Historians' Lists
Historians' Lists
Might be good to have a sticky thread where people can post the rankings of historians.
I know that I would like it.
Be good to state the date the list was created.
I know that I would like it.
Be good to state the date the list was created.
Re: Historians' Lists
From Gilbert Odd (1985)
1-Muhammad Ali
2-Joe Louis
3-Jack Johnson
4-Floyd Patterson
5-Jack Dempsey
6-Jim Jeffries
7-Tommy Burns
8-Gene Tunney
9-Jim Corbett
10-Max Schmeling
11-Larry Holmes
12-Jack Sharkey
13-Jim Braddock
14-Ezzard Charles
15-Rocky Marciano
16-Joe Frazier
17-Bob Fitzsimmons
18-John L. Sullivan
19-Jersey Joe Walcott
20-Max Baer
21-Ingemar Johansson
22-Primo Carnera
23-Sonny Liston
24-Jess Willard
25-Marvin Hart
1-Muhammad Ali
2-Joe Louis
3-Jack Johnson
4-Floyd Patterson
5-Jack Dempsey
6-Jim Jeffries
7-Tommy Burns
8-Gene Tunney
9-Jim Corbett
10-Max Schmeling
11-Larry Holmes
12-Jack Sharkey
13-Jim Braddock
14-Ezzard Charles
15-Rocky Marciano
16-Joe Frazier
17-Bob Fitzsimmons
18-John L. Sullivan
19-Jersey Joe Walcott
20-Max Baer
21-Ingemar Johansson
22-Primo Carnera
23-Sonny Liston
24-Jess Willard
25-Marvin Hart
Re: Historians' Lists
From Monte Cox's 'Cox's Corner'
https://coxscorner.tripod.com/heavylists.htm
Nat Fleischer, Founder of Ring Magazine, 1958, 1971.
Jack Johnson
Jim Jeffries
Bob Fitzsimmons
Jack Dempsey
Jim Corbett
Joe Louis
Sam Langford
Gene Tunney
Max Schemling
Rocky Marciano
Charley Rose, 1968
Sam Langford
Jack Johnson
Jack Dempsey
Joe Louis
Jim Jeffries
Gene Tunney
Sam McVey
Rocky Marciano
Jim Corbett
Max Baer
World Boxing 1974 Readers Poll
Joe Louis
Jack Dempsey
Rocky Marciano
Jack Johnson
Muhammad Ali
Joe Frazier
Gene Tunney
Jim Jeffries
Sonny Liston
Ezzard Charles
Nat Loubet, 1975
Joe Louis
Jack Dempsey
Jim Jeffries
Jack Johnson
Rocky Marciano
Gene Tunney
Bob Fitzsimmons
James J. Corbett
Muhammad Ali
Joe Frazier
Survey of Old Timers (Encyclopedia of World Boxing Champions, John McCallum), 1975
James J. Jeffries
Jack Johnson
Bob Fitzsimmons
James J. Corbett
Jack Dempsey
John L. Sullivan
Gene Tunney
Joe Louis
Rocky Marciano
Muhammad Ali
John Durant -Author of "The Heavyweight Champions" (1976)
Joe Louis
Jack Johnson
Jack Dempsey
Muhammad Ali
Gene Tunney
Joe Frazier
Jim Jeffries
James J. Corbett
Rocky Marciano
Max Schemling
Bill Brennan 1978 (Former President of the WBA)
Muhammad Ali
Joe Louis
Jack Dempsey
Jack Johnson
Gene Tunney
Jim Jeffries
Max Schemeling
Rocky Marciano
James J. Corebett
Bob Fitzsimmons
Big Book of Boxing Reader Poll, 1978
Joe Louis
Muhammad Ali
Rocky Marciano
Jack Dempsey
Jack Johnson
Gene Tunney
Joe Frazier
Jim Jeffries
Ezzard Charles
Sonny Liston
Sports Illustrated, 1979
Jack Johnson
Joe Louis
Muhammad Ali
Jack Dempsey
Rocky Marciano
Gee Tunney
Sam Langford
Jersey Joe Walcott
Floyd Patterson
Ezzard Charles
Gilbert Odd, 1985 (Kings of the Ring)
Muhammad Ali
Joe Louis
Jack Johnson
Floyd Patterson
Jack Dempsey
Jim Jeffries
Tommy Burns
Gene Tunney
Jim Corbett
Max Schmeling
Arthur Harris, 1992 (Nov 1992 Boxing Scene)
Muhammad Ali
Joe Louis
Jack Dempsey
Jack Johnson
Gene Tunney
Rocky Marciano
Larry Holmes
Jersey Joe Walcott
Joe Frazier
Sonny Liston
Nigel Collins, 1997
Muhammad Ali
Joe Louis
Evander Holyfield
Larry Holmes
George Foreman
Jack Johnson
Rocky Marciano
Joe Frazier
Jack Dempsey
Sonny Liston
Herbert Goldman, 1997
Muhammad Ali
Joe Louis
Sonny Liston
Mike Tyson
Larry Holmes
Jack Johnson
Jack Dempsey
George Foreman
Rocky Marciano
Joe Frazier
Steve Farhood, 1997
Muhammad Ali
Joe Louis
Jack Johnson
Larry Holmes
Rocky Marciano
Jack Dempsey
Jim Jeffries
Evander Holyfield
Mike Tyson
George Foreman
Tracy Callis, Cyberboxingzone, 1999
Jim Jeffries
Jack Johnson
Jack Dempsey
Joe Louis
Muhammad Ali
Gene Tunney
Jim Corbett
Sonny Liston
Rocky Marciano
Larry Holmes
BBC Sports, 2004
Muhammad Ali
Joe Louis
Jack Johnson
Larry Holmes
Jack Dempsey
Rocky Marciano
Lennox Lewis
Mike Tyson
George Foreman
Evander Holyfield
IBRO Member Poll, 2005
Joe Louis
Muhammad Ali
Jack Johnson
Jack Dempsey
Rocky Marciano
Larry Holmes
James Jeffries
George Foreman
Sonny Liston
Joe Frazier
ESPN, 2007 Reader Poll
Joe Louis
Muhammad Ali
Jack Dempsey
Jack Johnson
Gene Tunney
Rocky Marciano
Ezzard Charles
George Foreman
Joe Frazier
Larry Holmes
Richard O'Brien (Sports Illustrated Senior Editor) 2009
Muhammad Ali
Joe Louis
Sonny Liston
Larry Holmes
Jack Johnson
Jack Dempsey
George Foreman
Joe Frazier
Rocky Marciano
Lennox Lewis
Bert Sugar, 2011 (Ultimate Book of Boxing Lists)
Joe Louis
Muhammad Ali
Jack Johnson
Jack Dempsey
Gene Tunney
Rocky Marciano
George Foreman
Larry Holmes
Sam Langford
Joe Frazier
