Syntax Error wrote: ↑28 Aug 2023, 04:53
elmersalsa wrote: ↑24 Aug 2023, 10:12
gilgamesh wrote: ↑24 Aug 2023, 01:44
Actually Duran famously makes excuses for every one of his losses, and I'd have thought this was a well known fact.
Everybody got EXCUSES. But, Terry Norris beats Leonard and it doesn't count by many that he was washed up. Wasn't Duran at that same age as Leonard when he lost to Hearns, Benitez and Marvelous?
Ages are irrelevant; it's what a fighter has left that counts.
Lennox Lewis and Mike Tyson highlight this,
When they fought, Tyson was actually the younger man by a year, yet Tyson was completely shot as opposed to Lewis who was still the heavyweight champion of the world and almost still in his prime.
You can't compare Leonard and Duran at respective equivalent ages because Leonard was shot at 34, as crazy as that sounds, but he was nothing like the Leonard of a decade earlier.
Duran had a lot more left when he was 34.
Age is relevant in any sport, especially in boxing. And worse if a fighter is moving up to other weight classes.
If Lennox Lewis would have fought lots of fights and started as a teenager, by the age of 36 he would have been washed up. Ask the greats Archie Moore, Ezzard Charles, Sugar Ray Robinson, Ruben Olivares, Roberto Duran, Alexis Arguello, Willie Pep , etc, etc, etc.
They started young and finished old with lots of fights.
If Leonard was washed up at 34, then how could he be better than Duran who fought much more, started professional boxing at a younger age at 15 and even retired after Leonard?
Why his loss to the great Thomas Hearns counts, but Leonard's loss to Terrible Terry Norris doesn't. They were about the same age when they lost. That's double standard.