Overall an eminently reasonable list, even though I have my quibbles with details, of course.jezzamundo wrote:Based on a vote from BoxRec members over a month
1. Muhammad Ali
2. Joe Louis
3. Larry Holmes
4. Jack Johnson
5. George Foreman
6. Rocky Marciano
7. Jack Dempsey
8. Joe Frazier
9. Lennox Lewis
10. Sonny Liston
11. Evander Holyfield
12. Mike Tyson
13. James Jeffries
14. Ezzard Charles
15. Gene Tunney
16. Sam Langford
17. Jersey Joe Walcott
18. Floyd Patterson
19. Harry Wills
20. Max Schmeling
The top 15 heavyweight champions of all time!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
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pundit
- Heavyweight

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pundit
- Heavyweight

Becuase Decagon ranks a guy above a legend like Langford who was outclassed by the Klitters. Otherwise there's no reason to mention them in this thread.Terence wrote:These guys who fought for us, all that blood, sweat, tears and jeers and they gets their posthumous (for many) reward when Boxrec posters bounce their names all over a few lists![]()
It is a touching rememberance.
Only kidding, I don't do lists but a lot of them seem very sensible. One question, why is Klitters mentioned in this strand
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pundit
- Heavyweight

Well ahead indeed.Terence wrote:I suppose you include what you can judge. I wonder how a list called: "Best Heavtweights whom you have seen in at least 3-4 full fights." would look.pundit wrote:Becuase Decagon ranks a guy above a legend like Langford who was outclassed by the Klitters. Otherwise there's no reason to mention them in this thread.Terence wrote:These guys who fought for us, all that blood, sweat, tears and jeers and they gets their posthumous (for many) reward when Boxrec posters bounce their names all over a few lists![]()
It is a touching rememberance.
Only kidding, I don't do lists but a lot of them seem very sensible. One question, why is Klitters mentioned in this strand
I would not endorse it, but it makes a point, I think.
I saw footage purported to be Langford, he seemed ahead of his time.
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pundit
- Heavyweight

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pundit
- Heavyweight

Well, the issue is that Langford DID beat the best heavyweights of his era (or at least those he was allowed to fight): Harry Wills (until 1916), Joe Jeanette, Sam Mc Vea; and a very green Langford went 15 rounds with the great Jack Johnson who was at his prime. In contrast, Byrd was twice beaten from pillar to post by Vlad (who, strangely, doesn't make your top 40), and he struggled with old Golota and bum Oquendo. Whenever it mattered, Byrd could NOT make up for lack fo size with technique, while Langford did -- over and over again.Decagon wrote: Basically, I'm hearing that Chris Byrd would've been a great cruiserweight, while a man he was 7 inches taller than and 40 pounds heavier than was one of the greatest heavyweights of all time. I'd pick Michael Spinks at 175 to beat Langford at heavyweight. Bob Foster, too. Lots of light heavyweights could get the better of Langford, and a lot of heavyweights could as well. He ranks as high as he does on my list because he did have a very good run at heavyweight. I rank him #4 pound-for-pound and #7 at light heavyweight. He was a top heavyweight when boxing was in its infancy. While Johnson's size and defense would make him a threat in any era, I don't see Langford doing well in the 1970s, or even the 1980s.
How can you even begin to compare Byrd and Langford???.... absolutely absurd!...Decagon wrote:You're ignoring Langford's losses and concentrating on Byrd's. Try a more balanced approach. Wladimir Klitschko's a one-hit-wonder. Sure, he beat Byrd twice, but he didn't beat anyone else of note, against some very bad losses. Buster Douglas doesn't make my top 40, either, and at least Douglas beat a prime Mike Tyson.
I doubt Byrd would last 3 rounds with Sam...
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BrocktonBlockbuster49
- Heavyweight

- Posts: 4900
- Joined: 29 May 2005, 00:32
walcott was 38 and was HEAVYWEIGHT CHAMPION and a known late bloomerRocky was just 29 when he gained the title from Walcott, 32 when he defended it the last time against Moore; while Moore and Walcott were close to 40 (or over 40, if you believe Moore and not his mum).
moore was 38 coming off a 45-1 run heading into the marciano fight
pundit,
dempsey beat a better version of gibbons than tunney did. in fact tunney avoided a prime gibbons
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pundit
- Heavyweight

Well, Langford had 200 something fights, often with a week between two bouts, so it's no wonder he has a few losses. But on balance he came out on top agasint EVERYONE except (i) the great Jack Johnson when Langford was green and Johnson at his peak, and (ii) the almost-as-great Harry Wills when Langford was half-blind and deteriorating.silkov wrote:How can you even begin to compare Byrd and Langford???.... absolutely absurd!...Decagon wrote:You're ignoring Langford's losses and concentrating on Byrd's. Try a more balanced approach. Wladimir Klitschko's a one-hit-wonder. Sure, he beat Byrd twice, but he didn't beat anyone else of note, against some very bad losses. Buster Douglas doesn't make my top 40, either, and at least Douglas beat a prime Mike Tyson.![]()
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I doubt Byrd would last 3 rounds with Sam...![]()
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In contrast, Byrd came out as a mashed potato against Vlad twice; and overall he has in few convincing wins on his record. Vitali and Holyfield were injured (and Holyfield over-the-hill); the best win is perhaps Tua, but who is Tua? A journeyman with a hard left hook. This is not the material ATGs are made off. As said, Byrd is outside the top 100.
Btw: Byrd-McCline SD 12; Vlad-McCline TKO 10, winning 9 rounds on two scoreacards and 8 on the remaining card. This is NOT to say that Vlad should be in your top 40 (maybe after unifying a few belts, but not at this satge); this is to say Bryd should not be there.
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pundit
- Heavyweight

