The great non champions

elmersalsa
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Re: The great non champions

Post by elmersalsa »

How about these two guys that caught my attention?:
Johnny Risko (heavyweight)
Percy Bassett (featherweight)
Ambling Alp II
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Re: The great non champions

Post by Ambling Alp II »

elmersalsa wrote: 19 Apr 2021, 11:58
Ambling Alp II wrote: 18 Apr 2021, 13:38 There is a reason why several people have disagreed with you on this and nobody agrees. He won several no-decisions over great fighters. I know that you don't get it (like everyone else does) but that has to count for something.
Non decisions don't count, Alp. End of story.
That's ridiculous. It's not the end of the story. A lot of people would disagree with that. Some people even count them as much as a normal decision.

They have to count for something. They weren't sparring. they weren't exhibitions. There were two guys battling it out. If in a no-decision fight, the the fight didn't go the distance, because of KO, ref stoppage etc. then it counts on both fighters record.
It is silly to say it doesn't count for anything at all when two guys battled for 10 or more rounds.
scartissue
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Re: The great non champions

Post by scartissue »

elmersalsa wrote: 19 Apr 2021, 15:01 How about these two guys that caught my attention?:
Johnny Risko (heavyweight)
Percy Bassett (featherweight)
I always liked Percy Bassett, a fighter who never received his just dues and who never received a title shot. Over his career, he beat: Jimmy Carter, Lew Jenkins, Harold Dade, Orlando Zulueta, Teddy Davis, Charley Riley and Ray Famechon.

A number more I think is deserving to this list is Jack Chase who beat Archie Moore, Lloyd Marshall, Eddie Booker, Aaron (Tiger) Wade and Harry (Kid) Matthews.

Kenny Lane, who beat Carlos Ortiz, Virgil Akins, Carlos Hernandez, Ralph Dupas, Orlando Zulueta, Len Matthews and Doug Vaillant.

Tiger Jack Fox, who beat Jersey Joe Walcott (twice), Maxie Rosenbloom, Bob Olin, Lou Broullaird and Al Gainer.

Wes Ramey, who beat Tony Canzoneri, Lew Jenkins, Johnny Jadick, Battling Shaw, Leo Rodak, Cocoa Kid, Ray Miller and Benny Bass.

Freddie Dawson, who beat Joe Brown, Bernard Docusen, Tommy Bell, Vic Patrick and George Barnes, Also lost a squeaker to Ike Williams for the title.

More later.
klompton
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Re: The great non champions

Post by klompton »

elmersalsa wrote: 18 Apr 2021, 11:29
kasimirkid wrote: 16 Apr 2021, 23:04
elmersalsa wrote: 15 Apr 2021, 17:29

Tommy was better, klompton
No way. Except for being heavier, Tommy was a mediocre copy of his brother.
Mike Gibbons did not do that much. I checked his record. Tommy accomplished much more.
What more exactly did Tommy accomplish?? Mike was considered the pound for pound best boxer in the world during his pre WW1 career. Tommy was never considered the pound for pound best and never even considered the best in any division he fought in. Even Tommy, until the end of his days was happy to admit that his brother was the better more accomplished boxer.

