney, their common opponents were all fairly close in age when each of them fought them. So I believe it's a more valid comparison than most of the examples that you gave.
disagree, read my post above. u will see weinhart beat a horribly green sharkey, and tunney fought a green risko. he never fought a prime risko like sharkey did.
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The Great John L
- Heavyweight

- Posts: 4351
- Joined: 26 Jul 2005, 19:37
Does Kevin Bacon showup anywhere in this list?Decagon wrote:Foreman twice beat Frazier, who beat Ali.
Foreman destroyed Norton, who beat Ali.
Foreman beat Cooney, who beat Norton, who beat Ali.
Foreman beat Lyle, who beat Shavers, who got robbed against Ali.
Foreman beat Savarese, who beat Douglas, who beat Tyson, who beat Holmes, who beat Ali.
Foreman beat Moorer, who beat Holyfield, who beat Holmes, who beat Ali.
Yet, as strange as it sounds, Ali beat Foreman.
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The Great John L
- Heavyweight

- Posts: 4351
- Joined: 26 Jul 2005, 19:37
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Ambling Alp
- Heavyweight

- Posts: 3627
- Joined: 15 Jul 2005, 22:31
BB- I hope you read my entire post on the Schmeling-Sharkey thread.(April 5, 6:19 pm.) especially regarding your two vastly different spins on the 2nd Schmeling-Sharkey fight.
At the risk of sounding condescending, in the long run you will be better off only saying what you really believe.
You obviously love the sport and really like certain fighters and that's great. You just have to realistic about their limitations, which isn't always easy to do.
Some excuses are legitimate; sometimes one guy is well over the hill or there is a bad decision.
However, most excuses are just that, excuses. The vast majority of the time, the better guy wins.
At the risk of sounding condescending, in the long run you will be better off only saying what you really believe.
You obviously love the sport and really like certain fighters and that's great. You just have to realistic about their limitations, which isn't always easy to do.
Some excuses are legitimate; sometimes one guy is well over the hill or there is a bad decision.
However, most excuses are just that, excuses. The vast majority of the time, the better guy wins.
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BrocktonBlockbuster49
- Heavyweight

- Posts: 4900
- Joined: 29 May 2005, 00:32
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The Great John L
- Heavyweight

- Posts: 4351
- Joined: 26 Jul 2005, 19:37
Re: Breaking The Rules In Order to Win!
In regards to the controversy pertaining to his knockout
win over Jack Sharkey, Jack Dempsey said, "What did
you want me to do? Write him a letter?"
I think that alot of boxers would agree with Richard Petty,
the great American stock car driver who said, "If you ain't
cheating, you ain't trying."
- Chuck Johnston
win over Jack Sharkey, Jack Dempsey said, "What did
you want me to do? Write him a letter?"
I think that alot of boxers would agree with Richard Petty,
the great American stock car driver who said, "If you ain't
cheating, you ain't trying."
- Chuck Johnston
Re: Breaking The Rules In Order to Win!
I think Dempsey was asked why he hit Sharkey when Sharkey stopped protecting himself to compalin to the ref. He responded, "What did you want me to do? Write him a letter?"Chuck1052 wrote:In regards to the controversy pertaining to his knockout
win over Jack Sharkey, Jack Dempsey said, "What did
you want me to do? Write him a letter?"
I think that alot of boxers would agree with Richard Petty,
the great American stock car driver who said, "If you ain't
cheating, you ain't trying."
- Chuck Johnston
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BrocktonBlockbuster49
- Heavyweight

