Cunningham always found a way to be competitive, and still come up short. He'd do that against Haye too. He'd have his moments, but Haye might drop him or rock him a few times, and would ultimately do enough to win the fight.
I'm thinking Haye by Unanimous Decision
Terry Norris vs Pernell Whitaker at 154...Norris frequently called out Whitaker as I recall.
DrDuke wrote: ↑09 Jul 2018, 12:08
Lennox would have taken the decision. I believe, he could have gathered the remains of best him and provide the last hurrah.
Riddick Bowe vs Ray Mercer, if Mercer didn't lose to Ferguson that night.
Bowe TKO10. Mercer had great chin, but he would take too much punishment against Bowe, who had amazing workrate.
Corrie Sanders vs Nikolai Valuev in May, 2005. Their fight was actually scheduled on BoxRec for May date in South Africa, but then Sanders got much more lucrative option in Wladimir Klitschko.
gilgamesh wrote: ↑08 Jul 2018, 01:56
Cunningham always found a way to be competitive, and still come up short. He'd do that against Haye too. He'd have his moments, but Haye might drop him or rock him a few times, and would ultimately do enough to win the fight.
I'm thinking Haye by Unanimous Decision
Terry Norris vs Pernell Whitaker at 154...Norris frequently called out Whitaker as I recall.
Yeah, Terry Norris was man enough to call Sweet Pea, but never asked a rematch against Julian Jackson. He never called Gerald McClellan or Felix "Tito" Trinidad. I wonder why.
DrDuke wrote: ↑09 Jul 2018, 12:43
Sanders by TKO. Valuev's chin seemed to be very good, but it still wasn't tested enough, so Sanders probably was able to do it.
Lamon Brewster vs Shannon Briggs somewhere at the mid 00s.
Brewster... Decision... Ugly fight...
Manny Pacquiao vs Kelly Pavlik
(The potentiality of this was discussed in RING MAGAZINE for quite a long time)
That's crazy to think about. My timeline is off, how was Pavlik mentally? If he was still OK then I'll go for his size being too much. If it was when Pavlik was struggling mentally then maybe Pacquiao can cut his face up enough to get the W. Apologies if that's too much of a fence sit but it depends on the time.
Juan Manuel Marquez vs Erik Morales. Mid to late 2005. Super Featherweight. JMM coming off the win vs Victor Polo, Morales coming off the win vs Manny. Before JMM lost to Chris John and Morales lost to Raheem at 135.
Mitchell v Nelson
Calzaghe v Collins
Calzaghe v Froch
Mitchell and Nelson intrigues the most.........two really outstanding SF champs who did their business on the road due to politics (Mitchell) and economics (Nelson) and both exceptionally fit, disciplined, mentally hard and technically organised.
Nelson starts favourite.........more dynamic and on balance the better resume, but Mitchell was as hard as hell in terms of his fitness, chin strength and matching Azumah in terms of being brutally strong at the weight......he was also a pure winner.
Part of me still wishes that Joe and Collins got it on........Eubank bravely stepped into the breech......but Collins rough-housing Calzaghe would have been the stiffer and more interesting test for a young Joe.
Collins made top fighters sweat/battle and at that point Joe had not faced that kind of challenge.
Calzaghe v Froch also intrigues.........Joe wisely took on Jones/Hopkins for more money, but what a fight it would have been to see him tangle with a hard-as-nails, confident and physical Froch.