"I checked his record" spoken like a true boxrec warrior who has no clue what hes talking about. Mike Gibbons defeated Jimmy Clabby, Eddie McGoorty, Jack Dillon, George Chip, Al McCoy, Harry Greb, Leo Houck, Ted Kid Lewis, Perry Graves, Bob Moha, Gus Christie, Jeff Smith, and Mike ODowd. He essentially ruled the MW division prior to WW1 and was almost universally considered the best man in the division. There wasnt a premier middleweight between 1910 and 1917 that Gibbons didnt defeat with the exception of Les Darcy who turned down a career high payday which was ten times more than hed ever earned for a single fight rather than face Gibbons. Mike Gibbons fought seven hall of famers and his record against them was: 10-4-1 (if you count the McFarland fight as a draw which having seen the long film of the fight I dont. Mike won it handily) and by the way Mike never lost to a HOFer before he was taken out of the sport for WW1 which essentially ended his prime. Mike was considered one of the greatest and most influential fighters in the sport for decades and the imprint he had on the sport carried on long after he retired. By comparison Tommy spent the vast majority of his career in Mikes in shadow, often referred to simply as "Mike's brother". Like Mike Tommy also faced seven hall of famers and his record against them was 8-5-1. But consider that three of those wins came against Billy Miske who is damn near the bottom of the barrel of hall of famers and never deserved to get in. His win over Norfolk came nearly a decade after Tommy first began turning down offers to face him. It was no secret at the time that Tommy wanted nothing to do with Norfolk and finally took the fight when Norfolk was blind. Notice how from the time he starts fighting top fighters in 1914 until 1921 when he tries to make a run at Dempsey he has only six KOs in 7 years. Then, as Mike was very open about, Tommy's level of competition goes WAY down and his KOs go up. It was smoke and mirrors. Period. It was designed entirely to get publicity for a title shot and just as he was on the verge of that title shot he lost an almost complete shutout to a middleweight and somehow still managed to get the title shot. Thats the sum total of Tommy's accomplishments. If he didnt share the last name that Mike made famous we likely wouldnt be talking about him today as anything more than the guy who took Dempsey 15 rounds.

And please, dont broadcast your ignorance by telling us that newspaper decisions dont matter.
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Re: The great non champions

Post by elmersalsa »

klompton wrote: 19 Apr 2021, 20:35
elmersalsa wrote: 18 Apr 2021, 11:29
kasimirkid wrote: 16 Apr 2021, 23:04

No way. Except for being heavier, Tommy was a mediocre copy of his brother.
Mike Gibbons did not do that much. I checked his record. Tommy accomplished much more.
What more exactly did Tommy accomplish?? Mike was considered the pound for pound best boxer in the world during his pre WW1 career. Tommy was never considered the pound for pound best and never even considered the best in any division he fought in. Even Tommy, until the end of his days was happy to admit that his brother was the better more accomplished boxer.

"I checked his record" spoken like a true boxrec warrior who has no clue what hes talking about. Mike Gibbons defeated Jimmy Clabby, Eddie McGoorty, Jack Dillon, George Chip, Al McCoy, Harry Greb, Leo Houck, Ted Kid Lewis, Perry Graves, Bob Moha, Gus Christie, Jeff Smith, and Mike ODowd. He essentially ruled the MW division prior to WW1 and was almost universally considered the best man in the division. There wasnt a premier middleweight between 1910 and 1917 that Gibbons didnt defeat with the exception of Les Darcy who turned down a career high payday which was ten times more than hed ever earned for a single fight rather than face Gibbons. Mike Gibbons fought seven hall of famers and his record against them was: 10-4-1 (if you count the McFarland fight as a draw which having seen the long film of the fight I dont. Mike won it handily) and by the way Mike never lost to a HOFer before he was taken out of the sport for WW1 which essentially ended his prime. Mike was considered one of the greatest and most influential fighters in the sport for decades and the imprint he had on the sport carried on long after he retired. By comparison Tommy spent the vast majority of his career in Mikes in shadow, often referred to simply as "Mike's brother". Like Mike Tommy also faced seven hall of famers and his record against them was 8-5-1. But consider that three of those wins came against Billy Miske who is damn near the bottom of the barrel of hall of famers and never deserved to get in. His win over Norfolk came nearly a decade after Tommy first began turning down offers to face him. It was no secret at the time that Tommy wanted nothing to do with Norfolk and finally took the fight when Norfolk was blind. Notice how from the time he starts fighting top fighters in 1914 until 1921 when he tries to make a run at Dempsey he has only six KOs in 7 years. Then, as Mike was very open about, Tommy's level of competition goes WAY down and his KOs go up. It was smoke and mirrors. Period. It was designed entirely to get publicity for a title shot and just as he was on the verge of that title shot he lost an almost complete shutout to a middleweight and somehow still managed to get the title shot. Thats the sum total of Tommy's accomplishments. If he didnt share the last name that Mike made famous we likely wouldnt be talking about him today as anything more than the guy who took Dempsey 15 rounds.

