Thanks, go it.margaret thatcher wrote: ↑18 Oct 2024, 04:33 its because its on boxing scene and boxrec auto changes boxing scene urls to BS, which makes the links not work
The Klitschko Brothers
Re: The Klitschko Brothers
Re: The Klitschko Brothers
Like the questions of what might have been for an uninjured Vitali, we’ll never know. All we have is what was. In Vitali, we have a fighter who for many is probably more fun to imagine against the biggest names of all time. Vitali left a big impression, no matter the depth of his resume, with enough time served and quality wins to lend substance to any imaginings.
In Wladimir, we had a heavyweight who proved that no ledger is worth evaluating until it can be viewed in full. Wladimir might rate all-time behind a Holmes or Lewis, but his efforts were still enough to be worthy of comparison and no discussion of the great heavyweight title reigns is complete without him. He will join his brother in the Hall of Fame soon.
Verdicts:
Vitali Klitschko - Borderline Hall of Fame Accomplishments; Top heavyweight in any era
Wladimir Klitschko - All Time Great Heavyweight Champion
This seems pretty balanced to me.
In Wladimir, we had a heavyweight who proved that no ledger is worth evaluating until it can be viewed in full. Wladimir might rate all-time behind a Holmes or Lewis, but his efforts were still enough to be worthy of comparison and no discussion of the great heavyweight title reigns is complete without him. He will join his brother in the Hall of Fame soon.
Verdicts:
Vitali Klitschko - Borderline Hall of Fame Accomplishments; Top heavyweight in any era
Wladimir Klitschko - All Time Great Heavyweight Champion
This seems pretty balanced to me.
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keithmoonhangover
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Re: The Klitschko Brothers
Well, for me, losses count and there is no mention of any in that statement.Ezzard wrote: ↑18 Oct 2024, 05:44 Like the questions of what might have been for an uninjured Vitali, we’ll never know. All we have is what was. In Vitali, we have a fighter who for many is probably more fun to imagine against the biggest names of all time. Vitali left a big impression, no matter the depth of his resume, with enough time served and quality wins to lend substance to any imaginings.
In Wladimir, we had a heavyweight who proved that no ledger is worth evaluating until it can be viewed in full. Wladimir might rate all-time behind a Holmes or Lewis, but his efforts were still enough to be worthy of comparison and no discussion of the great heavyweight title reigns is complete without him. He will join his brother in the Hall of Fame soon.
Verdicts:
Vitali Klitschko - Borderline Hall of Fame Accomplishments; Top heavyweight in any era
Wladimir Klitschko - All Time Great Heavyweight Champion
This seems pretty balanced to me.
Re: The Klitschko Brothers
There is in the whole article. This is just the summation.keithmoonhangover wrote: ↑18 Oct 2024, 05:53Well, for me, losses count and there is no mention of any in that statement.Ezzard wrote: ↑18 Oct 2024, 05:44 Like the questions of what might have been for an uninjured Vitali, we’ll never know. All we have is what was. In Vitali, we have a fighter who for many is probably more fun to imagine against the biggest names of all time. Vitali left a big impression, no matter the depth of his resume, with enough time served and quality wins to lend substance to any imaginings.
In Wladimir, we had a heavyweight who proved that no ledger is worth evaluating until it can be viewed in full. Wladimir might rate all-time behind a Holmes or Lewis, but his efforts were still enough to be worthy of comparison and no discussion of the great heavyweight title reigns is complete without him. He will join his brother in the Hall of Fame soon.
Verdicts:
Vitali Klitschko - Borderline Hall of Fame Accomplishments; Top heavyweight in any era
Wladimir Klitschko - All Time Great Heavyweight Champion
This seems pretty balanced to me.
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keithmoonhangover
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Re: The Klitschko Brothers
Ezzard wrote: ↑18 Oct 2024, 05:56There is in the whole article. This is just the summation.keithmoonhangover wrote: ↑18 Oct 2024, 05:53Well, for me, losses count and there is no mention of any in that statement.Ezzard wrote: ↑18 Oct 2024, 05:44 Like the questions of what might have been for an uninjured Vitali, we’ll never know. All we have is what was. In Vitali, we have a fighter who for many is probably more fun to imagine against the biggest names of all time. Vitali left a big impression, no matter the depth of his resume, with enough time served and quality wins to lend substance to any imaginings.
In Wladimir, we had a heavyweight who proved that no ledger is worth evaluating until it can be viewed in full. Wladimir might rate all-time behind a Holmes or Lewis, but his efforts were still enough to be worthy of comparison and no discussion of the great heavyweight title reigns is complete without him. He will join his brother in the Hall of Fame soon.
