Povetkin is a top HW of this era. He stands 6'2 and 220-225 range. The list goes on. The only "fact" that supports your argument is that Foreman didn't constantly face too many HW's of today's size. His actual height/weight/power should be realistically fine to carry him in today's division. Wilder is seen as the #2 guy in the division today, and was only a few inches taller and around the same general weight. Not that these guys are world beaters, but:Enlightened-One wrote: ↑05 Jun 2018, 05:14When you consider the facts, rather than simply guessing, you’ll surely realise that mentioning those names doesn’t support your argument one iota…
If you assume that Evander Holyfield was considered past-his-prime immediately after the Michael Moorer rematch, then “The Real Deal’s” average ring weight was 210½lbs when he competed as a heavyweight.
His opponents typically weighed 227¾lbs, which is considered "small" by today’s heavyweight standards.
When ‘Iron’ Mike was at his destructive best (prior to his defeat to ‘Buster’ Douglas) for the first 37 bouts of his career, his opponents typically weighed 212lbs (excl. four anomalous fighters) and should be considered as being the equivalent of today's rehydrated cruiserweights.
Mike Tyson’s average ring weight during the same period was only 217¼lbs, which means he was also the physical equivalent of a rehydrated cruiserweight.
In terms of George Foreman, the topic of this thread is to discuss the 1973 version and I’ve already supplied the stats for him twice and I don't feel the need to keep repeating myself.
Wepner 221- TKO 3
Clay 228- TKO 2
O'Halloran 235- KO5
Turnbow 246- TKO 1
Harris 235- KO2
Gordwin 220- KO2
Holyfield was a CW never fighting over 190, then came to the HW division and did great. My point is just because Foreman didn't face some of the bigger guys from today, it doesn't mean he couldn't. Chris Byrd started his career at 169 and was never seen as a power puncher, who also (IMO) fought in a better class of HW's. He was 6 1 1/2. He won multiple belts.
Again, my whole point is to say Foreman couldn't do it just based off fighting in a smaller HW era is absurd. That is the crutch of your whole argument. You can't say for sure, and I've easily shown some of today's HW's , and recent past, were smaller or around the same size of Foreman and did great. Although a small sample size against not the best of guys, Foreman had no issue dispatching bigger HW's. Yes size matters, being an actual good fighter matters just as much.
This is what I believe and I think I've proven enough to hold my point up. If you don't, we just agree to disagree. No big deal....
