Ambling Alp wrote:Well, Ali was better by 1967. Still in 1964 he was already a great fighter. He had the phenomenal reflexes, speed, combination punches. He was much better than Liston.
Where is the evidence that Liston was not as good in 1964 as he was at any other time? He was steamrolling everyone else until he fought Clay.
In the three fights Liston had before the Clay fight in 1964, Liston had three cakewalks against Westphal and Patterson. In those three fights (spanning almost 3 years), he spent a total of just more than 6 minutes in action, and with guys who offered token resistence at best. These guys appeared scared to death of Liston. So I think it is hard to say from these performances whether he had lost any skills due to age. Had these guys offered any real resistence or carried him beyond the first round, maybe we would know. But I submit that we don't.
I do know what my eyes tell me. Against Clay, he looked a bit slower afoot, and his punches seemed to lack snap. His timing didn't seem to be what it was before he won the title. Was that due to the quality of his opponent? Perhaps. Was it because he hadn't had a fight in almost three years against an opponent who had offered serious opposition, and thus had lost his edge? Maybe. Did he start believing his own press clippings, and took Clay too lightly? Possibly. But to my eyes, he didn't look like the fighter who tore through the division in 59-60. I think he had gone back. I think the '59-'60 version was a superior fighter to the 64 edition.
However, I do believe the 67 Ali would have defeated any version of Sonny Liston. I think Clay/Ali was one of those rare fighters who got better after he won the title. But I don't think the 1964 version would have defeated the circa 58 version of Sonny Liston.