Teddy Atlas, 2011 (Ultimate Book of Boxing Lists)
Joe Louis
Muhammad Ali
Jack Johnson
Rocky Marciano
Gene Tunney
Jack Dempsey
Sam Langford
John L. Sullivan
Larry Holmes
sonny Liston
Matt Hamilton, Esnewsreporting.com, 2012
Joe Louis
Muhammad Ali
Jack Johnson
Joe Frazier
Sam Langford
George Foreman
Jack Dempsey
Larry Holmes
Rocky Marciano
Gene Tunney
Tyson Bruce, www.boxinginsider.com, 2014
Muhammad Ali
Joe Louis
Larry Holmes
Jack Johnson
Rocky Marciano
George Foreman
Lennox Lewis
Jack Dempsey
Evander Holyfield
Joe Frazier
Mike Casey, sites.google.com/site/alltimeboxingrankings, 2015
Jack Dempsey
Muhammad Ali
Joe Louis
Jack Johnson
Rocky Marciano
Jim Jeffries
George Foreman
Joe Frazier
Sonny Liston
Lennox Lewis
Tony Connolly, Boxing News, Dec 2015
Muhammad Ali
Joe Louis
Jack Johnson
Larry Holmes
George Foreman
Joe Frazier
Sonny Liston
Rocky Marciano
Lennox Lewis
Mike Tyson
IBRO Member Poll, 2019
Muhammad Ali
Joe Louis
Jack Dempsey
Larry Holmes
George Foreman
Jack Johnson
Rocky Marciano
Sonny Liston
Lennox Lewis
Joe Frazier
Larry Merchant, Former HBO Boxing Analyst, 2024
Muhammad Ali
Larry Holmes
Joe Louis
Lennox Lewis
Rocky Marciano
Jack Dempsey
Evander Holyfield
Mike Tyson
George Foreman
Joe Frazier
https://coxscorner.tripod.com/heavylists.htm
Nat Fleischer, Founder of Ring Magazine, 1958, 1971.
Jack Johnson
Jim Jeffries
Bob Fitzsimmons
Jack Dempsey
Jim Corbett
Joe Louis
Sam Langford
Gene Tunney
Max Schemling
Rocky Marciano
Charley Rose, 1968
Sam Langford
Jack Johnson
Jack Dempsey
Joe Louis
Jim Jeffries
Gene Tunney
Sam McVey
Rocky Marciano
Jim Corbett
Max Baer
World Boxing 1974 Readers Poll
Joe Louis
Jack Dempsey
Rocky Marciano
Jack Johnson
Muhammad Ali
Joe Frazier
Gene Tunney
Jim Jeffries
Sonny Liston
Ezzard Charles
Nat Loubet, 1975
Joe Louis
Jack Dempsey
Jim Jeffries
Jack Johnson
Rocky Marciano
Gene Tunney
Bob Fitzsimmons
James J. Corbett
Muhammad Ali
Joe Frazier
Survey of Old Timers (Encyclopedia of World Boxing Champions, John McCallum), 1975
James J. Jeffries
Jack Johnson
Bob Fitzsimmons
James J. Corbett
Jack Dempsey
John L. Sullivan
Gene Tunney
Joe Louis
Rocky Marciano
Muhammad Ali
John Durant -Author of "The Heavyweight Champions" (1976)
Joe Louis
Jack Johnson
Jack Dempsey
Muhammad Ali
Gene Tunney
Joe Frazier
Jim Jeffries
James J. Corbett
Rocky Marciano
Max Schemling
Bill Brennan 1978 (Former President of the WBA)
Muhammad Ali
Joe Louis
Jack Dempsey
Jack Johnson
Gene Tunney
Jim Jeffries
Max Schemeling
Rocky Marciano
James J. Corebett
Bob Fitzsimmons
Big Book of Boxing Reader Poll, 1978
Joe Louis
Muhammad Ali
Rocky Marciano
Jack Dempsey
Jack Johnson
Gene Tunney
Joe Frazier
Jim Jeffries
Ezzard Charles
Sonny Liston
Sports Illustrated, 1979
Jack Johnson
Joe Louis
Muhammad Ali
Jack Dempsey
Rocky Marciano
Gee Tunney
Sam Langford
Jersey Joe Walcott
Floyd Patterson
Ezzard Charles
Gilbert Odd, 1985 (Kings of the Ring)
Muhammad Ali
Joe Louis
Jack Johnson
Floyd Patterson
Jack Dempsey
Jim Jeffries
Tommy Burns
Gene Tunney
Jim Corbett
Max Schmeling
Arthur Harris, 1992 (Nov 1992 Boxing Scene)
Muhammad Ali
Joe Louis
Jack Dempsey
Jack Johnson
Gene Tunney
Rocky Marciano
Larry Holmes
Jersey Joe Walcott
Joe Frazier
Sonny Liston
Nigel Collins, 1997
Muhammad Ali
Joe Louis
Evander Holyfield
Larry Holmes
George Foreman
Jack Johnson
Rocky Marciano
Joe Frazier
Jack Dempsey
Sonny Liston
Herbert Goldman, 1997
Muhammad Ali
Joe Louis
Sonny Liston
Mike Tyson
Larry Holmes
Jack Johnson
Jack Dempsey
George Foreman
Rocky Marciano
Joe Frazier
Steve Farhood, 1997
Muhammad Ali
Joe Louis
Jack Johnson
Larry Holmes
Rocky Marciano
Jack Dempsey
Jim Jeffries
Evander Holyfield
Mike Tyson
George Foreman
Tracy Callis, Cyberboxingzone, 1999
Jim Jeffries
Jack Johnson
Jack Dempsey
Joe Louis
Muhammad Ali
Gene Tunney
Jim Corbett
Sonny Liston
Rocky Marciano
Larry Holmes
BBC Sports, 2004
Muhammad Ali
Joe Louis
Jack Johnson
Larry Holmes
Jack Dempsey
Rocky Marciano
Lennox Lewis
Mike Tyson
George Foreman
Evander Holyfield
IBRO Member Poll, 2005
Joe Louis
Muhammad Ali
Jack Johnson
Jack Dempsey
Rocky Marciano
Larry Holmes
James Jeffries
George Foreman
Sonny Liston
Joe Frazier
ESPN, 2007 Reader Poll
Joe Louis
Muhammad Ali
Jack Dempsey
Jack Johnson
Gene Tunney
Rocky Marciano
Ezzard Charles
George Foreman
Joe Frazier
Larry Holmes
Richard O'Brien (Sports Illustrated Senior Editor) 2009
Muhammad Ali
Joe Louis
Sonny Liston
Larry Holmes
Jack Johnson
Jack Dempsey
George Foreman
Joe Frazier
Rocky Marciano
Lennox Lewis
Bert Sugar, 2011 (Ultimate Book of Boxing Lists)
Joe Louis
Muhammad Ali
Jack Johnson
Jack Dempsey
Gene Tunney
Rocky Marciano
George Foreman
