Counter-puncher wrote:Just. Fucken. Ignore.
Every one should block this goose out
Counter-puncher wrote:Just. Fucken. Ignore.
I didn't say they were runaway beatings... I didn't say the 2nd and 3rd fights weren't competitive... You love to attribute quotes to me I would never say... You pull pile after pile of bullcrap out of your rear because you have no argument... I said Ali was beaten up in their first fight and didn't inflict as much damage as Norton did in the next 2 fights which were gifted to him by the judges... Norton wasn't hurt or beaten up in ANY of their fights. He barely had a mark on him.. Frazier took a severe beating in the 1st and 3rd Ali fights - look at the battering his face underwent.BoxBuzz wrote: ↑16 Jun 2016, 23:59Kalan wrote:It IS NOT CLEAR to anyone but YOU!!!! and other blind people such as there may be.. That's the FIRST time I ever heard that Ali did well to VERY well against Norton... Ali beat the crap out of Frazier in their 1st and their 3rd fight... He grabbed and held all night and didn't allow Smokin' to do crap in the boring assed rematch...and he stopped Joe in the rubber match... So I'd say he did very well beating up Frazier.BoxBuzz wrote:It is clear that Ali did anywhere from pretty well, to very well against both Kenny and Joe
Norton shattered Ali's jaw in their first fight and beat the crap out of him. Norton dominated the fight and if you don't think so you're nuts.. Norton landed better and harder punches in the rematch.. somehow he lost the decision.. Ali's friend and right hand man Bundini Brown walked over to Norton after the rematch and said "You won the fight Norton. They robbed you." This was caught on TV.. The TV people even talked to Norton and said, "Ali's friend Bundini Brown just said you won the fight." Norton smiled wryly and agreed with the assessment. Most think Norton was a clear winner of the 3rd fight.. Norton barely had a mark on him after all 3 encounters. Frazier looked like a Halloween mask after 2 of them.
Well, the Ali-Norton fights were competitive, and once you get some good thick glasses and take another look, you'll be better informed.
According to Ali, Norton broke Ali's Jaw early on in that first fight, you know it, I know it and Bob Dole knows it. So Ali did pretty well when you factor that in.
A fight that he lost, but gave a very good accounting of himself.
And of course he won the other two according to the judges and referee. I know I know, they were close and a lot of people think Kenny won them both.
The fights were competitive, neither were runaway beatings, except in your over active imagination.
Norton's defense would easily hold up to Frazier's offense... because Norton had tons of experience dealing with Frazier's tricks, moves, and his winging hook... Frazier had a bigger problem dealing with Norton's increasing size and strength.. Experience doesn't help you there.. You have to muscle up or get beaten up... Frazier lacked the frame.BoxBuzz wrote: ↑13 Mar 2018, 14:37 Much of what you just said is confabulation. But there is lot of intuitive stuff that I would not argue with in the generic.
Most think Frazier would have prevailed at their mutual best.........I would think in real time, you could pick dates and argue that ON THOSE DATES one or the other fighter would have an advantage.
You sort of allude to that yourself in a round about way.
I'll ask you a direct question. IN your opinion would Kenny's defense hold up against Frazier? After all Frazier did persevere over several gifted fighters that were bigger and stronger than he was. Was it the "smartness" in this case that makes the difference? Often referred to by some as "Ring Generalship".
Are you kinda sorta agreewing with my argument about why Liston was beaten by his own sparring partner? E.G. He had the keys because he had "exposure" to his opponent for so long, he simply knew the weaknesses....and thus likely to persevere despite being the "lesser fighter"? (Of course that lesser fighter never fought again because Liston kinda sort won the war, despite losing the fight by KO.)
Or do those two cases have different "reasons".
Of course in the Liston Case...it actually happened.....and the Frazier Norton fight never manifested.
Just the opposite... Ali was wide open for left hooks so the was the perfect opponent for a prime Frazier... On the other hand a man standing 6'3" X 223, like Norton was for Bobick... That's a problem for a fat kid who's natural fighting weight was the 205 he weighed for Ali 1... Getting fatter didn't make Frazier better.
I don't really disagree in any wholesale way with point one.Ambling Alp II wrote: ↑13 Mar 2018, 15:55 1. Tales form the gym mean less than pre-season NFL games.
2. How was Norton to know that Quarry was supposedly running on empty?
"It was reported" .... I would like to know where you get your reports... I never heard that.BoxBuzz wrote: ↑13 Mar 2018, 15:41 It was reported that Quarry would bully Norton when there was sparring going on between them.....Norton knew Jerry was running on empty and timed him admirably in terms of signing up to fight him. Lil' Quarry would have beaten Norton earlier in their careers.....and I believe while sparring often did just that.
