Roberto Duran's legacy?

elmersalsa
Heavyweight
Heavyweight
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Re: Roberto Duran's legacy?

Post by elmersalsa »

Speaking back about the great Roberto Duran. The Hands of Stone in my view was/is:
1. The greatest Lightweight ever
2. The greatest pound per pound fighter of his era, the 1970s
3. The greatest Latin American boxer pound per pound ever
4. The greatest fighter out of his native Panama.
5. In my view, only Henry Armstrong, Sugar Ray Robinson and Sam Langford were the only boxers that were better than he. Nobody else.

An incredible fighter was this Hands of Stone. A fighter for the ages!
Duran1970
Lightweight
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Re: Roberto Duran's legacy?

Post by Duran1970 »

Armstrong was awesome
11 title defenses in one year
5 in one month!
What a fighter.
elmersalsa
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Re: Roberto Duran's legacy?

Post by elmersalsa »

Duran1970 wrote: 07 Feb 2019, 15:27 Armstrong was awesome
11 title defenses in one year
5 in one month!
What a fighter.
Did he won them all by knockout, too?
elmersalsa
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Posts: 15648
Joined: 02 Feb 2003, 03:50

Re: Roberto Duran's legacy?

Post by elmersalsa »

elmersalsa wrote: 08 Feb 2019, 05:26
Duran1970 wrote: 07 Feb 2019, 15:27 Armstrong was awesome
11 title defenses in one year
5 in one month!
What a fighter.
Did he won them all by knockout, too?
That was the year 1939.
Ambling Alp II
Super Middleweight
Posts: 15097
Joined: 04 Nov 2012, 18:31

Re: Roberto Duran's legacy?

Post by Ambling Alp II »

elmersalsa wrote: 08 Feb 2019, 05:26
Duran1970 wrote: 07 Feb 2019, 15:27 Armstrong was awesome
11 title defenses in one year
5 in one month!
What a fighter.
Did he won them all by knockout, too?
No. Three went the distance.
elmersalsa
Heavyweight
Heavyweight
Posts: 15648
Joined: 02 Feb 2003, 03:50

Re: Roberto Duran's legacy?

Post by elmersalsa »

Ambling Alp II wrote: 08 Feb 2019, 08:45
elmersalsa wrote: 08 Feb 2019, 05:26
Duran1970 wrote: 07 Feb 2019, 15:27 Armstrong was awesome
11 title defenses in one year
5 in one month!
What a fighter.
Did he won them all by knockout, too?
No. Three went the distance.
Thanks, Ambling Alp!

In the year 1937, Henry Armstrong won 27 straight fights. All by knockout! Unbelievable!
jpspice
Lightweight
Posts: 107
Joined: 21 Feb 2018, 21:57

Re: Roberto Duran's legacy?

Post by jpspice »

Nile4000 wrote: 30 Dec 2018, 13:08
jpspice wrote: 11 Jun 2018, 22:08
DrDuke wrote: 07 Jun 2018, 04:14 Duran is a one of the all time greatest boxers for sure. He's the best lightweight ever. He went up and defeated prime Sugar Ray Leonard, no one else did it. He had some troublesome times after that, but he managed to overcome everything, he went up and crushed Davey Moore for another World championship. He went up and challenged the dominant force of the middleweights, another ATG boxer - Marvin Hagler. He lost there, but in a very close bout. After that he had troubles again, but still he was able to outbrawl big Iran Barkley for the middleweight championship at his late thirties. Most of his losses were after that, when he was clearly past prime. And every loss, except a single avenged one, were after he went up from his natural cathegory. This incredible resume tells everything for Roberto, he can't be overrated, he gets a well deserved credit.
I totally agree. Also, I think Duran underestimated Tommy and came to the fight physically unprepared. If he had gotten past Tommy's right hand for another round or two he likely would have been the one delivering the KO.
You honestly believe that?
Yep
Duran1970
Lightweight
Posts: 934
Joined: 03 Jan 2018, 14:20

Re: Roberto Duran's legacy?

Post by Duran1970 »

elmersalsa wrote: 08 Feb 2019, 22:49
Ambling Alp II wrote: 08 Feb 2019, 08:45
elmersalsa wrote: 08 Feb 2019, 05:26
Duran1970 wrote: 07 Feb 2019, 15:27 Armstrong was awesome
11 title defenses in one year
5 in one month!
What a fighter.
Did he won them all by knockout, too?
No. Three went the distance.
Thanks, Ambling Alp!

In the year 1937, Henry Armstrong won 27 straight fights. All by knockout! Unbelievable!
All but one...Spoldi lasted the distance.
Onetimeonly
Super Featherweight
Posts: 11584
Joined: 16 Oct 2018, 06:28

Re: Roberto Duran's legacy?

Post by Onetimeonly »

jpspice wrote: 09 Feb 2019, 00:39
Nile4000 wrote: 30 Dec 2018, 13:08
jpspice wrote: 11 Jun 2018, 22:08
DrDuke wrote: 07 Jun 2018, 04:14 Duran is a one of the all time greatest boxers for sure. He's the best lightweight ever. He went up and defeated prime Sugar Ray Leonard, no one else did it. He had some troublesome times after that, but he managed to overcome everything, he went up and crushed Davey Moore for another World championship. He went up and challenged the dominant force of the middleweights, another ATG boxer - Marvin Hagler. He lost there, but in a very close bout. After that he had troubles again, but still he was able to outbrawl big Iran Barkley for the middleweight championship at his late thirties. Most of his losses were after that, when he was clearly past prime. And every loss, except a single avenged one, were after he went up from his natural cathegory. This incredible resume tells everything for Roberto, he can't be overrated, he gets a well deserved credit.
I totally agree. Also, I think Duran underestimated Tommy and came to the fight physically unprepared. If he had gotten past Tommy's right hand for another round or two he likely would have been the one delivering the KO.
You honestly believe that?
Yep
Why in the world would anyone underestimate hearns?
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