Larry Holmes
Sam Langford
Joe Frazier
Teddy Atlas, 2011 (Ultimate Book of Boxing Lists)
Joe Louis
Muhammad Ali
Jack Johnson
Rocky Marciano
Gene Tunney
Jack Dempsey
Sam Langford
John L. Sullivan
Larry Holmes
sonny Liston
Matt Hamilton, Esnewsreporting.com, 2012
Joe Louis
Muhammad Ali
Jack Johnson
Joe Frazier
Sam Langford
George Foreman
Jack Dempsey
Larry Holmes
Rocky Marciano
Gene Tunney
Tyson Bruce, www.boxinginsider.com, 2014
Muhammad Ali
Joe Louis
Larry Holmes
Jack Johnson
Rocky Marciano
George Foreman
Lennox Lewis
Jack Dempsey
Evander Holyfield
Joe Frazier
Mike Casey, sites.google.com/site/alltimeboxingrankings, 2015
Jack Dempsey
Muhammad Ali
Joe Louis
Jack Johnson
Rocky Marciano
Jim Jeffries
George Foreman
Joe Frazier
Sonny Liston
Lennox Lewis
Tony Connolly, Boxing News, Dec 2015
Muhammad Ali
Joe Louis
Jack Johnson
Larry Holmes
George Foreman
Joe Frazier
Sonny Liston
Rocky Marciano
Lennox Lewis
Mike Tyson
IBRO Member Poll, 2019
Muhammad Ali
Joe Louis
Jack Dempsey
Larry Holmes
George Foreman
Jack Johnson
Rocky Marciano
Sonny Liston
Lennox Lewis
Joe Frazier
Larry Merchant, Former HBO Boxing Analyst, 2024
Muhammad Ali
Larry Holmes
Joe Louis
Lennox Lewis
Rocky Marciano
Jack Dempsey
Evander Holyfield
Mike Tyson
George Foreman
Joe Frazier
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Ambling Alp II
- Super Middleweight
- Posts: 15186
- Joined: 04 Nov 2012, 18:31
Re: Historians' Lists
Some of these are comically bad. Gilbert Odds might have been the worst. His first three aren't bad, then it falls apart. Patterson is #4 and Sonny Liston #23?
Looking at his list, it looks like he thought of the names and then just drew them out of hat as to who goes where.
Nat Fleischer was notorious for going overboard in favoring the Old Timers. We aren't just talking borderline cases here.
Some of them were not too bad with the exception of one or two picks. BBC poll was not bad.
Jeffries did better in some of these polls than you might think.
Looking at his list, it looks like he thought of the names and then just drew them out of hat as to who goes where.
Nat Fleischer was notorious for going overboard in favoring the Old Timers. We aren't just talking borderline cases here.
Some of them were not too bad with the exception of one or two picks. BBC poll was not bad.
Jeffries did better in some of these polls than you might think.
Re: Historians' Lists
Just depends on the criteria is all.
I think Odd gives Floyd and Burns more respect for historical reasons.
I think Odd gives Floyd and Burns more respect for historical reasons.
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Ambling Alp II
- Super Middleweight
- Posts: 15186
- Joined: 04 Nov 2012, 18:31
Re: Historians' Lists
Would love to know his criteria. Even if he just going on "historical" purposes, it still doesn't make a lot of sense. Sharkey is #12? He is more important historically (or for any other reason) than Joe Frazier?
Guessing that how much he liked the guy is a huge factor here.
I have a book by him and thought it was decent. I am shocked at how bad this list is.
Jimmy Braddock is #13? Beating Baer got him that high?
Charles is ahead of Marciano?
George Foreman did not make the cut at all? Wow.
You can go on and on with other examples of how bad his list is.
Guessing that how much he liked the guy is a huge factor here.
I have a book by him and thought it was decent. I am shocked at how bad this list is.
Jimmy Braddock is #13? Beating Baer got him that high?
Charles is ahead of Marciano?
George Foreman did not make the cut at all? Wow.
You can go on and on with other examples of how bad his list is.
Re: Historians' Lists
Almost nobody had Foreman top 10 before the comeback.
And Tunney almost always made the top 10.
And Tunney almost always made the top 10.
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Caractacus
- Middleweight
- Posts: 18605
- Joined: 13 Jun 2014, 16:47
Re: Historians' Lists
well, first names some Boxing historians.
( and then rank them)
Burt Sugar (1936-2012)comes to mind.
Barney Nagler (1911-1990)too
( and then rank them)
Burt Sugar (1936-2012)comes to mind.
Barney Nagler (1911-1990)too
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Ambling Alp II
- Super Middleweight
- Posts: 15186
- Joined: 04 Nov 2012, 18:31
Re: Historians' Lists
Foreman was a bit underrated after he retired in 1977. This was after his poor performance in losing to Jimmy Young. He really disappeared for 10 years before his comeback. He wasn't on talk shows, commercials or anything like that at all. A lot of people seemed to have forgot about him.
