Tyson outweighed the mathematical average weight of his opponents from the start of his career until his prime ended.IKSRTFO wrote: ↑28 Jun 2020, 17:13No it isn't. Tyson was 5'10" 218lbs at his best and was successful against bigger men.Enlightened-One wrote: ↑28 Jun 2020, 04:11
David Haye (won only once) and Deontay Wilder (winning three times) are the only fighters that successfully competed in world heavyweight title fights within the last decade weighing less than 225lbs.
I can also provide you with loads of stats about the limited success small heavyweights have achieved within the last twenty years if you like?
It’s very rare for small heavyweights to be successful against bigger men.
No one should dishonestly pretend that citing “needle in the haystack” type scenarios illustrates the “norm”.
And I previously provided stats from all the WBA, WBC, WBO & IBF title bouts that were staged during the last twenty years, which irrefutably proved the it was extremely rare for fighters weighing less than 215lbs and also less than 220lbs to achieve success at world level at heavyweight.
Do you want the numbers? I could simply resurrect some of my old posts that everyone has already seen.
No one, and that includes myself, can rewrite the course of history and disprove the real-world facts that are easily accessible.
The numbers are what they really are. And facts don’t care about feelings either.
I realise I’m making myself appear rather cocky, but I’ve done the legwork and the effort I’ve already performed to research this matter has resulted in me being supremely confident about my claims.
And to be fair, I didn’t really have an opinion or a personal preference on the matter until I saw the stats.