And please, dont broadcast your ignorance by telling us that newspaper decisions dont matter.
Most of those wins were non decisions, pal.
Mike Gibbons was never the best fighter of the 1910s decade. That honor belongs to that great Jimmy Wilde of Wales.

Was Mike Gibbons good? Yes. Great? Yes. Top 100 p4p? Perhaps in other people's minds.

He only had 1 defeat in his first 131 fights, in which 65 of them were non-decisions. That does not mean nothing to me. Either you win or you lose. That is what matters.

So, in that time he was 64-1-1 (65NDs) with 36KOs. Impressive? Yes. Did he beat anyone great in the 100 p4p all time rankings? Not one!

His defining fight? ND10 Harry Greb (II)...June 23, 1919...."Gave all he could handle against future all-time great"

Other defining bouts: W10 Willie "KO" Brennan, W12 George "KO" Brown, WKO5 Eddie McGoorty (III), WTKO7 Battling Ortega, WKO1 Battling Ortega (II) and L12 Mike O'Dowd (III)

That's it??? Not good enough for an ignorant boy like me. Bye bye, klompton! Nice try.
Onetimeonly
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Re: The great non champions

Post by Onetimeonly »

It now has to be a dozen people that disagree with you yet you typed the board disagreed with me!
elmersalsa
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Re: The great non champions

Post by elmersalsa »

scartissue wrote: 19 Apr 2021, 18:25
elmersalsa wrote: 19 Apr 2021, 15:01 How about these two guys that caught my attention?:
Johnny Risko (heavyweight)
Percy Bassett (featherweight)
I always liked Percy Bassett, a fighter who never received his just dues and who never received a title shot. Over his career, he beat: Jimmy Carter, Lew Jenkins, Harold Dade, Orlando Zulueta, Teddy Davis, Charley Riley and Ray Famechon.

A number more I think is deserving to this list is Jack Chase who beat Archie Moore, Lloyd Marshall, Eddie Booker, Aaron (Tiger) Wade and Harry (Kid) Matthews.

Kenny Lane, who beat Carlos Ortiz, Virgil Akins, Carlos Hernandez, Ralph Dupas, Orlando Zulueta, Len Matthews and Doug Vaillant.

Tiger Jack Fox, who beat Jersey Joe Walcott (twice), Maxie Rosenbloom, Bob Olin, Lou Broullaird and Al Gainer.

Wes Ramey, who beat Tony Canzoneri, Lew Jenkins, Johnny Jadick, Battling Shaw, Leo Rodak, Cocoa Kid, Ray Miller and Benny Bass.

Freddie Dawson, who beat Joe Brown, Bernard Docusen, Tommy Bell, Vic Patrick and George Barnes, Also lost a squeaker to Ike Williams for the title.

More later.
Nice choices that are worth a look. Especially, Wesley Ramey, Tiger Jack Fox and Kenny Layne :TU:
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Re: The great non champions

Post by elmersalsa »

Onetimeonly wrote: 20 Apr 2021, 14:03 It now has to be a dozen people that disagree with you yet you typed the board disagreed with me!
No. I am not sold on Mike Gibbons. Sorry.
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Re: The great non champions

Post by Onetimeonly »

elmersalsa wrote: 20 Apr 2021, 14:11
Onetimeonly wrote: 20 Apr 2021, 14:03 It now has to be a dozen people that disagree with you yet you typed the board disagreed with me!
No. I am not sold on Mike Gibbons. Sorry.
The board is. So stop asking for in put and ignoring it.
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Re: The great non champions

Post by Ambling Alp II »

it is kind of humorous how he keeps pretending that that his rankings are the consensus. :D
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Re: The great non champions

Post by Ambling Alp II »

elmersalsa wrote: 20 Apr 2021, 13:35
klompton wrote: 19 Apr 2021, 20:35
elmersalsa wrote: 18 Apr 2021, 11:29

Mike Gibbons did not do that much. I checked his record. Tommy accomplished much more.
What more exactly did Tommy accomplish?? Mike was considered the pound for pound best boxer in the world during his pre WW1 career. Tommy was never considered the pound for pound best and never even considered the best in any division he fought in. Even Tommy, until the end of his days was happy to admit that his brother was the better more accomplished boxer.

