1. Anthony Joshua
2. Dillian Whyte
3. Deontay Wilder
4. Luis Ortiz
5. Andy Ruiz Jr.
6. Alexander Povetkin
7. Joseph Parker
8. Michael Hunter
9. Adam Kownacki
10. Oscar Rivas
Thoughts?
Povetkin never hold any real belt...Finkel wrote: ↑25 Feb 2020, 13:52 Ortiz (age 43) was beaten by KO by Wilder #3 twice, yet is ranked @4
Ruiz Jr. (Age 30) former champion who beat Joshua #1, was beat on points by Joshua #1 and close loss to Parker #7, ranked @5
Povetkin (age 40) former champion who was KO'd by Joshua #1 and prime Klitschko, ranked @6
Parker (age 28) former champion beaten on points by Joshua #1 and loses a very close fight to Whyte #2, ranked @7
I would be very interested to hear their justification for Ortiz @4
Where is Pulev?
You're right, it's the same status as the belt Canelo has at Super Middle, so I should retract the Champion remark. Still, that along with his gold medal is levels beyond anything Ortiz has won.bigman1968 wrote: ↑25 Feb 2020, 17:46Povetkin never hold any real belt...Finkel wrote: ↑25 Feb 2020, 13:52 Ortiz (age 43) was beaten by KO by Wilder #3 twice, yet is ranked @4
Ruiz Jr. (Age 30) former champion who beat Joshua #1, was beat on points by Joshua #1 and close loss to Parker #7, ranked @5
Povetkin (age 40) former champion who was KO'd by Joshua #1 and prime Klitschko, ranked @6
Parker (age 28) former champion beaten on points by Joshua #1 and loses a very close fight to Whyte #2, ranked @7
I would be very interested to hear their justification for Ortiz @4
Where is Pulev?
It makes no sense to still have Ortiz that high at his age and based on his lack of resume.
Well, yeah, Thompson was 44 when he fought Ortizmargaret thatcher wrote: ↑25 Feb 2020, 22:16 To me they seem like similar level fighters who for a while have been ranked around each other. They shoulda fought
Ort has the nice destruction of Jennings. Then shutting out Scott and stopping Tony as his next best, though a Tony that was at the end of the line and had already lost 11 out of 12 rounds to Takam a few years before
Pov has a lot of good B level wins like Takam, Chag, Chambers, Duhaupas, Perez, etc but nothing really like 'wow that's hot!' . He prob has the better resume overall but I'd rank them around the same.
Who has Pulev beaten to deserve his usual top ten ranking? It's fair to say he's never beaten anyone of real quality. He has made a career of taking the right fights that will (1) result in a win (2) keep him relevant, and (3) maintain his ranking. Seems "The Ring" has got wise to himFinkel wrote: ↑25 Feb 2020, 13:52 Ortiz (age 43) was beaten by KO by Wilder #3 twice, yet is ranked @4
Ruiz Jr. (Age 30) former champion who beat Joshua #1, was beat on points by Joshua #1 and close loss to Parker #7, ranked @5
Povetkin (age 40) former champion who was KO'd by Joshua #1 and prime Klitschko, ranked @6
Parker (age 28) former champion beaten on points by Joshua #1 and loses a very close fight to Whyte #2, ranked @7
I would be very interested to hear their justification for Ortiz @4
Where is Pulev?
They really should have fought. I'd still really want to see it even though they are both past their best.margaret thatcher wrote: ↑25 Feb 2020, 22:16 To me they seem like similar level fighters who for a while have been ranked around each other. They shoulda fought
Ort has the nice destruction of Jennings. Then shutting out Scott and stopping Tony as his next best, though a Tony that was at the end of the line and had already lost 11 out of 12 rounds to Takam a few years before
Pov has a lot of good B level wins like Takam, Chag, Chambers, Duhaupas, Perez, etc but nothing really like 'wow that's hot!' . He prob has the better resume overall but I'd rank them around the same.
Agree with this. He's good but nowhere near that good and I would like to see him face a top 15 opponent but Ortiz's amateur record has been sold as myth and legend by Wilder and PBC, but in reality he was just experienced but with no actual relevant victories, qualifications or trophies.candyslim wrote: ↑26 Feb 2020, 04:44They really should have fought. I'd still really want to see it even though they are both past their best.margaret thatcher wrote: ↑25 Feb 2020, 22:16 To me they seem like similar level fighters who for a while have been ranked around each other. They shoulda fought
Ort has the nice destruction of Jennings. Then shutting out Scott and stopping Tony as his next best, though a Tony that was at the end of the line and had already lost 11 out of 12 rounds to Takam a few years before
Pov has a lot of good B level wins like Takam, Chag, Chambers, Duhaupas, Perez, etc but nothing really like 'wow that's hot!' . He prob has the better resume overall but I'd rank them around the same.
I think I was very guilty of overrating Ortiz. He was a Cuban and a veteran of a great many amateur contests. I think Cuban amateur heavyweight and I'm thinking Teofilo Stevenson. On top of that I rated Bryant Jennings and Ortiz crushed him like a bug which Wlad wasn't able to do. In retrospect Jennings subsequent career suggests Ortiz's win wasn't quite as stellar as I thought at the time. Also the glittering amateur career didn't amount to an Olympic medal or anything did it?
