jujigatame wrote: ↑15 Sep 2020, 13:38
H8Usernames wrote: ↑15 Sep 2020, 12:32
So the logic is that God or nature creates alot of great small men who deserve lots of divisions and championships but then when men grow bigger than 175 pounds then weight stops mattering as much.
This is really nonsense. More weight divisions and champions do not hurt boxing. If the champions and the weight divisions are irrelevant then people simply dont notice them.
I would argue more weight divisions and champions absolutely DO hurt boxing. Any sports fandom needs to know who the top teams/individuals are. If that becomes excessively muddled or unclear, people lose interest. There already being too many classes is not an argument for adding more.
Also, beyond that, it seems like there is a weight level (~240 or so) at which point more weight becomes a hindrance to a fighter's body rather than a help. Which is why we've basically never seen 300+ pound HW champs.
In 2007 the weight catagory light minimum weight was established. Please explain how this has hurt boxing.
In 1987 minimumweight was established and in 1980 cruiserweight was established. Please explain how this has hurt boxing.
The IBA had a superheavyweight champion and have a supercruiserweight division. Please explain how this hurts or has hurt boxing.
Explain how Chagaev and Oquendo are hurtig boxing with their fake championship?
Fact of the matter is that none of this has hurt boxing the least.
Lewis, Tyson Fury and probably a few more fighters benefited from coming in to fight at above 240 pounds.
Today we acctually have fewer world champions than we did a while back. The IBA was gaining status. The IBO was becoming very credible. Some fighters would bring their WBU, WBF, IBC, IBU etc belts into the ring with them and the fight would be called a world title fight. This silver, diamond, etc game that the big 3 are playing isnt really causing any harm.