Question for all those who think they know their stuff!!!
Question for all those who think they know their stuff!!!
Get a load of this one then you bast****! Sorry just glad i thought of this so i can look clever for once.
Which boxer who went on to become the world champion years later boxed in ALL the weight classes?
Im being vague on purpose not to give away the era by mentioning the amount of weight classes around at this particular time.
Apologies if there is more than 1 (probably about 10 with my luck) please try to make me look clever by guessing wrong at first lol cheers n good luck
Edit: mistake on my part and a huge apology, it was all as a pro.
Which boxer who went on to become the world champion years later boxed in ALL the weight classes?
Im being vague on purpose not to give away the era by mentioning the amount of weight classes around at this particular time.
Apologies if there is more than 1 (probably about 10 with my luck) please try to make me look clever by guessing wrong at first lol cheers n good luck
Edit: mistake on my part and a huge apology, it was all as a pro.
Last edited by mattym on 11 Jun 2006, 16:53, edited 1 time in total.
Re: Question for all those who think they know their stuff!!
I was going to say Georges Carpentier.mattym wrote:Get a load of this one then you bast****! Sorry just glad i thought of this so i can look clever for once.
Which boxer who went on to become the world champion years later boxed in ALL the weight classes as an amateur?
Im being vague on purpose not to give away the era by mentioning the amount of weight classes around at this particular time.
Apologies if there is more than 1 (probably about 10 with my luck) please try to make me look clever by guessing wrong at first lol cheers n good luck
James Toney?
Re: Question for all those who think they know their stuff!!
Hey 1 guess only mate!!!! lol Toney??? that man was NEVER a minimum/strawweight. I bet he was born atleast a welterKO Artist wrote:I was going to say Georges Carpentier.mattym wrote:Get a load of this one then you bast****! Sorry just glad i thought of this so i can look clever for once.
Which boxer who went on to become the world champion years later boxed in ALL the weight classes as an amateur?
Im being vague on purpose not to give away the era by mentioning the amount of weight classes around at this particular time.
Apologies if there is more than 1 (probably about 10 with my luck) please try to make me look clever by guessing wrong at first lol cheers n good luck
James Toney?
That statement surprises me, as I have several fight reports of Carpentier fighting at the Bantamweight limit which at the time (1909-1910) was, I think, the lightest weight category.klompton wrote:Supposedly Carpentier did but there is some doubt as to whether he actually boxed in the lowest divisions.
re
I have a really good article on Charles Ledoux that the late Bob Soderman wrote and I know that Soderman researched the New York Herlad (Paris, France edition) very thoroughly during those years, so I'll go back through the article and Soderman also copied a lot of results/recaps of the Paris edition. I know I have results from 1910, but I'm not certain about 1909, but the 1910 results should tell a lot about the weight that Carpentier was at during that year...I'll check it out and print what I find in a couple of hours.
Interesting, and the first time I've heard mention of over the weight matches.klompton wrote:Im certainly no expert on Carp's early career but I was under the impression that his bantamweight bouts were over the weight matches in which he was fighting guys who smaller than him but it was somewhat acceptable because he was so young.
I've just had a quick look through some of his fight reports (late 1909 to early 1910), Carpentier received a lot of ink in the British Boxing press from early in his career.
Many of the reports mention his frail build, slip of a lad, etc. He is also labelled as a Bantamweight and two of the reports I looked at were billed as for the French title against Til so presumably he weighed within the limit.
A few reports mention the opponents being physically more imposing, heavier or sturdier than Carpentier.
Nothing I read suggested Carpentier was the bigger man, if anything it was the reverse.
I skipped ahead to the end of 1910 and one report noted how "Carpentier had shot up into a Lightweight".
I'll be interested to read what Barry finds in his Soderman notes.
re
Bob Soderman's notes from his research in the Paris Herald mentions that near the beginning of 1910 Carpentier was fighting as a bantamweight, of which it states that he was Champion of France at bantamweight, but by the end of the year he was nearly a full-fledged lightweight.
Re: re
Thanks Barry, that ties in exactly with what I wrote a few posts up ...... but then again Soderman was probably using the same reports that I was.barry wrote:Bob Soderman's notes from his research in the Paris Herald mentions that near the beginning of 1910 Carpentier was fighting as a bantamweight, of which it states that he was Champion of France at bantamweight, but by the end of the year he was nearly a full-fledged lightweight.
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The Scranton Assassin
- Heavyweight

- Posts: 199
- Joined: 20 Jul 2004, 13:15
Lewis actualy did fight a heavyweight named Joe Gummer and royaly kicked his ass! Anyone ever see this fight? According to the film I have Gummer weighed in at exactly 200 lbs. However I check the weighs in Lewis record and there was no weightsharrygreb wrote:ted kid lewis went thru the weights like a madman. never a heavy though, so i guess you have beaten me
'nuff said.Decagon wrote:...some say that he held "all the French titles, from flyweight to heavyweight," most notably on the ESPN Classic version of Jack Johnson vs. Frank Moran, which Carpentier officiated. This simply isn't true.
Someone mentioned that Carpentier fought in the bantamweight division. It's true that the bantamweight division - which had a limit of 112 pounds - was the smallest division in boxing around 1908, but I doubt that Carpentier actually fought at 112. Carpentier was almost 6 feet tall as an adult, and when he reffed the fight between Johnson and Moran in 1914, he looked like a solid light heavyweight or heavyweight. I've always seen the talk of him fighting in all eight divisions as a myth. As far as I know, he's never fought below 126.
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sockdolager
- Heavyweight

- Posts: 1455
- Joined: 17 Jun 2005, 08:57
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The Great John L
- Heavyweight

- Posts: 4351
- Joined: 26 Jul 2005, 19:37
How about RJJ and Toney, also MW through HW. Actually RJJ started at JMWgranberry wrote:Some remarkable fighters
Jimmy McLarnin--flyweight through welterweight
Sam Langford--lighweight thhrough heavyweight
Mickey Walker--welterweight through heavyweight
Bob Fitzsimmons--middleweight (welterweight?) through heavyweight
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The Great John L
- Heavyweight

- Posts: 4351
- Joined: 26 Jul 2005, 19:37
[Some remarkable fighters
Jimmy McLarnin--flyweight through welterweight
Sam Langford--lighweight thhrough heavyweight
Mickey Walker--welterweight through heavyweight
Bob Fitzsimmons--middleweight (welterweight?) through heavyweight
Roy Jones in his prime would have beaten them all. Yes, including Langford.