There is no doubt Ortiz deserves to regarded as still one of the best around but there was a time I thought he was the uncrowned champion. Povetkin too. Definitely one of the best for a long time but despite the gold medal he will be known for falling short in his two biggest tests, he doesn't really have a signature win.
I would love to have seen any fight between two of Ortiz, Povetkin, and Pulev when they were at their prime.
I have personally always considered Alexander Povetkin as being the better more proven fighter (in their primes) than Luis Ortiz. And here are some reason to explain why:margaret thatcher wrote: ↑25 Feb 2020, 22:16 To me they seem like similar level fighters who for a while have been ranked around each other. They shoulda fought
Ort has the nice destruction of Jennings. Then shutting out Scott and stopping Tony as his next best, though a Tony that was at the end of the line and had already lost 11 out of 12 rounds to Takam a few years before
Pov has a lot of good B level wins like Takam, Chag, Chambers, Duhaupas, Perez, etc but nothing really like 'wow that's hot!' . He prob has the better resume overall but I'd rank them around the same.
Last I checked Ortiz and Povetkin were close to the same age, about 6 months apart. 41?Finkel wrote: ↑25 Feb 2020, 13:52 Ortiz (age 43) was beaten by KO by Wilder #3 twice, yet is ranked @4
Ruiz Jr. (Age 30) former champion who beat Joshua #1, was beat on points by Joshua #1 and close loss to Parker #7, ranked @5
Povetkin (age 40) former champion who was KO'd by Joshua #1 and prime Klitschko, ranked @6
Parker (age 28) former champion beaten on points by Joshua #1 and loses a very close fight to Whyte #2, ranked @7
I would be very interested to hear their justification for Ortiz @4
Where is Pulev?
There was an interview on the Joe Rogan podcast with the Cuban Yoel Romero.Bandog wrote: ↑26 Feb 2020, 08:52Last I checked Ortiz and Povetkin were close to the same age, about 6 months apart. 41?Finkel wrote: ↑25 Feb 2020, 13:52 Ortiz (age 43) was beaten by KO by Wilder #3 twice, yet is ranked @4
Ruiz Jr. (Age 30) former champion who beat Joshua #1, was beat on points by Joshua #1 and close loss to Parker #7, ranked @5
Povetkin (age 40) former champion who was KO'd by Joshua #1 and prime Klitschko, ranked @6
Parker (age 28) former champion beaten on points by Joshua #1 and loses a very close fight to Whyte #2, ranked @7
I would be very interested to hear their justification for Ortiz @4
Where is Pulev?
He’s still dining out on his excellent performances during 2018 against Joshua and Whyte, as well as his 2016 victory over Ruiz Jr., which admittedly are fairly impressive feats in comparison to what some of his fellow top-ten peers have accomplished (i.e. compare his resume to those of the Wilder, Hunter, Ortiz, Kownacki and Rivas).jujigatame wrote: ↑26 Feb 2020, 11:40Parker should probably be removed, he has done absolute jack for what, 3-4 years now?
Jennings was Ortiz's best performance. After that he was on the slide. Then Eddie dropped him off the books for two straight poor performances, and deemed him not worthy of a fight with AJ. Next minute he is some boogyman and people gave props to Wilder for beating him. Even though Ortiz gave Wilder kittens in the fight, that only goes to show how bad Wilder is, not hoe good Ortiz is. Ortiz was an exciting prospect after Jennings, then got old overnight and has been sliding for 4 years.candyslim wrote: ↑26 Feb 2020, 04:44They really should have fought. I'd still really want to see it even though they are both past their best.margaret thatcher wrote: ↑25 Feb 2020, 22:16 To me they seem like similar level fighters who for a while have been ranked around each other. They shoulda fought
Ort has the nice destruction of Jennings. Then shutting out Scott and stopping Tony as his next best, though a Tony that was at the end of the line and had already lost 11 out of 12 rounds to Takam a few years before
Pov has a lot of good B level wins like Takam, Chag, Chambers, Duhaupas, Perez, etc but nothing really like 'wow that's hot!' . He prob has the better resume overall but I'd rank them around the same.
I think I was very guilty of overrating Ortiz. He was a Cuban and a veteran of a great many amateur contests. I think Cuban amateur heavyweight and I'm thinking Teofilo Stevenson. On top of that I rated Bryant Jennings and Ortiz crushed him like a bug which Wlad wasn't able to do. In retrospect Jennings subsequent career suggests Ortiz's win wasn't quite as stellar as I thought at the time. Also the glittering amateur career didn't amount to an Olympic medal or anything did it?
There is no doubt Ortiz deserves to regarded as still one of the best around but there was a time I thought he was the uncrowned champion. Povetkin too. Definitely one of the best for a long time but despite the gold medal he will be known for falling short in his two biggest tests, he doesn't really have a signature win.
I would love to have seen any fight between two of Ortiz, Povetkin, and Pulev when they were at their prime.