Verdicts:
Vitali Klitschko - Borderline Hall of Fame Accomplishments; Top heavyweight in any era
Wladimir Klitschko - All Time Great Heavyweight Champion
This seems pretty balanced to me.
Do you think Vitali should have continued against Chris Byrd? Danny Williams style.
Re: The Klitschko Brothers
No. I think it's an ideology left over from a bygone time. Great for Williams. And applause when it comes off. But in no other sport do we expect people to go on with an injury.keithmoonhangover wrote: ↑18 Oct 2024, 06:01Ezzard wrote: ↑18 Oct 2024, 05:56There is in the whole article. This is just the summation.keithmoonhangover wrote: ↑18 Oct 2024, 05:53
Well, for me, losses count and there is no mention of any in that statement.![]()
Do you think Vitali should have continued against Chris Byrd? Danny Williams style.
Look at Dubois? He retired against Joyce but look where he is now. That retirement might have saved him and led to his current success.
"Retirement" through injury is a part of every sport. When I read people squealing "quit" I just skim over their nonsense, just too transparent.
In terms of VK he was winning the fight too. He wasn't looking for a way out (unlike Whittaker at the weekend).
Re: The Klitschko Brothers
If you're injured then a retirement is perfectly acceptable. Nobody should be expected to continue. He lost the fight because of it. His stock went down. He rebuilt. Byrd's went up. We move on.
VK was clearly winning the fight. He was a great competitor.
Re: The Klitschko Brothers
VK was the better of the two brothers IMO, unfortunately he'll always have the 'what was his best win' question to contend with when ranking him as an ATG.Ezzard wrote: ↑18 Oct 2024, 06:51If you're injured then a retirement is perfectly acceptable. Nobody should be expected to continue. He lost the fight because of it. His stock went down. He rebuilt. Byrd's went up. We move on.
VK was clearly winning the fight. He was a great competitor.
And the era both fought their championship fights in damages them both from an ATG perspective, as it was a horrible era to watch heavyweight boxing, by far the worst in my lifetime
Re: The Klitschko Brothers
I think I'm with you on this. VK would always be a dangerous fighter for anyone.Flump wrote: ↑18 Oct 2024, 07:16VK was the better of the two brothers IMO, unfortunately he'll always have the 'what was his best win' question to contend with when ranking him as an ATG.
And the era both fought their championship fights in damages them both from an ATG perspective, as it was a horrible era to watch heavyweight boxing, by far the worst in my lifetime
Both were great with some negatives to contend with.
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Re: The Klitschko Brothers
Flump wrote: ↑18 Oct 2024, 07:16VK was the better of the two brothers IMO, unfortunately he'll always have the 'what was his best win' question to contend with when ranking him as an ATG.
And the era both fought their championship fights in damages them both from an ATG perspective, as it was a horrible era to watch heavyweight boxing, by far the worst in my lifetime
VK is somewhat unique among heavyweight champions. He really is. After further review of his long career it dawned on me that he has never been behind on the score cards. Not vs. Lewis or Byrd. Or any other opponent. Who can claim that? Yes, he fought plenty of ring magazine ranked opponents in the top ten, just like the famous champions.
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Riddick Bowie
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Re: The Klitschko Brothers
Ah, that old chestnut.pound per pound wrote: ↑18 Oct 2024, 07:25Flump wrote: ↑18 Oct 2024, 07:16VK was the better of the two brothers IMO, unfortunately he'll always have the 'what was his best win' question to contend with when ranking him as an ATG.
And the era both fought their championship fights in damages them both from an ATG perspective, as it was a horrible era to watch heavyweight boxing, by far the worst in my lifetime
VK is somewhat unique among heavyweight champions. He really is. After further review of his long career it dawned on me that he has never been behind on the score cards. Not vs. Lewis or Byrd. Or any other opponent. Who can claim that? Yes, he fought plenty of ring magazine ranked opponents in the top ten, just like the famous champions.
Difficult to be behind on the cards when you're fighting old fat slobs. It doesn't matter where the Ring ranked them. What matters is their names. Kevin Johnson, Juan Carlos Gomez, Danny Williams, Chris Arreola etc. Horrific.
Re: The Klitschko Brothers
Talk about a murderers row.
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Re: The Klitschko Brothers
Old and Fat? False. Check the fighters age when they fought VK. He fought many prime fighters which you have listed. I'll help you out, Billy.Billy Tully wrote: ↑18 Oct 2024, 10:27Ah, that old chestnut.pound per pound wrote: ↑18 Oct 2024, 07:25Flump wrote: ↑18 Oct 2024, 07:16
VK was the better of the two brothers IMO, unfortunately he'll always have the 'what was his best win' question to contend with when ranking him as an ATG.