How did such miracles as this take place? And how did you get this "inside info" on the Frazier Norton sparring? And as far as I know Norton never challenged frazier. Is there any newspaper interviews or other such documentation that speaks to Nortons "wish to fight Joe"?
Many of the uninformed......thought they were famous friends who agreed to avoid each other.
I'm not certain that Norton went out if his way to fight a declining Quarry at that time.BoxBuzz wrote: ↑13 Mar 2018, 15:41 It was reported that Quarry would bully Norton when there was sparring going on between them.....Norton knew Jerry was running on empty and timed him admirably in terms of signing up to fight him. Lil' Quarry would have beaten Norton earlier in their careers.....and I believe while sparring often did just that.
How did such miracles as this take place? And how did you get this "inside info" on the Frazier Norton sparring? And as far as I know Norton never challenged frazier. Is there any newspaper interviews or other such documentation that speaks to Nortons "wish to fight Joe"?
Many of the uninformed......thought they were famous friends who agreed to avoid each other.
My problem with the Quarry out of shape excuse is this: He just had a 10 round fight less than a month before he fought Norton. If he signed for the fight a week before it happened, that means he had to have got woefully out of shape in less three weeks. That doesn't seem that plausible.SenorPipino wrote: ↑14 Mar 2018, 11:05I'm not certain that Norton went out if his way to fight a declining Quarry at that time.BoxBuzz wrote: ↑13 Mar 2018, 15:41 It was reported that Quarry would bully Norton when there was sparring going on between them.....Norton knew Jerry was running on empty and timed him admirably in terms of signing up to fight him. Lil' Quarry would have beaten Norton earlier in their careers.....and I believe while sparring often did just that.
How did such miracles as this take place? And how did you get this "inside info" on the Frazier Norton sparring? And as far as I know Norton never challenged frazier. Is there any newspaper interviews or other such documentation that speaks to Nortons "wish to fight Joe"?
Many of the uninformed......thought they were famous friends who agreed to avoid each other.
From what I recall, the semi main to Ali vs Wepner was supposed to be something completely different than Quarry-Norton.
But fighters kept falling out and eventually it was Norton vs Bonavena.
At a very late hour, Ringo also dropped out and a flabby, out of shape Quarry was quickly brought in.
Quarry was probably named as a replacement less than a week before the card.
How about all the fights that DIDN'T happen in that era - or any other era???Ambling Alp II wrote: ↑14 Mar 2018, 14:06 As for Frazier-Norton, they would have met if Ali and Foreman were not around. It would have been the biggest fight out there. Back then the top guys still actually fought each other; crazy notion isn't it?
I do think it's a stretch. So I guess we will have agree to disagree on that. (btw for years I kept hearing that Quarry took the fight on three weeks notice. Then it became one.)SenorPipino wrote: ↑14 Mar 2018, 15:00 I don't think it's a stretch to believe that a fighter can get out of shape in 3 weeks.
Who knows how much barroom fighting and drinking Quarry had been doing in that time span before he received the call to step in as a replacement against Norton?
Quarry weighed 207 for the Norton bout, which was one of the highest weights of his career. He was 209 a month earlier when he cruised to a decision over the venerable Scrap Iron Johnson.
And just 197 for Frazier 9 months earlier.
So no, I believe Quarry was out of shape against Norton. Of course he was also pretty much at the end of the line physically as a world class fighter.
And Quarry was paid $185,000 as a late replacement, so it was obviously hard for him to say no, no matter what his conditioning was.
Norton, who was the considered the fresher contender as that stage (#4 vs #5 Quarry) was still only paid $100,000.
Quarry succumbed to money.... He took fights he knew he shouldn’t take because of the money... Ali did it... Frazier did it... It cost them and it cost Quarry one HELL of a lot more than the money they made... Money can’t buy health.SenorPipino wrote: ↑14 Mar 2018, 17:28 Well I said that the 207 for Norton was one of the higher weights of his career, not the highest. A prime Quarry didn't even weigh 200. Usually upper 190s.
But we quibble. I need to check how late Quarry took the Norton fight. I'm certain it was much less than 3 weeks.
Regardless I feel he was out of shape and was at the end of the road physically.
The defeat to Frazier 9 months earlier was truly the end of the line for Quarry and he had no business taking on a ready contender like Norton---especially on short notice. No matter how short that notice was.