But Gilbert Odd had a Top 25 list and Foreman did not make it. Marvin Hart, Jess Willard, and Primo Carnera all made it. That's beyond ridiculous.
Tunney was an interesting case. I have always defended him against people who vastly underrate him. Top 10 is pushing it, though. Some of these polls were a long time before some of these guys even fought (Lewis, Holyfield, Holmes, etc.) so it makes more sense. Some people don't like to rate current fighters at the time either.
However, Teddy Atlas and Bert Sugar had in the top 10 in 2011, which is of course silly. I think some people like to throw in a surprise that they don't really believe themselves.
But Gilbert Odd had a Top 25 list and Foreman did not make it. Marvin Hart, Jess Willard, and Primo Carnera all made it. That's beyond ridiculous.
Tunney was an interesting case. I have always defended him against people who vastly underrate him. Top 10 is pushing it, though. Some of these polls were a long time before some of these guys even fought (Lewis, Holyfield, Holmes, etc.) so it makes more sense. Some people don't like to rate current fighters at the time either.
However, Teddy Atlas and Bert Sugar had in the top 10 in 2011, which is of course silly. I think some people like to throw in a surprise that they don't really believe themselves.
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Caractacus
- Middleweight
- Posts: 18605
- Joined: 13 Jun 2014, 16:47
Re: Historians' Lists
IMOP, Gene Tunney and Archie Moore should also be considered ring 'historians".
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pound per pound
- Heavyweight

- Posts: 1605
- Joined: 13 Jan 2005, 14:36
Re: Historians' Lists
Ambling Alp II wrote: ↑31 Oct 2024, 08:33 Some of these are comically bad. Gilbert Odds might have been the worst. His first three aren't bad, then it falls apart. Patterson is #4 and Sonny Liston #23?![]()
Looking at his list, it looks like he thought of the names and then just drew them out of hat as to who goes where.
Nat Fleischer was notorious for going overboard in favoring the Old Timers. We aren't just talking borderline cases here.
Some of them were not too bad with the exception of one or two picks. BBC poll was not bad.
Jeffries did better in some of these polls than you might think.
Odd's list was well odd.
Nat Fleischer's list is mocked today, but the man died in Jan 1972 right? His list came out in the 1960's and is unique in that he saw nearly everybody live in the ring and some films are lost. But it was only good until the 1960s!
Boxing has evolved greatly; some say the fights are no longer great. But the athletes competing at heavyweight are much bigger, stronger, and longer. In my view they hit harder too. Lots of er's
Greatest means many things. Great in his era for sure. Head to head is a totally different story. This is why I prefer to use Ring Magazine Rankings as they go back 100 year and judge the all vs. the fields on W's and L's while paying close attention to the age and the condition of the fighters when the fights happened with ranked fighters.
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Ambling Alp II
- Super Middleweight
- Posts: 15186
- Joined: 04 Nov 2012, 18:31
Re: Historians' Lists
yeah it was odd. Some of the others were almost as bad.
I hate the word "evolved". It implies better. I don't think the sport is better. This is not like technology where you can just build on what came before and should always get better and better.
I think when a sport first starts, there is going to naturally be a lot of improvement for awhile. New techniques and strategies are going to be developed. But then after a while, the progress naturally slows down and eventually stops. Specific weight classes go up and down as far as quality goes.
If a guy was great, he was great Doesn't matter if he is fighting now or 120 years ago.
you do have to take into consideration when the poll was made; obviously you can't rate someone that has not come along yet.
It is interesting to see what people come up with. Noticed that Sonny Liston seemed to get rated higher as the years went on.
I hate the word "evolved". It implies better. I don't think the sport is better. This is not like technology where you can just build on what came before and should always get better and better.
I think when a sport first starts, there is going to naturally be a lot of improvement for awhile. New techniques and strategies are going to be developed. But then after a while, the progress naturally slows down and eventually stops. Specific weight classes go up and down as far as quality goes.
If a guy was great, he was great Doesn't matter if he is fighting now or 120 years ago.
you do have to take into consideration when the poll was made; obviously you can't rate someone that has not come along yet.
It is interesting to see what people come up with. Noticed that Sonny Liston seemed to get rated higher as the years went on.
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funso banjo baby
- Heavyweight

- Posts: 4417
- Joined: 23 Sep 2005, 11:05
Re: Historians' Lists
Gosh, these are tricky.
Someone else mentioned criteria.
The basic top ten seems pretty consistent apart from lunatics like Gilbert odd`s etc. Several names are quite problematic. One thing that unites Sonny Liston and George Foreman is there before and afters.
I find it super hard to compare the different eras and I don't know how it's even possible? It could be argued that Jack Johnson`s era was a entirely different sport.
Someone else mentioned criteria.
The basic top ten seems pretty consistent apart from lunatics like Gilbert odd`s etc. Several names are quite problematic. One thing that unites Sonny Liston and George Foreman is there before and afters.
I find it super hard to compare the different eras and I don't know how it's even possible? It could be argued that Jack Johnson`s era was a entirely different sport.
Re: Historians' Lists
I guess there is the idea of who they beat. How good those guys were. And how broad the opposition was.
Then there are achievements like being champion. Defences. Comebacks. Historical significance.
On top of that is the traits and skills they showed in the ring.
But it's all just down to how you want to reward different factors.
Then there are achievements like being champion. Defences. Comebacks. Historical significance.
On top of that is the traits and skills they showed in the ring.
But it's all just down to how you want to reward different factors.
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pound per pound
- Heavyweight

- Posts: 1605
- Joined: 13 Jan 2005, 14:36
Re: Historians' Lists
Ambling Alp II wrote: ↑31 Oct 2024, 19:21 yeah it was odd. Some of the others were almost as bad.
I hate the word "evolved". It implies better. I don't think the sport is better. This is not like technology where you can just build on what came before and should always get better and better.
I think when a sport first starts, there is going to naturally be a lot of improvement for awhile. New techniques and strategies are going to be developed. But then after a while, the progress naturally slows down and eventually stops. Specific weight classes go up and down as far as quality goes.
If a guy was great, he was great Doesn't matter if he is fighting now or 120 years ago.
you do have to take into consideration when the poll was made; obviously you can't rate someone that has not come along yet.