And the era both fought their championship fights in damages them both from an ATG perspective, as it was a horrible era to watch heavyweight boxing, by far the worst in my lifetime
VK is somewhat unique among heavyweight champions. He really is. After further review of his long career it dawned on me that he has never been behind on the score cards. Not vs. Lewis or Byrd. Or any other opponent. Who can claim that? Yes, he fought plenty of ring magazine ranked opponents in the top ten, just like the famous champions.
Difficult to be behind on the cards when you're fighting old fat slobs. It doesn't matter where the Ring ranked them. What matters is their names. Kevin Johnson, Juan Carlos Gomez, Danny Williams, Chris Arreola etc. Horrific.
Williams was 31, Arreola was 28, Johnson was 30. They were in thier primes. The only thing horrific is you wrong data and agenda.
Come to think of it, VK was so good the most he lost on ANY scorecard* was two rounds in 47 fights. Who else among heavyweight histoy can boast that?
Asking you, Mr. expert of false information.
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Ambling Alp II
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Re: The Klitschko Brothers
He easily could have continued against Byrd. he literally just had to stand up for three more rounds, against a pillow puncher, and he goes the distance. Lewis was terrible in that fight, and he still could only last 6 rounds. If he was a hard puncher he would have stopped Lewis. If he had a decent defense, his face would not have looked like that and he would not have been stopped.pound per pound wrote: ↑18 Oct 2024, 07:25Flump wrote: ↑18 Oct 2024, 07:16VK was the better of the two brothers IMO, unfortunately he'll always have the 'what was his best win' question to contend with when ranking him as an ATG.
And the era both fought their championship fights in damages them both from an ATG perspective, as it was a horrible era to watch heavyweight boxing, by far the worst in my lifetime
VK is somewhat unique among heavyweight champions. He really is. After further review of his long career it dawned on me that he has never been behind on the score cards. Not vs. Lewis or Byrd. Or any other opponent. Who can claim that? Yes, he fought plenty of ring magazine ranked opponents in the top ten, just like the famous champions.
He was unable to finish either the Lewis or Byrd fights. (He never fought anyone else that was that good.) That is what is important. Nobody ever says this kind of thing for any other fighter. They try to give him credit for losing. We should not be
bending over backwards making excuses and actually giving him credit in these situations.
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Ambling Alp II
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Riddick Bowie
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Re: The Klitschko Brothers
Oh grow up. The biggest Names he beat are Corrie Sanders and Shannon Briggs who were fat 40 year olds.pound per pound wrote: ↑18 Oct 2024, 14:47Old and Fat? False. Check the fighters age when they fought VK. He fought many prime fighters which you have listed. I'll help you out, Billy.Billy Tully wrote: ↑18 Oct 2024, 10:27Ah, that old chestnut.pound per pound wrote: ↑18 Oct 2024, 07:25
VK is somewhat unique among heavyweight champions. He really is. After further review of his long career it dawned on me that he has never been behind on the score cards. Not vs. Lewis or Byrd. Or any other opponent. Who can claim that? Yes, he fought plenty of ring magazine ranked opponents in the top ten, just like the famous champions.
Difficult to be behind on the cards when you're fighting old fat slobs. It doesn't matter where the Ring ranked them. What matters is their names. Kevin Johnson, Juan Carlos Gomez, Danny Williams, Chris Arreola etc. Horrific.
Williams was 31, Arreola was 28, Johnson was 30. They were in thier primes. The only thing horrific is you wrong data and agenda.
Come to think of it, VK was so good the most he lost on ANY scorecard* was two rounds in 47 fights. Who else among heavyweight histoy can boast that?
Asking you, Mr. expert of false information.
Can you name ANY heavyweight greats who would lose rounds to Vitali's victims? That little thought exercise might shake you out of your infantile hero worship. Vitali's career was easy and his opposition weak.
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Riddick Bowie
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Re: The Klitschko Brothers
I'm still laughing at "prime Kevin Johnson". Don't think I've seen those three words in a sentence before.Ambling Alp II wrote: ↑18 Oct 2024, 18:09![]()
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You don't think Kevin Johnson, Juan Carlos Gomez, Danny Williams, Chris Arreola etc. aren't a murders row?
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keithmoonhangover
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Re: The Klitschko Brothers
And that was only a big deal because Corrie completely flattened Wlad, although for some, that loss proves Wlad wasn't in his prime.