"I checked his record" spoken like a true boxrec warrior who has no clue what hes talking about. Mike Gibbons defeated Jimmy Clabby, Eddie McGoorty, Jack Dillon, George Chip, Al McCoy, Harry Greb, Leo Houck, Ted Kid Lewis, Perry Graves, Bob Moha, Gus Christie, Jeff Smith, and Mike ODowd. He essentially ruled the MW division prior to WW1 and was almost universally considered the best man in the division. There wasnt a premier middleweight between 1910 and 1917 that Gibbons didnt defeat with the exception of Les Darcy who turned down a career high payday which was ten times more than hed ever earned for a single fight rather than face Gibbons. Mike Gibbons fought seven hall of famers and his record against them was: 10-4-1 (if you count the McFarland fight as a draw which having seen the long film of the fight I dont. Mike won it handily) and by the way Mike never lost to a HOFer before he was taken out of the sport for WW1 which essentially ended his prime. Mike was considered one of the greatest and most influential fighters in the sport for decades and the imprint he had on the sport carried on long after he retired. By comparison Tommy spent the vast majority of his career in Mikes in shadow, often referred to simply as "Mike's brother". Like Mike Tommy also faced seven hall of famers and his record against them was 8-5-1. But consider that three of those wins came against Billy Miske who is damn near the bottom of the barrel of hall of famers and never deserved to get in. His win over Norfolk came nearly a decade after Tommy first began turning down offers to face him. It was no secret at the time that Tommy wanted nothing to do with Norfolk and finally took the fight when Norfolk was blind. Notice how from the time he starts fighting top fighters in 1914 until 1921 when he tries to make a run at Dempsey he has only six KOs in 7 years. Then, as Mike was very open about, Tommy's level of competition goes WAY down and his KOs go up. It was smoke and mirrors. Period. It was designed entirely to get publicity for a title shot and just as he was on the verge of that title shot he lost an almost complete shutout to a middleweight and somehow still managed to get the title shot. Thats the sum total of Tommy's accomplishments. If he didnt share the last name that Mike made famous we likely wouldnt be talking about him today as anything more than the guy who took Dempsey 15 rounds.

And please, dont broadcast your ignorance by telling us that newspaper decisions dont matter.
Most of those wins were non decisions, pal.
Mike Gibbons was never the best fighter of the 1910s decade. That honor belongs to that great Jimmy Wilde of Wales.

Was Mike Gibbons good? Yes. Great? Yes. Top 100 p4p? Perhaps in other people's minds.

He only had 1 defeat in his first 131 fights, in which 65 of them were non-decisions. That does not mean nothing to me. Either you win or you lose. That is what matters.

So, in that time he was 64-1-1 (65NDs) with 36KOs. Impressive? Yes. Did he beat anyone great in the 100 p4p all time rankings? Not one!

His defining fight? ND10 Harry Greb (II)...June 23, 1919...."Gave all he could handle against future all-time great"

Other defining bouts: W10 Willie "KO" Brennan, W12 George "KO" Brown, WKO5 Eddie McGoorty (III), WTKO7 Battling Ortega, WKO1 Battling Ortega (II) and L12 Mike O'Dowd (III)

That's it??? Not good enough for an ignorant boy like me. Bye bye, klompton! Nice try.
The ignorant boy part is your most accurate statement.

