So your issue is he enforced the rules of boxing in a boxing match?
Could Ruiz not use all his extra mass to attack and KO little Roy without the illegal holding and mauling bit?
So your issue is he enforced the rules of boxing in a boxing match?
Facile argument because those lighter div fighters are little people. Bulking up would help nothing. 185lb men are not little, they're big strong blokes, and the ones who are punchers empirically have the strength to hurt big men.Controversial wrote: ↑09 May 2022, 06:17 Most of the greatest fighters in boxing history are from the lighter divisions, they are normally the fighters that are the most well rounded, speed, fitness, endurance, boxing ability etc... So surely if they just bulk up they would dominate the less skilled HW division? Except we know that doesn't work because more often than not they don't dominate when they try and move up one or two divisions. Plus lots of them don't even try and move up. And I don't mean adding a few pounds and winning a light or super version of a title, I mean actually jumping whole divisions. Yes there will be examples when they have success but even then there is a limit to it. If not whatever example you think of why didn't they go up another entire weight division. Could Mayweather have been a force in the MW division? Could Pac have dominated at MW? Could Duran have been a force at LHW? How about arguably the greatest fighter in history, SRR, pack on a few pounds and become HW champ? Anyone would say no of course not they are too small. So size matters in these instances and can even negate pure skill. I'm sure any of these fighters could beat someone much bigger but on the whole they would struggle more and more the heavier they got and this would be exacerbated the more skilled their opponent was. Would Marciano have remained unbeaten if everyone he fought was 6'4 and 16+ stone? Probably not.
But smaller fighters are normally far more skilled and faster than most HWs, their skill and speed would get them through it surely? Most of the examples I gave were just moving up a division or two from their normal weight class, not even moving to HW, you think that has nothing to do with size being a factor? Hagler considered by many to the be the greatest MW in history yet he didn't move to LHW, the reason being his advantages lessen the bigger the opponent gets. So scrap the CW division then and see how many of these smaller guys do against HWs, at least they don't need to bulk up, they can just stay at 13 stone.Billy Tully wrote: ↑09 May 2022, 06:59Facile argument because those lighter div fighters are little people. Bulking up would help nothing. 185lb men are not little, they're big strong blokes, and the ones who are punchers empirically have the strength to hurt big men.Controversial wrote: ↑09 May 2022, 06:17 Most of the greatest fighters in boxing history are from the lighter divisions, they are normally the fighters that are the most well rounded, speed, fitness, endurance, boxing ability etc... So surely if they just bulk up they would dominate the less skilled HW division? Except we know that doesn't work because more often than not they don't dominate when they try and move up one or two divisions. Plus lots of them don't even try and move up. And I don't mean adding a few pounds and winning a light or super version of a title, I mean actually jumping whole divisions. Yes there will be examples when they have success but even then there is a limit to it. If not whatever example you think of why didn't they go up another entire weight division. Could Mayweather have been a force in the MW division? Could Pac have dominated at MW? Could Duran have been a force at LHW? How about arguably the greatest fighter in history, SRR, pack on a few pounds and become HW champ? Anyone would say no of course not they are too small. So size matters in these instances and can even negate pure skill. I'm sure any of these fighters could beat someone much bigger but on the whole they would struggle more and more the heavier they got and this would be exacerbated the more skilled their opponent was. Would Marciano have remained unbeaten if everyone he fought was 6'4 and 16+ stone? Probably not.
This should really put the whole debate to bed.Seamus wrote: ↑09 May 2022, 09:22 Arguing about endless hypotheticals along with obscure reasoning, i,e "sure the big guy held a belt, and defended it a few times, but he was never dominant" . The bottomline is we just don't have small heavyweight champions anymore, and that means what they actually weigh, and not what they once weighed or what someone believes their optimum weight would be, or if someone believes they looked no bigger than the old time champs in photos.
Beat me to the proverbial punch! yes!
He isn't small. He is the ideal size. He is small compared to the other heavyweights of today. And he is at least the 2nd best. How surprising.Controversial wrote: ↑08 May 2022, 07:15 But we've said numerous times guys like Usyk historically aren't small, he is similar dimensions to Foreman and bigger than Liston. Wilder isn't small, he's one of the tallest HW champs in history. It's not just weight.
Love that people are now whining that the referee was not letting the fighters clinch.
Why did RJJ not stay at HW then?Ambling Alp II wrote: ↑10 May 2022, 10:49Love that people are now whining that the referee was not letting the fighters clinch.![]()
How many times have people complained about too much clinching? But when the smaller guy wins, it's a crybaby excuse.
As for how Jones would have done, again it's he would have lost if he fought this guy or that guy. Without getting used to the extra, he beat one of the best heavyweights in the world.
He was 5'11. 193 pounds. 74 inch reach. Happened with the the last 30 years.
When it actually happened, in real life, Jones won.
When did anyone say it was just weight? The thread title is "size of HWs compared to other eras" (not weight of HWs) and the height and reach of guys like Fury has been mentioned throughout.Ambling Alp II wrote: ↑10 May 2022, 10:48Controversial wrote: ↑08 May 2022, 07:15 But we've said numerous times guys like Usyk historically aren't small, he is similar dimensions to Foreman and bigger than Liston. Wilder isn't small, he's one of the tallest HW champs in history. It's not just weight.
Glad to hear it's just weight though. Constantly hearing about the weight "advantage".
It can in your mind. Pretty sparse evidence. But if you want to call Jones a HW champion sort of shows how little proof there is.