- Posts: 4900
- Joined: 29 May 2005, 00:32
Re: Gene Tunney vs. George Godfrey
In regards to Gene Tunney's alleged avoidance of
George Godfrey, the decade of the 1920s was a
different era. For one reason or another, no
black man fought in a world heavyweight title
bout for over twenty years after Jack Johnson
lost his title to Jess Willard.
While reading the Pittsburgh Courier (a black
newspaper) on microfilm, one gets an idea about
the situation in regards to segregation in the
United States during the 1920s. I remember
reading that W. Rollo Wilson, a black sportswriter
of the Courier, was not able to mix with a group of
white reporters when they were interviewing Mickey
Walker during the middle 1920s. Wilson had to
"buttonhole" Walker for a separate interview!
- Chuck Johnston
George Godfrey, the decade of the 1920s was a
different era. For one reason or another, no
black man fought in a world heavyweight title
bout for over twenty years after Jack Johnson
lost his title to Jess Willard.
While reading the Pittsburgh Courier (a black
newspaper) on microfilm, one gets an idea about
the situation in regards to segregation in the
United States during the 1920s. I remember
reading that W. Rollo Wilson, a black sportswriter
of the Courier, was not able to mix with a group of
white reporters when they were interviewing Mickey
Walker during the middle 1920s. Wilson had to
"buttonhole" Walker for a separate interview!
- Chuck Johnston
Let us also not forget that the last time a black fought for the HW championship there were riots and lynching(read: murders) in the aftermath. That is the main reason Tex Rickard, promoter of the Johnson/Jeffries fiasco, never could fully commit to a Dempsey/Wills fight. He didn't want to go through that again.
Put yourself in that time and place for a second. If you were a matchmaker would YOU want to be put in that predicament??
Put yourself in that time and place for a second. If you were a matchmaker would YOU want to be put in that predicament??
Re: Jeffries, Tunney, Marciano
that's not true!pound per pound wrote:Sharkey, Schmeling, Carnera, Baer and Braddock failed to make a successful title defense.
Cleveland, Muncipal Stadium, July, 3rd 1931
Max Schmeling retained World Heavyweight title against Young Stribling
by tko 15th rd.
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pundit
- Heavyweight

Re: Breaking The Rules In Order to Win!
Earlier I wrote that I believed Schmeling would have beaten Tunney.
I read some stuff during the recent weaks and I change my assessment. In the late 1920s the "master technician" was head and shoulders above all other competition. Schmeling and Sharkey - the strongest challengers - wouldn't have had more than an outsider's chance. Sharkey had a habit of trying to kill his opponents in the first 4 and to collapse thereafter - a bit like a modern Tyson - a strategy that woud have played into Tunney's hands. Schmeling would probably have tried to wore Tunney down, but Tunney had the tools to stay away from Schmeling's sweet right for 15 rounds .
Thus, I believe a motivated Tunney could well have remained unbeaten until Joe Louis came up.
I read some stuff during the recent weaks and I change my assessment. In the late 1920s the "master technician" was head and shoulders above all other competition. Schmeling and Sharkey - the strongest challengers - wouldn't have had more than an outsider's chance. Sharkey had a habit of trying to kill his opponents in the first 4 and to collapse thereafter - a bit like a modern Tyson - a strategy that woud have played into Tunney's hands. Schmeling would probably have tried to wore Tunney down, but Tunney had the tools to stay away from Schmeling's sweet right for 15 rounds .
Thus, I believe a motivated Tunney could well have remained unbeaten until Joe Louis came up.
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pundit
- Heavyweight

Re: Jeffries, Tunney, Marciano
Friedie wrote:that's not true!pound per pound wrote:Sharkey, Schmeling, Carnera, Baer and Braddock failed to make a successful title defense.
Cleveland, Muncipal Stadium, July, 3rd 1931
Max Schmeling retained World Heavyweight title against Young Stribling
by tko 15th rd.
.... and he was robbed in the refight agasint Sharkey.
Until Schmeling lost to Baer he was considered the strongest heavyweight in the world.
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pundit
- Heavyweight

I don't think so. Sharkey's head snaps back sharply as a result of Primo's punch, it looks like a legit KO.BrocktonBlockbuster49 wrote:As far as sharkey "probably taking a dive against Carnera", umm no. He was knocked out. Call it a lucky punch if you want. But the fact remains that Sharkey lost yet another big fight.
thats ur opinion. IMO sharkey took a dive
More generally you would need to explain how Sharkey - a guy who had put obsessive effort into becoming world champ - was supposed to be bribable but not Max Baer (in Primo's nect fight), a guy who cared a sh!t about titles but a lot about easy money.
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pundit
- Heavyweight