Two of your lines I found particularly interesting:

Mike Gibbons was never the best fighter of the 1910s decade. That honor belongs to that great Jimmy Wilde of Wales.
So, in that time he was 64-1-1 (65NDs) with 36KOs. Impressive? Yes. Did he (Gibbons) beat anyone great in the 100 p4p all time rankings? Not one!
I know Wilde is one of your favorites. You even have him your All time top 10.
What fighter in the Top 100 did Wilde beat? Do tell.
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Re: The great non champions

Post by elmersalsa »

Ambling Alp II wrote: 20 Apr 2021, 16:37
elmersalsa wrote: 20 Apr 2021, 13:35
klompton wrote: 19 Apr 2021, 20:35

What more exactly did Tommy accomplish?? Mike was considered the pound for pound best boxer in the world during his pre WW1 career. Tommy was never considered the pound for pound best and never even considered the best in any division he fought in. Even Tommy, until the end of his days was happy to admit that his brother was the better more accomplished boxer.

"I checked his record" spoken like a true boxrec warrior who has no clue what hes talking about. Mike Gibbons defeated Jimmy Clabby, Eddie McGoorty, Jack Dillon, George Chip, Al McCoy, Harry Greb, Leo Houck, Ted Kid Lewis, Perry Graves, Bob Moha, Gus Christie, Jeff Smith, and Mike ODowd. He essentially ruled the MW division prior to WW1 and was almost universally considered the best man in the division. There wasnt a premier middleweight between 1910 and 1917 that Gibbons didnt defeat with the exception of Les Darcy who turned down a career high payday which was ten times more than hed ever earned for a single fight rather than face Gibbons. Mike Gibbons fought seven hall of famers and his record against them was: 10-4-1 (if you count the McFarland fight as a draw which having seen the long film of the fight I dont. Mike won it handily) and by the way Mike never lost to a HOFer before he was taken out of the sport for WW1 which essentially ended his prime. Mike was considered one of the greatest and most influential fighters in the sport for decades and the imprint he had on the sport carried on long after he retired. By comparison Tommy spent the vast majority of his career in Mikes in shadow, often referred to simply as "Mike's brother". Like Mike Tommy also faced seven hall of famers and his record against them was 8-5-1. But consider that three of those wins came against Billy Miske who is damn near the bottom of the barrel of hall of famers and never deserved to get in. His win over Norfolk came nearly a decade after Tommy first began turning down offers to face him. It was no secret at the time that Tommy wanted nothing to do with Norfolk and finally took the fight when Norfolk was blind. Notice how from the time he starts fighting top fighters in 1914 until 1921 when he tries to make a run at Dempsey he has only six KOs in 7 years. Then, as Mike was very open about, Tommy's level of competition goes WAY down and his KOs go up. It was smoke and mirrors. Period. It was designed entirely to get publicity for a title shot and just as he was on the verge of that title shot he lost an almost complete shutout to a middleweight and somehow still managed to get the title shot. Thats the sum total of Tommy's accomplishments. If he didnt share the last name that Mike made famous we likely wouldnt be talking about him today as anything more than the guy who took Dempsey 15 rounds.

And please, dont broadcast your ignorance by telling us that newspaper decisions dont matter.
Most of those wins were non decisions, pal.
Mike Gibbons was never the best fighter of the 1910s decade. That honor belongs to that great Jimmy Wilde of Wales.

Was Mike Gibbons good? Yes. Great? Yes. Top 100 p4p? Perhaps in other people's minds.

He only had 1 defeat in his first 131 fights, in which 65 of them were non-decisions. That does not mean nothing to me. Either you win or you lose. That is what matters.

So, in that time he was 64-1-1 (65NDs) with 36KOs. Impressive? Yes. Did he beat anyone great in the 100 p4p all time rankings? Not one!

His defining fight? ND10 Harry Greb (II)...June 23, 1919...."Gave all he could handle against future all-time great"

Other defining bouts: W10 Willie "KO" Brennan, W12 George "KO" Brown, WKO5 Eddie McGoorty (III), WTKO7 Battling Ortega, WKO1 Battling Ortega (II) and L12 Mike O'Dowd (III)

That's it??? Not good enough for an ignorant boy like me. Bye bye, klompton! Nice try.
The ignorant boy part is your most accurate statement.