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Re: The Klitschko Brothers
You are wrong again. Neither Sanders or Briggs were 40.Billy Tully wrote: ↑19 Oct 2024, 03:40Oh grow up. The biggest Names he beat are Corrie Sanders and Shannon Briggs who were fat 40 year olds.pound per pound wrote: ↑18 Oct 2024, 14:47Old and Fat? False. Check the fighters age when they fought VK. He fought many prime fighters which you have listed. I'll help you out, Billy.Billy Tully wrote: ↑18 Oct 2024, 10:27
Ah, that old chestnut.
Difficult to be behind on the cards when you're fighting old fat slobs. It doesn't matter where the Ring ranked them. What matters is their names. Kevin Johnson, Juan Carlos Gomez, Danny Williams, Chris Arreola etc. Horrific.
Williams was 31, Arreola was 28, Johnson was 30. They were in thier primes. The only thing horrific is you wrong data and agenda.
Come to think of it, VK was so good the most he lost on ANY scorecard* was two rounds in 47 fights. Who else among heavyweight histoy can boast that?
Asking you, Mr. expert of false information.
Can you name ANY heavyweight greats who would lose rounds to Vitali's victims? That little thought exercise might shake you out of your infantile hero worship. Vitali's career was easy and his opposition weak.
Briggs was not among Vitali's top wins, and again I defer to Ring Magazine ratings at the time of the fight.
Peter, Sanders, and Adamek were all rated by Ring Magazine inside the top 3 when VK fought them. Either he or his brother occupied two of the spots making it difficult for other fighters to be rated 1, 2, or 3.
Can I name past heavyweight greats that would lose rounds to VK's victims? I sure can. I will start with Muhammad Ali. Is he good enough? Well, he lost rounds to lesser fighters who were not even ranked in some cases.
Case closed.
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Re: The Klitschko Brothers
Talking about a longtime unified heavyweight reign being not a HoF achievement is bullcrap, be it a good era or a not so good one. With Vitali it's more complicated. He became famous for giving a fight to Lewis, but then left the best opposition for his brother. His WBC reign was sh1t. He was inducted for that and they'll do the same with Wilder.
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Re: The Klitschko Brothers
DrDuke wrote: ↑20 Oct 2024, 01:03 Talking about a longtime unified heavyweight reign being not a HoF achievement is bullcrap, be it a good era or a not so good one. With Vitali it's more complicated. He became famous for giving a fight to Lewis, but then left the best opposition for his brother. His WBC reign was sh1t. He was inducted for that and they'll do the same with Wilder.
Dr. Duke,
Vitali was a 1st year eligible inductee, and the leading vote getter in his class.
Wilder does not rate. What are his best wins and the scorecards of those fights?
Vitali beat two of the guys who beat his brother, badly I might add.
Re: The Klitschko Brothers
Still Vitali's resume isn't really HoF worthy. The likes of Pinklon Thomas and Toney Tucker aren't worse. Tucker beat Douglas, who beat Tyson.pound per pound wrote: ↑20 Oct 2024, 07:32DrDuke wrote: ↑20 Oct 2024, 01:03 Talking about a longtime unified heavyweight reign being not a HoF achievement is bullcrap, be it a good era or a not so good one. With Vitali it's more complicated. He became famous for giving a fight to Lewis, but then left the best opposition for his brother. His WBC reign was sh1t. He was inducted for that and they'll do the same with Wilder.
Dr. Duke,
Vitali was a 1st year eligible inductee, and the leading vote getter in his class.
Wilder does not rate. What are his best wins and the scorecards of those fights?
Vitali beat two of the guys who beat his brother, badly I might add.
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Re: The Klitschko Brothers
Yes it is. Like I said he was a 1st year eligible inductee, and the leading vote getter in his class. .DrDuke wrote: ↑20 Oct 2024, 12:23Still Vitali's resume isn't really HoF worthy. The likes of Pinklon Thomas and Toney Tucker aren't worse. Tucker beat Douglas, who beat Tyson.pound per pound wrote: ↑20 Oct 2024, 07:32DrDuke wrote: ↑20 Oct 2024, 01:03 Talking about a longtime unified heavyweight reign being not a HoF achievement is bullcrap, be it a good era or a not so good one. With Vitali it's more complicated. He became famous for giving a fight to Lewis, but then left the best opposition for his brother. His WBC reign was sh1t. He was inducted for that and they'll do the same with Wilder.
Dr. Duke,
Vitali was a 1st year eligible inductee, and the leading vote getter in his class.
Wilder does not rate. What are his best wins and the scorecards of those fights?
Vitali beat two of the guys who beat his brother, badly I might add.
Danny Williams beat Tyson by the way. What did VK do to him? He beat him badly not losing a round.
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tiny_acres
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Re: The Klitschko Brothers
Both Klit's deserve to be in the HOF.
I personally didn't care for their era. Lacked depth and name recognition
I personally didn't care for their era. Lacked depth and name recognition