It is interesting to see what people come up with. Noticed that Sonny Liston seemed to get rated higher as the years went on.
You don't have to like or dislike it. Heavyweights around today are in fact much bigger, taller, heavier, longer, and more powerful than the were 100, 75, 50 , of even 35 years ago in general.
They are in fact a different weight class.
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BroughtonRulesRefuge
- Heavyweight

- Posts: 2773
- Joined: 16 Dec 2008, 06:55
Re: Historians' Lists
- Top post, Ez
Of course literally Fleischer was a one man unit posting fighter records and providing a top heavyweight list. I posted the open letter he published after Ali fans swamped him with requests to make Ali a top heavywt in spite of just being well whooped by Frazier. Since he passed, what, 50 years ago, of course he seems outdated.
Anyway, I'm an observer, not a historian who are Johnny come latelys after Fleischer. They seldom record reasons.
I posted this about a year ago with criteria quite a bit different than the usual suspects who tend to ape each other.
This list is the boxing and world impact, both of which have the biggest influence in boxing.
1.Joe Louis…It don’t get any bigger worldwide than the rematch with Max Schmeling on the eve of WW2 in a bout that was relayed worldwide via the nascent radio of the era. Joe was the first black American heavyweight the overwhelming white majority could rally around and set the stage for the post WW2 integration of Major League Baseball and the US armed forces and subsequent civil rights movements. Need I add that Joe was also a major inspiration in the development of Nelson Mandela and Martin Luther King as young boys avidly listening to his fights on the radio?
2.The Klitschko brothers…Their collective was 109-7, 94 KO and never once took a ten count that averages ot to 55-4, 47 KO. Between them they moved the heavyweight division to Germany and knocked Don King out of the heavy division to usher in the continuing saga of East European dominance of the heavier boxing divisions.
3.Bob Fitzsimmons…A rare trifecta of being part the first proposed full length feature cinematographic project by Thomas Edison’s Black Maria Studio, the first title fight against James J Corbett to be held in Dallas, Texas, circa 1895 that was cancelled when the Texas Legislature made prize fighting illegal. The always overly dramatic Corbett publicly forfeited his title that was then fought over near Langtry, Texas by Fitz and Peter Maher.
Maher had previously claimed the forfeited Corbett title in November of 1895 against Steve O’Donnell with a 1st rd KO. Fitz and Maher were situated in 1896 on a spit island in the middle of the Rio Grande(Bravo) for the first failed full length feature cinematographic project by Thomas Edison. Tragically the crew could not not get properly set up in misty conditions before Maher became his own victim of a first round KO as his claims to the title transferred to Ruby Robert. Whatever may have been filmed has thus far been lost in time though hope springs eternal that it may possibly turn up.
The 1897 Corbett vs Fitz fight held in Reno, Nevada, the first ever successful full length feature film that additionally became the first ever national and international blockbuster that established art of cinematography permanently in the world. Subsequently James J Jeffries helped develop the art of cinematography further when he knocked out Fitz to claim the title though sadly almost all of the Jeffries film has be either lost or waiting to be rediscovered. The first non boxing blockbuster featuring actors was The Great Train Robbery 6 years later in 1903, a film of only 10 minutes for perspective that introduced the first ever silent screen star to the public, Bronco Billy.
4.John L Sullivan, 39-1-1, 33 KO. John L was the first and only unified Bareknucks and Gloved Queensbury champ and the first American to consolidate titles that had previously belonged exclusively to the British. John L first set up the worldwide heavyweight stage in a growing age of literacy and media expansion, where they remained save for a nanoblip by Ingemar Johansson for a century before Lennox Lewis upset the American monopoly.
5A.Jack Dempsey, 55-6-8, 45 KO. Established the modern spectacle of boxing that is seldom matched and never exceeded. Also held the 1st round Hvywt KO record until Briggs broke it.
5B.Muhammad Ali, 56-5, 37 KO. Perhaps the 2nd best known fighter in the world only exceeded by the modern phenomenon of Manny Pacquiao and his 3 billion Asian population base enhanced with modern communication broadcasting.
5C.Mike Tyson, 50-6, 44 KO. Youngest ever champ who cleaned up the derelict post Ali era to unify the titles and temporarily wipe Don King’s slate clean. He had already held the record for career purse earnings before King and Robin Givens ever sunk their claws into him.
OK, now, and what about the greatest records?
1.Joe Louis, 66-3, 52 KO. Nominally his 26(27)-1 heavyweight title records were exceeded, but, overall never surpassed. The 27th was Lee Savold who claimed both the white heavy title and the BBBC heavyweight title that Joe is seldom credited with after knocking him out.
2.The Klitschko brothers, 109-7, 94 KO and bukos title fights with nary a 10 count between them. Collectively they smashed the Louis record, and though individually Wlad exceeded his total career heavyweight title fights, he fell short of the overall Louis record. They may well hold the heavyweight record of the most winning rounds scored as overmatched opponents seldom penetrated their defense. More importantly they put down Don King for years of 10 counts and transferred heavyweight title fights to Germany-HERESY to be sure!
3.Rocky, 49-0, 43 KO. The most iconic record in all of boxing. My next door neighbor who knows shinola about boxing can recite Rocky’s record like a mantra.
4.Sam Langford, 178-29-39, 126 KO. Mere numerical records FAIL to capture Sam’s greatness, not the least being the sheer number of fights he had against HOF fighters that greatly exceed all such fights by other fighters.
5.Anthony Joshua, 22-0, 21 KO. Going into his 8th title fight as a unified belt holder, no heavyweight as yet has done as much with such a limited number of fights. I always like to include a current great in rankings just to PO dusty mossbacks not understanding that all the greats in the making were moderns in their day as Josh is.
Consolidating the two lists by working backwards using my fighter ratings as their points totals, that’s Josh with 5 points, Sam with 4 points, Rocky with 3 points, The Ks with 2, and Louis with 1.
Then we have Dempsey, Ali, and Tyson tied with 5 each, John L with 4, Fitz at 3, the Ks at 2 and Louis at 1.
