It is not at the same level at George Foreman's. Surely you would agree with that?
Foreman was much better than Joshua (in almost every way), who Usyk did not beat that badly.
and if only usyk had more fights vs the likes of legendary '10 round fighters' like michael rush or jason robinson or sinon asipeli, he might have been able to catch up to james toney in the all time cruiser rankings. imagine what those wins would proveAmbling Alp II wrote: ↑05 Aug 2023, 19:34 Then watch Foreman against Frazier, and Norton. Who looked more impressive?
Usyk has his 21st fight this month against the legendary Daniel Duboius. Imagine what a win would prove?
Another busy year.
He had a fight in 2022, one 2021, one in 2020, and another in 2019! Very busy proving that he would beat one of the greatest heavyweights of all time.
If we are talking pure power than yes I think it certainly appears Gassiev is absolutely above Ali Holmes etc. Watching his fights and how people react to his punches seems to pretty clearly bear this out.Ambling Alp II wrote: ↑05 Aug 2023, 17:01Gassiev was a bigger puncher than Quarry, Ali, and Holmes? Really?Cojimar 1946 wrote: ↑03 Aug 2023, 03:13 He wasn't past his prime to the extent that one would expect him to get blown out easily by guys he would beat at his best. Were talking about a guy who turned pro around 24 and didn't start facing top opponents until 1973. Given that and him not fighting frequently from 1973 onwards he didn't have a lot of wear and tear. At that stage he should have been able to still win or at least had the advantage in the early rounds until he ran out of energy due to age and lack of conditioning. Also I think Shavers was as far past it as Norton when they fought so there the argument doesn't even make sense.
Joshua and Gassiev whatever their flaws certainly seem like bigger punchers than Ali Quarry etc as were Cooney and Shavers so yeah I don't like Nortons chances in either fight
Norton wasn't fighting enough? He had 19 fights from 1973 to the end of his career. That is one less than Usyk has in his entire career. The Holmes fight alone was a war.
Norton was absolutely shot when he fought Cooney. There is no getting around that.
You don't know what you are talking about.
He won the Peralta fight. He had been a pro for 8 months. That doesn't count for anything? Come on.Seamus wrote: ↑06 Aug 2023, 18:14 Not at all. Foreman was a huge puncher, but he faded against Peralta, Ali, Young. Usyk has very good stamina, and he's taken hard shots from Joshua without going down. Foreman would have to get him in the first 3 to win, and Usyk would be showing lots of movement. A fast southpaw with good handspeed, movement, stamina and a solid chin is a bad matchup for Foreman by the 4th rd. Frazier and Norton went toe to toe with George and got annihilated. Young showed movement and Foreman was wild and off balance by mid rounds.
Old George was way more relaxed in the ring. That's why he didn't have the stamina issues of young and TENSE George who tried to wreck everything in front of him for most of his early career. Anyone who's ever been in the ring knows that being tense takes your strength/endurance away quickly. The Young fight was a poorly trained change of style and the heat/humidity.Ambling Alp II wrote: ↑12 Aug 2023, 15:50 He fought at a much slower pace because he had no choice. He simply could not fight at that kind of pace when he got older. When he was older, sometimes he would land a good punch, but could not follow up on it because he simply did not have the energy anymore. When he was younger, he would have jumped all over the guy and put him away.
When he was in his prime, he fought at fast pace and that almost always worked. It didn't work against Ali, but nothing would have. Had he fought at a slower pace he certainly would not have won a decision.
The Young fight really wasn't just a stamina issue. For whatever reason, he looked bad for most of that fight, even in the early rounds.
The whole stamina thing is not based on much. The big evidence amounts to losing to Ali and not knocking a guy when he had 8 months of experience.
Beating Cobb suggests he had a bit left. Cobb beat Mercado, beat a faded Shavers gave Dokes trouble. Hard to gauge his power exactly as many of the guys he failed to kayo were better fighters so he likely wouldn't have been in good position to utilize his power. Norton was only 37 which isn't that old especially given he turned pro late and less than 4 years removed from what I would consider his prime which I feel ended in 1977.Ambling Alp II wrote: ↑09 Aug 2023, 21:42 Cobb couldn't punch at all. Norton still had a lot left in the Holmes fight. He didn't have much left by the time he fought Cooney. He wouldn't have just been target practice had they fought in Norton's prime.
Try watching Norton vs Holmes or Quarry. Holmes stopped one contender after another. Couldn't stop Norton in 15 rounds.
Do you seriously think Gassiev hits as hard as Foreman?
Cojimar 1946 wrote: ↑13 Aug 2023, 22:10Beating Cobb suggests he had a bit left. Cobb beat Mercado, beat a faded Shavers gave Dokes trouble. Hard to gauge his power exactly as many of the guys he failed to kayo were better fighters so he likely wouldn't have been in good position to utilize his power. Norton was only 37 which isn't that old especially given he turned pro late and less than 4 years removed from what I would consider his prime which I feel ended in 1977.Ambling Alp II wrote: ↑09 Aug 2023, 21:42 Cobb couldn't punch at all. Norton still had a lot left in the Holmes fight. He didn't have much left by the time he fought Cooney. He wouldn't have just been target practice had they fought in Norton's prime.
Try watching Norton vs Holmes or Quarry. Holmes stopped one contender after another. Couldn't stop Norton in 15 rounds.
Do you seriously think Gassiev hits as hard as Foreman?
That fight was in 1970. Why do you put so much emphasis on fights where clearly the guy is not reached his prime yet? Should we start counting Minor League baseball stats when looking at baseball players?
Cobb was a decent performance. Against LeDoux he was doing well early and seemed to run out of energy late. Weren't you picking Cobb over Deontay Wilder just a bit ago?Ambling Alp II wrote: ↑14 Aug 2023, 22:15 .Cojimar 1946 wrote: ↑13 Aug 2023, 22:10Beating Cobb suggests he had a bit left. Cobb beat Mercado, beat a faded Shavers gave Dokes trouble. Hard to gauge his power exactly as many of the guys he failed to kayo were better fighters so he likely wouldn't have been in good position to utilize his power. Norton was only 37 which isn't that old especially given he turned pro late and less than 4 years removed from what I would consider his prime which I feel ended in 1977.Ambling Alp II wrote: ↑09 Aug 2023, 21:42 Cobb couldn't punch at all. Norton still had a lot left in the Holmes fight. He didn't have much left by the time he fought Cooney. He wouldn't have just been target practice had they fought in Norton's prime.
Try watching Norton vs Holmes or Quarry. Holmes stopped one contender after another. Couldn't stop Norton in 15 rounds.
Do you seriously think Gassiev hits as hard as Foreman?
Your argument makes no sense. You claim that his prime ended in 1977. Then it was "only" four years later when he fought Cooney. 4 years past your prime is a long time. A very long time.
Norton never looked good again after the Holmes fight. It took a lot out of him and accelerated his decline. Cobb was terrible. Watch Norton's fight against Scott Ledoux; he looked awful. Was not the same fighter anymore.
Anyway, Foreman hit a helluva lot harder than Gassiev, which is the point you keep trying to get away from. Usyk would be going into completely unchartered waters here.