Wlad is a great fighter. It's absolutely stupid to deny it. He had a weak chin, but he was able to learn to box so that nobody was really able to reach his weak chin. He proved it with a lengthy reign, where he beat the best opposition possible. That's a definition of greatness. While you keep having doubts and point at the Peter fight, where Wlad didn't lose any round where he wasn't down, where he was able to keep to the gameplan at to show some heart, which is among your fearures of greatness. So, these anti-Wlad rants of yours sometimes don't correspond with your standards of evaluating a fighter. That's bias.Ambling Alp II wrote: ↑06 Jul 2020, 15:59It's not bias. I became a fan in 1976. If I would have claimed that the heavyweights in the more 90 years were not very good without knowing anything about them, then I would have been biased. I watched as much as I could and have read a ton. Some of the old heavyweights were bad, some were good. Some eras had more depth than other. Some divisions were great in period and not in another.DrDuke wrote: ↑06 Jul 2020, 11:56
It is pure bias. That's you, who don't understand what the word means, if you don't admit your wittingly 100% pro-oldie stuff as a bias. Old - a priori good. Modern - a priori bad. Am I getting something wrong? Enlighten me.
You've said, that he was more elusive than Fury. That was enough to illustrate the nature of your views related to boxing.
Never saw ya even calling some modern fight good. Maybe I'm missing something? And why on earth you stick to these workrate stats in the context of greatness? I'm even curious, what "great" means to ya. Is workrate somehow affects the class? Well, maybe let's compare the stats of Arreola against Klitschko and Kownacki? By the way, Kownacki-Arreola provided workrate record, if you didn't notice. Where was Arreola's workrate against Klitschko? Or maybe let's compare the stats of Tua against Lewis and Ibeabuchi? Maybe you box in a way your opponent allow you to, don't you think so? What have your been watching since your mid 70s?
There good heavyweight fights in the late 1970s, not a a lot but some good ones in the 1980s. 1990s have some good ones. Never doubted that Holmes, Tyson, Holyfield, and Lewis were great. Then Lewis got old and retired. I had originally had thought W. Klitschko might be the next great one when Lewis was at the end of his career. . (I knew he had been stopped once but thought it might have been a fluke) Then the Sanders fight happened. That kind of thing doesn't happen often to great fighters. Now I (like many other people)started having doubts. Then the Brewster fight. There was no doubt in my mind now. He barely survived Peter after that.
I (like many people) thought that sooner or later some great heavyweight would come a long. He wouldn't have to be that great to beat Klitschko with his glaring weaknesses. Year after year went by, and it somehow nobody was good enough to beat him. Finally when he was ancient, he finally lost to Fury and Joshua, Even then Fury looked awful. Joshua got decked and had way too much trouble. A great fighter would have won easily.
This isn't bias. That is simply my opinion.
As for the work rate- Of course it isn't the end all be all. A fight can be good without a ton of punches throw. It can be bad, if with a lot Certain match ups will make some fights at a faster rate than another. Obviously, punching acurracy, defense, power, speed, stamina, heart, boxing skills matter a great deal.
However it's an indication. On average, good fighters throw more punchers than bad fighters. On average, the guy throwing more punches will win most of the time. If a guy is not throwing much, maybe his opponent is doing something that is keeping him at bay. More often, he simply doesn't have the stamina to throw a lot of punches round after round.
Yes you can find fights from the 1990s or the 1970s or the 1950s where there was not a lot of action. Yes you can find a heavyweight in more recent times that there was a lot. however, on average, it's a lot easier to find a fight with a lot of action in those periods than the In more recent times.
And if Fury looked awful, than Wlad looked like utter sh!t that night. Thus, Fury clearly won Wlad, without having any troubles, in contrast to Joshua. How that wasn't an easy win FFS? You tell he should have won easily, as if he didn't do that. That's another bias. You even try to take away this win of him with repeating your "ancient Klitschko" in different threads.