Adding up the two lists with fighters not appearing on both lists being assigned a place value of 6 to keep my rankings on keel, That’s Louis 1+1 with 2 pts, the Ks 2+2 with 4, Fitz 3+6 with 9, John L 4+6 with 10, Dempsey, Ali, and Tyson, all 5+6 with 11 each, Josh 5+6 with 11, Sam with 10, Rocky with 7. Divided by 2 to get the final point rankings in numerical order:Louis 1, Ks 2, Rocky 3.5, Fitz 4.5, John L 5, Sam 5, and Dempsey, Ali, Tyson, and Josh 5.5
Translated into standard numerical ranking order:Louis 1, Ks 2, Rocky 3, Fitz 4, John L 5A and Sam 5B, Dempsey, Ali, Tyson, and Joshua 7A, 7B, 7C, 7 D.
So technically that 11 heavyweights if we split the Klitschko brothers, but they were such a dominating force in boxing that they really have to be consolidated as one unit to understand their impact.
Of course literally Fleischer was a one man unit posting fighter records and providing a top heavyweight list. I posted the open letter he published after Ali fans swamped him with requests to make Ali a top heavywt in spite of just being well whooped by Frazier. Since he passed, what, 50 years ago, of course he seems outdated.
Anyway, I'm an observer, not a historian who are Johnny come latelys after Fleischer. They seldom record reasons.
I posted this about a year ago with criteria quite a bit different than the usual suspects who tend to ape each other.
This list is the boxing and world impact, both of which have the biggest influence in boxing.
1.Joe Louis…It don’t get any bigger worldwide than the rematch with Max Schmeling on the eve of WW2 in a bout that was relayed worldwide via the nascent radio of the era. Joe was the first black American heavyweight the overwhelming white majority could rally around and set the stage for the post WW2 integration of Major League Baseball and the US armed forces and subsequent civil rights movements. Need I add that Joe was also a major inspiration in the development of Nelson Mandela and Martin Luther King as young boys avidly listening to his fights on the radio?
2.The Klitschko brothers…Their collective was 109-7, 94 KO and never once took a ten count that averages ot to 55-4, 47 KO. Between them they moved the heavyweight division to Germany and knocked Don King out of the heavy division to usher in the continuing saga of East European dominance of the heavier boxing divisions.
3.Bob Fitzsimmons…A rare trifecta of being part the first proposed full length feature cinematographic project by Thomas Edison’s Black Maria Studio, the first title fight against James J Corbett to be held in Dallas, Texas, circa 1895 that was cancelled when the Texas Legislature made prize fighting illegal. The always overly dramatic Corbett publicly forfeited his title that was then fought over near Langtry, Texas by Fitz and Peter Maher.
Maher had previously claimed the forfeited Corbett title in November of 1895 against Steve O’Donnell with a 1st rd KO. Fitz and Maher were situated in 1896 on a spit island in the middle of the Rio Grande(Bravo) for the first failed full length feature cinematographic project by Thomas Edison. Tragically the crew could not not get properly set up in misty conditions before Maher became his own victim of a first round KO as his claims to the title transferred to Ruby Robert. Whatever may have been filmed has thus far been lost in time though hope springs eternal that it may possibly turn up.
The 1897 Corbett vs Fitz fight held in Reno, Nevada, the first ever successful full length feature film that additionally became the first ever national and international blockbuster that established art of cinematography permanently in the world. Subsequently James J Jeffries helped develop the art of cinematography further when he knocked out Fitz to claim the title though sadly almost all of the Jeffries film has be either lost or waiting to be rediscovered. The first non boxing blockbuster featuring actors was The Great Train Robbery 6 years later in 1903, a film of only 10 minutes for perspective that introduced the first ever silent screen star to the public, Bronco Billy.
4.John L Sullivan, 39-1-1, 33 KO. John L was the first and only unified Bareknucks and Gloved Queensbury champ and the first American to consolidate titles that had previously belonged exclusively to the British. John L first set up the worldwide heavyweight stage in a growing age of literacy and media expansion, where they remained save for a nanoblip by Ingemar Johansson for a century before Lennox Lewis upset the American monopoly.
5A.Jack Dempsey, 55-6-8, 45 KO. Established the modern spectacle of boxing that is seldom matched and never exceeded. Also held the 1st round Hvywt KO record until Briggs broke it.
5B.Muhammad Ali, 56-5, 37 KO. Perhaps the 2nd best known fighter in the world only exceeded by the modern phenomenon of Manny Pacquiao and his 3 billion Asian population base enhanced with modern communication broadcasting.
5C.Mike Tyson, 50-6, 44 KO. Youngest ever champ who cleaned up the derelict post Ali era to unify the titles and temporarily wipe Don King’s slate clean. He had already held the record for career purse earnings before King and Robin Givens ever sunk their claws into him.
OK, now, and what about the greatest records?
1.Joe Louis, 66-3, 52 KO. Nominally his 26(27)-1 heavyweight title records were exceeded, but, overall never surpassed. The 27th was Lee Savold who claimed both the white heavy title and the BBBC heavyweight title that Joe is seldom credited with after knocking him out.
2.The Klitschko brothers, 109-7, 94 KO and bukos title fights with nary a 10 count between them. Collectively they smashed the Louis record, and though individually Wlad exceeded his total career heavyweight title fights, he fell short of the overall Louis record. They may well hold the heavyweight record of the most winning rounds scored as overmatched opponents seldom penetrated their defense. More importantly they put down Don King for years of 10 counts and transferred heavyweight title fights to Germany-HERESY to be sure!
3.Rocky, 49-0, 43 KO. The most iconic record in all of boxing. My next door neighbor who knows shinola about boxing can recite Rocky’s record like a mantra.
4.Sam Langford, 178-29-39, 126 KO. Mere numerical records FAIL to capture Sam’s greatness, not the least being the sheer number of fights he had against HOF fighters that greatly exceed all such fights by other fighters.
5.Anthony Joshua, 22-0, 21 KO. Going into his 8th title fight as a unified belt holder, no heavyweight as yet has done as much with such a limited number of fights. I always like to include a current great in rankings just to PO dusty mossbacks not understanding that all the greats in the making were moderns in their day as Josh is.
Consolidating the two lists by working backwards using my fighter ratings as their points totals, that’s Josh with 5 points, Sam with 4 points, Rocky with 3 points, The Ks with 2, and Louis with 1.
Then we have Dempsey, Ali, and Tyson tied with 5 each, John L with 4, Fitz at 3, the Ks at 2 and Louis at 1.