Two of your lines I found particularly interesting:

Mike Gibbons was never the best fighter of the 1910s decade. That honor belongs to that great Jimmy Wilde of Wales.
So, in that time he was 64-1-1 (65NDs) with 36KOs. Impressive? Yes. Did he (Gibbons) beat anyone great in the 100 p4p all time rankings? Not one!
I know Wilde is one of your favorites. You even have him your All time top 10.
What fighter in the Top 100 did Wilde beat? Do tell.
Jimmy Wilde did way much more better than Mike Gibbons. He won 91 straight fights! A world record I believe. Match that!

Big up for the little guy from Wales! He did not had Non decisions like Mike Gibbons.
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Re: The great non champions

Post by elmersalsa »

Thanks for scatissue, we got a new entry. Thank goodness!

Wesley Ramey at #34!

Any objections?
elmersalsa
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Re: The great non champions

Post by elmersalsa »

Well, so far we got:
1. Sam Langford
2. Charley Burley
3. Packey McFarland
4. Holman Williams
5. Jimmy Bivins
6. "Peerless" Jem Driscoll
7. Lloyd Marshall
8. Peter Jackson
9. Joe Jeannette
10. Billy Graham
11. Newsboy Brown
12. Billy Petrolle
13. Harry Wills
14. Sam McVaey
15. Tommy Gibbons
16. Owen Moran
17. Les Darcy
18. Pedro Montañez
19. Cocoa Kid
20. Jimmy Leto
21. Young Stribbling
22. Lew Tendler
23. Kid Norfolk
24. Mike Gibbons
25. George Godfrey
26. Lew Feldman
27. Eddie Booker
28. Georgie Abrams
29. Dave Sands
30. Dave Shade
31. Willie Joyce
32. Len Harvey
33. Gil Turner
34. Wesley Ramey

16 more to go!

Thanks, scartissue! :TU:

What about you, Onetimeonly? Who do you got for #35?
Onetimeonly
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Re: The great non champions

Post by Onetimeonly »

Your obsession with Peter Jackson and mocking of Mike gibbons made a joke of this list, but mouzon.
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Re: The great non champions

Post by Ambling Alp II »

elmersalsa wrote: 20 Apr 2021, 23:26
Ambling Alp II wrote: 20 Apr 2021, 16:37
elmersalsa wrote: 20 Apr 2021, 13:35

Most of those wins were non decisions, pal.
Mike Gibbons was never the best fighter of the 1910s decade. That honor belongs to that great Jimmy Wilde of Wales.

Was Mike Gibbons good? Yes. Great? Yes. Top 100 p4p? Perhaps in other people's minds.

He only had 1 defeat in his first 131 fights, in which 65 of them were non-decisions. That does not mean nothing to me. Either you win or you lose. That is what matters.

So, in that time he was 64-1-1 (65NDs) with 36KOs. Impressive? Yes. Did he beat anyone great in the 100 p4p all time rankings? Not one!

His defining fight? ND10 Harry Greb (II)...June 23, 1919...."Gave all he could handle against future all-time great"

Other defining bouts: W10 Willie "KO" Brennan, W12 George "KO" Brown, WKO5 Eddie McGoorty (III), WTKO7 Battling Ortega, WKO1 Battling Ortega (II) and L12 Mike O'Dowd (III)

That's it??? Not good enough for an ignorant boy like me. Bye bye, klompton! Nice try.
The ignorant boy part is your most accurate statement.

Two of your lines I found particularly interesting:

Mike Gibbons was never the best fighter of the 1910s decade. That honor belongs to that great Jimmy Wilde of Wales.
So, in that time he was 64-1-1 (65NDs) with 36KOs. Impressive? Yes. Did he (Gibbons) beat anyone great in the 100 p4p all time rankings? Not one!
I know Wilde is one of your favorites. You even have him your All time top 10.
What fighter in the Top 100 did Wilde beat? Do tell.
Jimmy Wilde did way much more better than Mike Gibbons. He won 91 straight fights! A world record I believe. Match that!

