Anthony Joshua only spent 30 months in the pro ranks when he dominated and destroyed Charles Martin within two rounds.Cyclops wrote: ↑02 Jan 2022, 23:58There's plenty of decent points in there, but this ranking is based on results and not potential, dude. It's not perfect but it's pretty fair.Enlightened-One wrote: ↑02 Jan 2022, 23:52I can’t give you an immediate answer, since I’ll need to think about it.
But I really can’t see any logical reason to rate Luis Ortiz, Frank Sanchez and Kubrat Pulev so highly.
Look at who these guys have beaten within the last three years, have they beaten any legitimate top-15 world-rated opponents?
Does anybody think that Dereck Chisora, Tony Yoka and Otto Wallin wouldn’t have had an excellent chance of beating this weekend’s iteration of Luis Ortiz?
I don’t know what to say, but I really do believe in expiry dates.
If a fighter hasn’t achieved anything noteworthy in the sport of boxing within the last three years, then we really should be endorsing other heavyweights that have recently achieved more.
Time doesn’t stand still.
I really do believe that today’s version of Luis Ortiz is tailor made for a durable heavy-handed busy heavyweight like Dereck Chisora, despite Del Boy appearing past-his-prime against Joe Parker.
And I think that Tony Yoka dominates Luis Ortiz.
Luis Ortiz also ducked the Otto Wallin fight.
Luis Ortiz ducked Joshua, Whyte, Joyce, Wallin and Ustinov.
And this weekend, Luis Ortiz snatched victory from the jaws of defeat by stopping Charles Martin when he had been decked twice and was also well behind on the scorecards.
Excluding the Charles Martin win, Luis Ortiz has only won one fight within the last 39 months, requiring only 30 seconds of pugilistic action, with the Cuban landing only two punches.
His opponent in that fight temporarily had his purse withheld, because he quit claiming an injury to his eye, but the only punches the Cuban landed connected to the body and the bicep!
It’s been more than six years since the Bryant Jennings fight.
Therefore, let me ask you one simple question, what has Luis Ortiz achieved within the last three years to deserve to be considered as being a top-ten world-rated heavyweight?