Adding up the two lists with fighters not appearing on both lists being assigned a place value of 6 to keep my rankings on keel, That’s Louis 1+1 with 2 pts, the Ks 2+2 with 4, Fitz 3+6 with 9, John L 4+6 with 10, Dempsey, Ali, and Tyson, all 5+6 with 11 each, Josh 5+6 with 11, Sam with 10, Rocky with 7. Divided by 2 to get the final point rankings in numerical order:Louis 1, Ks 2, Rocky 3.5, Fitz 4.5, John L 5, Sam 5, and Dempsey, Ali, Tyson, and Josh 5.5
Translated into standard numerical ranking order:Louis 1, Ks 2, Rocky 3, Fitz 4, John L 5A and Sam 5B, Dempsey, Ali, Tyson, and Joshua 7A, 7B, 7C, 7 D.
So technically that 11 heavyweights if we split the Klitschko brothers, but they were such a dominating force in boxing that they really have to be consolidated as one unit to understand their impact.
Re: Historians' Lists
Does Dempsey deserve a little more love in list one?BroughtonRulesRefuge wrote: ↑01 Nov 2024, 10:59 - Top post, Ez![]()
Of course literally Fleischer was a one man unit posting fighter records and providing a top heavyweight list. I posted the open letter he published after Ali fans swamped him with requests to make Ali a top heavywt in spite of just being well whooped by Frazier. Since he passed, what, 50 years ago, of course he seems outdated.
Anyway, I'm an observer, not a historian who are Johnny come latelys after Fleischer. They seldom record reasons.
I posted this about a year ago with criteria quite a bit different than the usual suspects who tend to ape each other.
This list is the boxing and world impact, both of which have the biggest influence in boxing.
1.Joe Louis…It don’t get any bigger worldwide than the rematch with Max Schmeling on the eve of WW2 in a bout that was relayed worldwide via the nascent radio of the era. Joe was the first black American heavyweight the overwhelming white majority could rally around and set the stage for the post WW2 integration of Major League Baseball and the US armed forces and subsequent civil rights movements. Need I add that Joe was also a major inspiration in the development of Nelson Mandela and Martin Luther King as young boys avidly listening to his fights on the radio?
2.The Klitschko brothers…Their collective was 109-7, 94 KO and never once took a ten count that averages ot to 55-4, 47 KO. Between them they moved the heavyweight division to Germany and knocked Don King out of the heavy division to usher in the continuing saga of East European dominance of the heavier boxing divisions.
3.Bob Fitzsimmons…A rare trifecta of being part the first proposed full length feature cinematographic project by Thomas Edison’s Black Maria Studio, the first title fight against James J Corbett to be held in Dallas, Texas, circa 1895 that was cancelled when the Texas Legislature made prize fighting illegal. The always overly dramatic Corbett publicly forfeited his title that was then fought over near Langtry, Texas by Fitz and Peter Maher.
Maher had previously claimed the forfeited Corbett title in November of 1895 against Steve O’Donnell with a 1st rd KO. Fitz and Maher were situated in 1896 on a spit island in the middle of the Rio Grande(Bravo) for the first failed full length feature cinematographic project by Thomas Edison. Tragically the crew could not not get properly set up in misty conditions before Maher became his own victim of a first round KO as his claims to the title transferred to Ruby Robert. Whatever may have been filmed has thus far been lost in time though hope springs eternal that it may possibly turn up.
The 1897 Corbett vs Fitz fight held in Reno, Nevada, the first ever successful full length feature film that additionally became the first ever national and international blockbuster that established art of cinematography permanently in the world. Subsequently James J Jeffries helped develop the art of cinematography further when he knocked out Fitz to claim the title though sadly almost all of the Jeffries film has be either lost or waiting to be rediscovered. The first non boxing blockbuster featuring actors was The Great Train Robbery 6 years later in 1903, a film of only 10 minutes for perspective that introduced the first ever silent screen star to the public, Bronco Billy.
4.John L Sullivan, 39-1-1, 33 KO. John L was the first and only unified Bareknucks and Gloved Queensbury champ and the first American to consolidate titles that had previously belonged exclusively to the British. John L first set up the worldwide heavyweight stage in a growing age of literacy and media expansion, where they remained save for a nanoblip by Ingemar Johansson for a century before Lennox Lewis upset the American monopoly.
5A.Jack Dempsey, 55-6-8, 45 KO. Established the modern spectacle of boxing that is seldom matched and never exceeded. Also held the 1st round Hvywt KO record until Briggs broke it.
5B.Muhammad Ali, 56-5, 37 KO. Perhaps the 2nd best known fighter in the world only exceeded by the modern phenomenon of Manny Pacquiao and his 3 billion Asian population base enhanced with modern communication broadcasting.
5C.Mike Tyson, 50-6, 44 KO. Youngest ever champ who cleaned up the derelict post Ali era to unify the titles and temporarily wipe Don King’s slate clean. He had already held the record for career purse earnings before King and Robin Givens ever sunk their claws into him.
OK, now, and what about the greatest records?
1.Joe Louis, 66-3, 52 KO. Nominally his 26(27)-1 heavyweight title records were exceeded, but, overall never surpassed. The 27th was Lee Savold who claimed both the white heavy title and the BBBC heavyweight title that Joe is seldom credited with after knocking him out.
2.The Klitschko brothers, 109-7, 94 KO and bukos title fights with nary a 10 count between them. Collectively they smashed the Louis record, and though individually Wlad exceeded his total career heavyweight title fights, he fell short of the overall Louis record. They may well hold the heavyweight record of the most winning rounds scored as overmatched opponents seldom penetrated their defense. More importantly they put down Don King for years of 10 counts and transferred heavyweight title fights to Germany-HERESY to be sure!
3.Rocky, 49-0, 43 KO. The most iconic record in all of boxing. My next door neighbor who knows shinola about boxing can recite Rocky’s record like a mantra.
4.Sam Langford, 178-29-39, 126 KO. Mere numerical records FAIL to capture Sam’s greatness, not the least being the sheer number of fights he had against HOF fighters that greatly exceed all such fights by other fighters.