Big up for the little guy from Wales! He did not had Non decisions like Mike Gibbons.
You care more about Wilde beating 91 guys that nobody knows anything about than you do Gibbon winning newspaper decisions over great opponents. That is simply stupid.


Jimmy Wilde did way more? He never beat a guy in the Top 100. For you that hurts Gibbons, but doesn't matter with Wilde. Yet another case of your bias.
It should matter that compared to Gibbons, Wilde's competition was a joke.
Wilde did not have no-decisions? That simply is not true. Wilde had several no-decisions in his career.

I think part of the problem is that elmer doesn't understand no-decisions. (not that understand much anything else).
In certain locations, it was actually illegal to have judges decisions. The guys would fight anyway because they were fighting for a living, not impress somebody 100 years in the future.
If one of the fighters got stopped, then it didn't matter. It goes down in the record books as a KO/TKO.
However, often it would go the distance. Newspapers would give their opinion. Hence the term newspaper decision.

I just don't see how you pretend like the fight never happened. If Mike Gibbons completely outboxed a great fighter, and got a newspaper decision, it is evidence that he himself was great.
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Re: The great non champions

Post by chrisjs1985 »

Still no consideration for Jose Medel? Surely he's a better and more accomplished boxer than some of the one's already listed?
Onetimeonly
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Re: The great non champions

Post by Onetimeonly »

chrisjs1985 wrote: 21 Apr 2021, 11:30 Still no consideration for Jose Medel? Surely he's a better and more accomplished boxer than some of the one's already listed?
They're all more accomplished than Peter Jackson. Talk about beating nobody.
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Re: The great non champions

Post by Ambling Alp II »

I think had he beat Corbett, you could make a decent argument for him. That was his big chance. He did beat Frank Slavin and the original George Godfrey, but that is not enough to rate him where elmer does.

I just love how not (officially )beating someone in the Top 100 kills Gibbons, but for Jimmy Wilde it doesn't matter. :roll:

Actually, if he would just simply switch Mike Gibbons with Jackson, most people could live with that.
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Re: The great non champions

Post by Onetimeonly »

Ambling Alp II wrote: 21 Apr 2021, 15:59 I think had he beat Corbett, you could make a decent argument for him. That was his big chance. He did beat Frank Slavin and the original George Godfrey, but that is not enough to rate him where elmer does.

I just love how not (officially )beating someone in the Top 100 kills Gibbons, but for Jimmy Wilde it doesn't matter. :roll:

Actually, if he would just simply switch Mike Gibbons with Jackson, most people could live with that.
Jackson is the only egregious error switching them would work. The Corbett result was a fine one, but nobody rates Corbett in the top 100.

Wilde is winning streaks, Perez is gold medals and title defenses, Jackson had a lot of fights, etc....
Last edited by Onetimeonly on 21 Apr 2021, 16:26, edited 1 time in total.
Onetimeonly
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Re: The great non champions

Post by Onetimeonly »

Feldman sticks out a bit, but I'm not overly familiar with his record and an Elmer list isn't worth looking it up.
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Re: The great non champions

Post by scartissue »

chrisjs1985 wrote: 21 Apr 2021, 11:30 Still no consideration for Jose Medel? Surely he's a better and more accomplished boxer than some of the one's already listed?
Chris, I agree with your Jose Medel assessment. A record chock full of top contenders. Had the bad luck to come along when he did with Jofre and Harada barring his path. If one ever wants to see a good match of Medel in action, watch his bout with another outstanding bantam who is right on the heels of Medel. I am talking about his fight with Jesus Pimental. I had always heard about the traps Medel would set on the ropes, but seeing it is believing. After having been caught a couple of times - even dropped - one could see Pimental actually hesitate when Medel would lay on the ropes. If one got close - snap - like a bear trap going off. A good close fight between top dogs. And between Pimental's punching power and Medel's counters off the ropes, I felt like applauding at what I had just witnessed.
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Re: The great non champions

Post by elmersalsa »

Ambling Alp II wrote: 21 Apr 2021, 11:17
elmersalsa wrote: 20 Apr 2021, 23:26
Ambling Alp II wrote: 20 Apr 2021, 16:37

The ignorant boy part is your most accurate statement.

