keithmoonhangover wrote: ↑21 Dec 2022, 06:38
DrDuke wrote: ↑21 Dec 2022, 06:32
keithmoonhangover wrote: ↑21 Dec 2022, 06:22
Wladimir was #1, but my point is he never beat the #1 in the world to do so. Almost all of the greats did it at some point.
What are you talking about?
Wladimir has been the man since the mid 2000s, after he had defeated Byrd and had started to unify.
Vitali was #1 contender during the reign of Wlad, until his last fight in 2012.
Povetkin had been #2 contender for years during the presence of both Wlad and Vitali. When Wlad, still being the man, faced Povtkin in Oct 2013, Povetkin clearly was #1 contender.
You're not getting this are you. Wlad never beat the #1 heavyweight in the world. He held that honour, but he never fought the #1 to get there. I could be wrong, but I don't think I am.
Lewis was the man until his last fight in 2003 against Vitali.
After the retirement of Lewis, there were two contenders for being the man of the division: Vitali, who fought a competetive fight vs Lewis, and Corrie Sanders, who defeated Wlad. As we know, Vitali defeated Sanders in 2004, and people started to see him as the best out there.
After the retirement of Vitali in 2005, there were several major contenders for a status of the man: Chris Byrd, Hasim Rahman, Lamon Brewster, Sultan Ibragimov, John Ruiz and Wlad Klitschko, who was the only one in this bunch to be consistent, to win almost every notable opponent of the bunch and to unify belts, what Wlad continued to do, when Vitali came back in 2008.
So, you are right, Wlad became the man without beating the man, but he's not the only ATG to do this, remember Max Schmeling and Floyd Patterson. Even the likes of Jack Johnson and Larry Holmes did that, until they met the previous lineal champion during his comeback from the retirement, so beating the man isn't always necessary to become the man. Furthermore, barely anyone cared about Spinks, after Tyson had unified 3 belts.