5.Anthony Joshua, 22-0, 21 KO. Going into his 8th title fight as a unified belt holder, no heavyweight as yet has done as much with such a limited number of fights. I always like to include a current great in rankings just to PO dusty mossbacks not understanding that all the greats in the making were moderns in their day as Josh is.
Consolidating the two lists by working backwards using my fighter ratings as their points totals, that’s Josh with 5 points, Sam with 4 points, Rocky with 3 points, The Ks with 2, and Louis with 1.
Then we have Dempsey, Ali, and Tyson tied with 5 each, John L with 4, Fitz at 3, the Ks at 2 and Louis at 1.
Adding up the two lists with fighters not appearing on both lists being assigned a place value of 6 to keep my rankings on keel, That’s Louis 1+1 with 2 pts, the Ks 2+2 with 4, Fitz 3+6 with 9, John L 4+6 with 10, Dempsey, Ali, and Tyson, all 5+6 with 11 each, Josh 5+6 with 11, Sam with 10, Rocky with 7. Divided by 2 to get the final point rankings in numerical order:Louis 1, Ks 2, Rocky 3.5, Fitz 4.5, John L 5, Sam 5, and Dempsey, Ali, Tyson, and Josh 5.5
Translated into standard numerical ranking order:Louis 1, Ks 2, Rocky 3, Fitz 4, John L 5A and Sam 5B, Dempsey, Ali, Tyson, and Joshua 7A, 7B, 7C, 7 D.
So technically that 11 heavyweights if we split the Klitschko brothers, but they were such a dominating force in boxing that they really have to be consolidated as one unit to understand their impact.
Love your words on Nat.
Re: Historians' Lists
And that's two Brits in your top 10/11 so it must be the gold standard:TU:
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Ambling Alp II
- Super Middleweight
- Posts: 15186
- Joined: 04 Nov 2012, 18:31
Re: Historians' Lists
Not more powerful, much slower, less stamina. i.e. they suck.pound per pound wrote: ↑01 Nov 2024, 08:38Ambling Alp II wrote: ↑31 Oct 2024, 19:21 yeah it was odd. Some of the others were almost as bad.
I hate the word "evolved". It implies better. I don't think the sport is better. This is not like technology where you can just build on what came before and should always get better and better.
I think when a sport first starts, there is going to naturally be a lot of improvement for awhile. New techniques and strategies are going to be developed. But then after a while, the progress naturally slows down and eventually stops. Specific weight classes go up and down as far as quality goes.
If a guy was great, he was great Doesn't matter if he is fighting now or 120 years ago.
you do have to take into consideration when the poll was made; obviously you can't rate someone that has not come along yet.
It is interesting to see what people come up with. Noticed that Sonny Liston seemed to get rated higher as the years went on.
You don't have to like or dislike it. Heavyweights around today are in fact much bigger, taller, heavier, longer, and more powerful than the were 100, 75, 50 , of even 35 years ago in general.
They are in fact a different weight class.
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Ambling Alp II
- Super Middleweight
- Posts: 15186
- Joined: 04 Nov 2012, 18:31
Re: Historians' Lists
Of those listed, this one is probably the best. don't agree with all of it, but it's not ridiculous.
Big Book of Boxing Reader Poll, 1978
Joe Louis
Muhammad Ali
Rocky Marciano
Jack Dempsey
Jack Johnson
Gene Tunney
Joe Frazier
Jim Jeffries
Ezzard Charles
Sonny Liston
Big Book of Boxing Reader Poll, 1978
Joe Louis
Muhammad Ali
Rocky Marciano
Jack Dempsey
Jack Johnson
Gene Tunney
Joe Frazier
Jim Jeffries
Ezzard Charles
Sonny Liston
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elmersalsa
- Heavyweight

- Posts: 15709
- Joined: 02 Feb 2003, 03:50
Re: Historians' Lists
Most historians got Muhammad Ali or Joe Louis as #1.
When Ali was fighting in the 70s decade, Louis was the defacto #1.
When Ali was fighting in the 70s decade, Louis was the defacto #1.
Re: Historians' Lists
We are all just looking at it from where we are in history and the ideas that are popular now. These gents were doing the same.
Re: Historians' Lists
They almost always only consider champions. Not that this is wrong. But in the multi-belt era this is tricky.
When I became a big fan in the early 1980s the lineal title was a big deal. Now fans don't seem to care. Or even try to undermine the idea, which always seems odd.
If you don't care for the lineal then Holmes's reign isn't quite the same. And neither is Foreman's second win. They were great achievements still. But they were title holders rather than champions in the old sense.
I do still think there is merit to the lineal.
When I became a big fan in the early 1980s the lineal title was a big deal. Now fans don't seem to care. Or even try to undermine the idea, which always seems odd.
If you don't care for the lineal then Holmes's reign isn't quite the same. And neither is Foreman's second win. They were great achievements still. But they were title holders rather than champions in the old sense.
I do still think there is merit to the lineal.
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elmersalsa
- Heavyweight

- Posts: 15709
- Joined: 02 Feb 2003, 03:50
Re: Historians' Lists
At the time, 46 years ago, this was a great list.Ambling Alp II wrote: ↑10 Nov 2024, 17:41 Of those listed, this one is probably the best. don't agree with all of it, but it's not ridiculous.
Big Book of Boxing Reader Poll, 1978
Joe Louis
Muhammad Ali
Rocky Marciano
Jack Dempsey
Jack Johnson
Gene Tunney
Joe Frazier
Jim Jeffries
Ezzard Charles
Sonny Liston
Re: Historians' Lists
Always the weirdest list ever this one.
Ezzard wrote: ↑31 Oct 2024, 06:56 From Gilbert Odd (1985)
1-Muhammad Ali
2-Joe Louis
3-Jack Johnson
4-Floyd Patterson
5-Jack Dempsey
6-Jim Jeffries
7-Tommy Burns
8-Gene Tunney
9-Jim Corbett
10-Max Schmeling
11-Larry Holmes
12-Jack Sharkey
13-Jim Braddock
14-Ezzard Charles
15-Rocky Marciano
16-Joe Frazier
17-Bob Fitzsimmons
18-John L. Sullivan
19-Jersey Joe Walcott
20-Max Baer
21-Ingemar Johansson
22-Primo Carnera
23-Sonny Liston
24-Jess Willard
25-Marvin Hart