Two of your lines I found particularly interesting:

Mike Gibbons was never the best fighter of the 1910s decade. That honor belongs to that great Jimmy Wilde of Wales.
So, in that time he was 64-1-1 (65NDs) with 36KOs. Impressive? Yes. Did he (Gibbons) beat anyone great in the 100 p4p all time rankings? Not one!
I know Wilde is one of your favorites. You even have him your All time top 10.
What fighter in the Top 100 did Wilde beat? Do tell.
Jimmy Wilde did way much more better than Mike Gibbons. He won 91 straight fights! A world record I believe. Match that!

Big up for the little guy from Wales! He did not had Non decisions like Mike Gibbons.
You care more about Wilde beating 91 guys that nobody knows anything about than you do Gibbon winning newspaper decisions over great opponents. That is simply stupid.


Jimmy Wilde did way more? He never beat a guy in the Top 100. For you that hurts Gibbons, but doesn't matter with Wilde. Yet another case of your bias.
It should matter that compared to Gibbons, Wilde's competition was a joke.
Wilde did not have no-decisions? That simply is not true. Wilde had several no-decisions in his career.

I think part of the problem is that elmer doesn't understand no-decisions. (not that understand much anything else).
In certain locations, it was actually illegal to have judges decisions. The guys would fight anyway because they were fighting for a living, not impress somebody 100 years in the future.
If one of the fighters got stopped, then it didn't matter. It goes down in the record books as a KO/TKO.
However, often it would go the distance. Newspapers would give their opinion. Hence the term newspaper decision.

I just don't see how you pretend like the fight never happened. If Mike Gibbons completely outboxed a great fighter, and got a newspaper decision, it is evidence that he himself was great.
That is not stupid. The STUPIDITY is that you are about IGNORANT about knowing Jimmy Wilde's greatest opponents on that stretch.

You are not only IGNORANT about guys fighting from South America, but guys fighting from Europe as well.

You only believe that only the greatest fighters come from America. There is your DOWNFALL , pal

You don't understand the stakes of the fights when Wilde fought them.

I did a research of Wilde's opposition and he did impressed.....Big time! To be an all-time great, you not only need great opposition, but excellent opposition as well. Wilde beat the best of his weight class and even guys that were outweighed him more than 15 pounds!

Either you win or you don't. Don't give me that newspaper decision bullshit. Wilde did not need none of that. He won 91 straight fights.......Look it up!
graham middleton
Super Bantamweight
Posts: 1
Joined: 21 Apr 2021, 10:32

Re: The great non champions

Post by graham middleton »

I suggest that Australian welterweight champion of the 1930's, Jack Carrol who was undefeated for the last 6 years of his career and who defeated many top liners including Bep Van Klavernan , Jimmy Leto, Izzy Janazzo, Ron Richards and others should be in the list of great boxers who did not get an opportunity to fight for a world title. I invite others to check his record and his high ring rating.
Unforetunatly during the Great Depression the money was not available to Australian promoters to bring a world champion to Australia for a title defence.
Graham Middleton
elmersalsa
Heavyweight
Heavyweight
Posts: 15708
Joined: 02 Feb 2003, 03:50

Re: The great non champions

Post by elmersalsa »

graham middleton wrote: 21 Apr 2021, 20:00 I suggest that Australian welterweight champion of the 1930's, Jack Carrol who was undefeated for the last 6 years of his career and who defeated many top liners including Bep Van Klavernan , Jimmy Leto, Izzy Janazzo, Ron Richards and others should be in the list of great boxers who did not get an opportunity to fight for a world title. I invite others to check his record and his high ring rating.
Unforetunatly during the Great Depression the money was not available to Australian promoters to bring a world champion to Australia for a title defence.
Graham Middleton
Thanks. We will look it up
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