Pound for Pound 1980's
-
generic screen name
- Heavyweight

- Posts: 631
- Joined: 11 Feb 2006, 16:28
Pound for Pound 1980's
In my opinion:
1. Marvin Hagler
2. Sugar Ray Leonard
3. Thomas Hearns
4. Michael Spinks
5. Larry Holmes
6. Aaron Pryor
7. Hector Camacho
8. Dwight Muhammad Qawi
9. Mike Tyson
10. Evander Holyfield
I'm probably forgetting a couple...
1. Marvin Hagler
2. Sugar Ray Leonard
3. Thomas Hearns
4. Michael Spinks
5. Larry Holmes
6. Aaron Pryor
7. Hector Camacho
8. Dwight Muhammad Qawi
9. Mike Tyson
10. Evander Holyfield
I'm probably forgetting a couple...
-
generic screen name
- Heavyweight

- Posts: 631
- Joined: 11 Feb 2006, 16:28
1 fight doesn't make up for 7 years of utter domination. Plus, depending on who you ask, not everyone believes Ray won that fight. If you wanna talk layoffs, Marvin had a 13 month layoff himself. Not to mention that Marvin made every concession to get Leonard into the ring (12 rounds not 15, bigger ring, fighting in Vegas, where Sugar is more popular that Marvin)mattym wrote:how can you POSSIBLY put hagler above the sugarman considering RAY BEAT MARVIN even considering the circumstances (long layoff, smaller guy).
The fact that Sugar never gave Marvin a rematch shows that Sugar knows he got away with one that night.
Also, Sugar had as many losses in the 80's as Marvin did, Sugar was 12-1, Marvin was 16-1.
-
generic screen name
- Heavyweight

- Posts: 631
- Joined: 11 Feb 2006, 16:28
Thank you you made my point for meMattyp151 wrote:1 fight doesn't make up for 7 years of utter domination. Plus, depending on who you ask, not everyone believes Ray won that fight. If you wanna talk layoffs, Marvin had a 13 month layoff himself. Not to mention that Marvin made every concession to get Leonard into the ring (12 rounds not 15, bigger ring, fighting in Vegas, where Sugar is more popular that Marvin)mattym wrote:how can you POSSIBLY put hagler above the sugarman considering RAY BEAT MARVIN even considering the circumstances (long layoff, smaller guy).
The fact that Sugar never gave Marvin a rematch shows that Sugar knows he got away with one that night.
Also, Sugar had as many losses in the 80's as Marvin did, Sugar was 12-1, Marvin was 16-1.
Hagler swept one of the deepest middleweight divisions since Sugar Ray Robinson, Leonard had an extremely good comeback but Hagler dominated his division defended it fifteen times, consistancy puts Hagler over Leonard... Leonard lost to Duran and had a chance to defend his loss, Leonard never gave Hagler that chance
-
generic screen name
- Heavyweight

- Posts: 631
- Joined: 11 Feb 2006, 16:28
-
generic screen name
- Heavyweight

- Posts: 631
- Joined: 11 Feb 2006, 16:28
-
kick asner
- Heavyweight

- Posts: 692
- Joined: 02 Oct 2005, 00:01
Chavez beat Taylor in 1990. The Mexican great won the WBC super-featherweight title in '84 and made nine defences before stepping up to lightweight and doing a real number on Edwin Rosario at Madison Square Garden in 1987 to win the WBA lightweight title. He won a unification battle with Jose Luis Ramirez, then stepped up to light-welter in 1989 and stopped Roger Mayweather to win the WBC title. He won all 16 of his world title fights in the 80's.sly2kusa wrote:Julio Ceasar Chavez didn't even become a name until the late 1980's (in his fight against Meldrick Taylor which still makes me sick to this day).
Sugar Ray was definitely the fighter of the 1980's and pound for pound best.
He turned pro at the start of the decade (February 1980) and was still unbeaten 10 years and 68 fights later.
That's a spot on summary of the 80's Chavezbennie wrote:Chavez beat Taylor in 1990. The Mexican great won the WBC super-featherweight title in '84 and made nine defences before stepping up to lightweight and doing a real number on Edwin Rosario at Madison Square Garden in 1987 to win the WBA lightweight title. He won a unification battle with Jose Luis Ramirez, then stepped up to light-welter in 1989 and stopped Roger Mayweather to win the WBC title. He won all 16 of his world title fights in the 80's.sly2kusa wrote:Julio Ceasar Chavez didn't even become a name until the late 1980's (in his fight against Meldrick Taylor which still makes me sick to this day).
Sugar Ray was definitely the fighter of the 1980's and pound for pound best.
He turned pro at the start of the decade (February 1980) and was still unbeaten 10 years and 68 fights later.
-
Professor X
- Heavyweight

- Posts: 130
- Joined: 22 Jun 2004, 10:42
[quote="bennie"][quote="sly2kusa"]Julio Ceasar Chavez didn't even become a name until the late 1980's (in his fight against Meldrick Taylor which still makes me sick to this day).
Sugar Ray was definitely the fighter of the 1980's and pound for pound best.[/quote]
Chavez beat Taylor in 1990. The Mexican great won the WBC super-featherweight title in '84 and made nine defences before stepping up to lightweight and doing a real number on Edwin Rosario at Madison Square Garden in 1987 to win the WBA lightweight title. He won a unification battle with Jose Luis Ramirez, then stepped up to light-welter in 1989 and stopped Roger Mayweather to win the WBC title. He won all 16 of his world title fights in the 80's.
He turned pro at the start of the decade (February 1980) and was still unbeaten 10 years and 68 fights later.[/quote
Yes. It's hard to believe (yet oddly typical of these message boards) that people denigrate JCC.
Sugar Ray was definitely the fighter of the 1980's and pound for pound best.[/quote]
Chavez beat Taylor in 1990. The Mexican great won the WBC super-featherweight title in '84 and made nine defences before stepping up to lightweight and doing a real number on Edwin Rosario at Madison Square Garden in 1987 to win the WBA lightweight title. He won a unification battle with Jose Luis Ramirez, then stepped up to light-welter in 1989 and stopped Roger Mayweather to win the WBC title. He won all 16 of his world title fights in the 80's.
He turned pro at the start of the decade (February 1980) and was still unbeaten 10 years and 68 fights later.[/quote
Yes. It's hard to believe (yet oddly typical of these message boards) that people denigrate JCC.
I just can't see Leonard as the best fighter of the 80's. Hagler's resume matches Leonard's and there's no * next to any of Hagler's fights. He fought them as they came, minus the bullshit. Pity we can't say the same for Ray
Had Aaron Pryor not almost killed himself with the drugs and mad lifestyle I reckon his name may just be at the top of the list
It's not easy to come up with one 'best fighter of a decade' as primes are much closer to half decades than full ones for most fighters
Had Aaron Pryor not almost killed himself with the drugs and mad lifestyle I reckon his name may just be at the top of the list
It's not easy to come up with one 'best fighter of a decade' as primes are much closer to half decades than full ones for most fighters
-
generic screen name
- Heavyweight

- Posts: 631
- Joined: 11 Feb 2006, 16:28
Leonard is the darling of the 80's thats why. I rank Leonard #2 for his impressive comeback and his win against Hearns. Hagler in my opinion was the fighter of the decade.Arsenal wrote:How can people rate Leonard over Hagler? Hagler dominated and never ducked anyone. Total professional and one of the best. I just don't see the fascination with Leonard.