Onetimeonly wrote: ↑14 Jul 2019, 00:16
elmersalsa wrote: ↑13 Jul 2019, 22:33
Is idiotic to think that Marvelous was in his prime like you think he was. On that night, against Sugar Ray, I could name about 10 guys that would have beaten Marvelous that night.
Really? I'd like to hear the 10.
Marvelous was slow of foot and hands that night. He was missing shots by a mile even when he had Sugar Ray on the corner, he was missing badly. Sugar Ray ain't no Nicolino Locche or Pernell Whitaker to make Marvelous miss like that. Marvelous was ready to be taken by any middleweight that was hungry to win the crown. Compare Marvelous of 1982 or '83 with the one with Leonard and you can see a extraordinary amount of slip up. Maybe he was rusty. Maybe it was time for him to be taken. But, Marvelous' performance THAT NIGHT was the worst of his middleweight title fights that I have ever seen him. He was not excellent. Not at all.
The 10 guys that would have beaten him THAT NIGHT in my view:
1. Gene Fullmer would have beaten him. His hand speed was very underrated. He could rough up Marvelous of that night on the inside. He was rough and tough, like Vito Antuofermo, but better.
2. Sugar Ray Robinson of the early '50s decade would have won by a landslide. His speed of hands and feet would have caused Marvelous to miss lots of punches. Marvelous didn't have it that night with Leonard. He was way off on his timing.
3. Carlos Monzon would have beaten him much easier. He would have won by cuts stoppage.
4. Dick Tiger by decision. That Marvelous didn't had anything to indicate that he was in full form. I think he knew it was his last fight.
5. Thomas Hearns probably would have stopped him by an early cuts stoppage or decision. Hearns had a better chance in '87 than in '85 or earlier in the decade.
6. Bernard Hopkins would have decisioned him outright. A complete fighter that destroyed Felix "Tito" Trinidad in spectacular fashion. He could beat that Marvelous of that night with Sugar Ray.
7. James Toney by decision against that Marvelous. Toney was a sensational middleweight at his very best.
8. Emile Griffith's inside game would have beaten Marvelous that night.
9. Marcel Cerdan's pressure would have beaten that Marvelous
10. Joey Giardello with his boxing style, just like Sugar Ray Leonard did to Marvelous, would have beaten him on that night.
11. Roy Jones Jr's speed would have given Marvelous more problems that night than Leonard did. Marvelous would have had a tough time to catch him that night. He was way off in his timing.
12. Mike McCallum would have beaten him, too. The one that had that chess match with James Toney in a draw would have beaten Marvelous of that fight with Leonard.
13. Jake LaMotta? The one that beat Sugar Ray Robinson and Holman Williams and Marcel Cerdan has a chance.
14. Iran Barkley would have beaten him by decision in a rough and tough scrap. Marvelous could have been taken by The Blade. That is the only night that I could see Barkley beating Marvelous. Any other night before 1987, Marvelous wins.
15. Roberto Duran. Believe or not, I can see Duran beating that version of Marvelous. Marvelous was way off and slow. Like I have said, it was the worst performance by Marvelous of his 15-fight title reign. Especially, if the fight is 12 rounds, I could have seen Roberto making a greater history of his career.
14. Charley Burley's speed would have confused Marvelous. Burley was a complete boxer. He was like Roy Jones Jr, but better. On April 6, 1987 if Burley was around instead of the 1940s decade, Burley would have get the crown.
The others like Harry Greb, Tiger Flowers, Mickey Walker, Tony Zale l can't tell. There's not enough footage of them for me to judge their style. Like it or not, Marvelous wasn't the same fighter in that Sugar Ray fight. And it showed. He was missing punches at close range, and was slow of hands and foot, which was very uncharacteristic of Marvelous. Very rare to see him fight like that. Maybe it was his time to be taken that night.