Back that record up. I'm not aware of anything definitive.Nero3000 wrote:Let us also not forget two important facts:
1. Sharkey easily beat Primo Carnera in their first fight, thus casting even more doubt on his dismal performance in the second.
2. Just about all of Primo's big bouts were fixed. He was a mob-controlled fighter. That's not opinion, that's public record.
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pundit
- Heavyweight

Tunney did accomplish enpough overall. Noone would have given Sharkey a serious chance in 1929 against Tunney, and Schmeling wasn't even on the radar screen.BrocktonBlockbuster49 wrote:tunney did not accomplish enough at heavyweight
* tunney beat a green risko who didnt peak until the late 20s-early 30s
*sharkey got screwed vs dempsey, he showed he was better than the 1927 dempsey. did i mention tunney was down for 14 seconds vs dempsey?
* weinhert beat a 8-3 and 10-4 sharkey, weak arguement alp. sharkey was very green
Fact: Tunney left the sport as the undisputed champ with noone left to fight.
Btw, Tunney won every single round he fought against Dempsey except the one where he went done (in contrast to Sharkey who never won more than 5 rounds agasint any top fighter before running out of gas). You can really shove that 14 seconds. They are a curiosity of bocxing history, no more.
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pundit
- Heavyweight

So which fights were these? And is the Sharkey titlefight among them?Decagon wrote:One of the guys who managed Carnera wrote a book about him. It listed Carnera's record with an asterix next to all the fights that were fixed.pundit wrote:Back that record up. I'm not aware of anything definitive.Nero3000 wrote:Let us also not forget two important facts:
1. Sharkey easily beat Primo Carnera in their first fight, thus casting even more doubt on his dismal performance in the second.
2. Just about all of Primo's big bouts were fixed. He was a mob-controlled fighter. That's not opinion, that's public record.
And is te guy credible?
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Dempsey1238
- Heavyweight

- Posts: 41
- Joined: 17 Oct 2005, 21:17
I would not say that.pundit wrote:Tunney did accomplish enpough overall. Noone would have given Sharkey a serious chance in 1929 against Tunney, and Schmeling wasn't even on the radar screen.BrocktonBlockbuster49 wrote:tunney did not accomplish enough at heavyweight
* tunney beat a green risko who didnt peak until the late 20s-early 30s
*sharkey got screwed vs dempsey, he showed he was better than the 1927 dempsey. did i mention tunney was down for 14 seconds vs dempsey?
* weinhert beat a 8-3 and 10-4 sharkey, weak arguement alp. sharkey was very green
Fact: Tunney left the sport as the undisputed champ with noone left to fight.
Btw, Tunney won every single round he fought against Dempsey except the one where he went done (in contrast to Sharkey who never won more than 5 rounds agasint any top fighter before running out of gas). You can really shove that 14 seconds. They are a curiosity of bocxing history, no more.
I think Dempsey won round 4, vs Tunney in fight 1.(Good left hook by Dempsey nearly had Tunney knock Tunney down)
And I gave Dempsey round 3 in fight 2, for his body work, close round to score, but I think Dempsey may have nab a few rounds.
Tell you what. Instead of me going through all my files from 15 years of doing organized crime research, why don't you just look up Primo Carnera, Owney Madden and the relationship of organized crime to boxing in the 1930s. There's literally tons of stuff on the subject and I have studied far too much of it to whittle it all down to recommend one or two definitive sources for anyone.pundit wrote:So which fights were these? And is the Sharkey titlefight among them?Decagon wrote:One of the guys who managed Carnera wrote a book about him. It listed Carnera's record with an asterix next to all the fights that were fixed.pundit wrote: Back that record up. I'm not aware of anything definitive.
And is te guy credible?
It's like someone asking me to prove and cite sources as to why Adolph Hitler or Josef Stalin were bad guys. It's all right out there for you to dive into yourself with no help needed from me.