Can't help but do a John L on you: my friend, you need to learn a bit more about boxing in the 1910s and 1920s before making statements whose naivety is hard to surpass.Decagon wrote:Byrd fought a lot of heavyweights and only came up short against Wlad and Ibeabuchi. Langford had multiple losses to guys like Bill Tate, Gunboat Smith and Fred Fulton. And I don't care what the scorecards were, Byrd CLEARLY beat McCline and Shitily.
(the substantial response was already in my previous post)
Last edited by pundit on 22 Sep 2006, 13:57, edited 1 time in total.
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The Great John L
- Heavyweight

- Posts: 4351
- Joined: 26 Jul 2005, 19:37
This implies that you don't think these guys were any good, or am I missing something? Dec, remember, Tate was as solid as Holmes, so losing to him is understandable. I think Smith and Fulton were pretty good fighters as well.Decagon wrote:Langford had multiple losses to guys like Bill Tate, Gunboat Smith and Fred Fulton.
Hear, hear!... I still havent stopped laughing!...pundit wrote:Can't help but do a John L on you: my friend, you need to learn a bit more about boxing in the 1910s and 1920s before making statements whose naivety is hard to surpass.Decagon wrote:Byrd fought a lot of heavyweights and only came up short against Wlad and Ibeabuchi. Langford had multiple losses to guys like Bill Tate, Gunboat Smith and Fred Fulton. And I don't care what the scorecards were, Byrd CLEARLY beat McCline and Shitily.
(the substantial response was already in my previous post)
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The Great John L
- Heavyweight

- Posts: 4351
- Joined: 26 Jul 2005, 19:37
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pundit
- Heavyweight

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The Great John L
- Heavyweight

- Posts: 4351
- Joined: 26 Jul 2005, 19:37
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pundit
- Heavyweight

It didn't work in the Vitali threads...[/quote]The Great John L wrote:A little bit of patronizing at the right moment can shorten a pointless discussion considerably....pundit wrote:Hey, what do you mean by that!! 8)The Great John L wrote:[quote="punditCan't help but do a John L on you:8)
Well, I guess I've figured you out by now (at least this part).
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The Great John L
- Heavyweight

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pundit
- Heavyweight

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dempseyfire
- Heavyweight

- Posts: 5534
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Tate and Smith were very good technical fighters who didn't stand ram-rod straight. Your grouping together a whole group of fighters together based on a joke of a Corbett exhibition flick and poor film speed/quality.Decagon wrote:I'm always going to underrate fighters using the upright, early stance. Very few make it work. Langford was a part of the start of modern boxing, with the jab, defense and combinations. That's what made him so good.The Great John L wrote:This implies that you don't think these guys were any good, or am I missing something? Dec, remember, Tate was as solid as Holmes, so losing to him is understandable. I think Smith and Fulton were pretty good fighters as well.Decagon wrote:Langford had multiple losses to guys like Bill Tate, Gunboat Smith and Fred Fulton.
Again, #4 of all time, pound-for-pound, #7 of all time at light heavyweight. At heavyweight, I see too many fighters getting the better of him. Put him in with the fighters of the 1970s, and he does no better than Bob Foster did (not that what Foster did was terribly bad, of course).
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Cojimar 1945
- Heavyweight

- Posts: 482
- Joined: 07 Oct 2003, 15:15
Langford ranking
I think the best way to rank boxers is based on accomplishments in their era. Langford was the best heavyweight in the world for a time and ranks above guys who never established themselves as the best.
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BrocktonBlockbuster49
- Heavyweight

- Posts: 4900
- Joined: 29 May 2005, 00:32
langford was far past his prime and basically blind when he lost to fulton and bill tate.Decagon wrote:Byrd fought a lot of heavyweights and only came up short against Wlad and Ibeabuchi. Langford had multiple losses to guys like Bill Tate, Gunboat Smith and Fred Fulton. And I don't care what the scorecards were, Byrd CLEARLY beat McCline and Shitily.
gunboat smith did beat a prime langford though.......however sam avenged the loss in dramatic fashion.
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pundit
- Heavyweight

Re: Langford ranking
I think this is a good criterion although not the only one (otherwise Vitali would be an all-time great, to the chagrin of some). Here are the fighters who were considered # 1 heavywegihts for a period, trying to keep the "vacant" periods at a minimum:Cojimar 1945 wrote:I think the best way to rank boxers is based on accomplishments in their era. Langford was the best heavyweight in the world for a time and ranks above guys who never established themselves as the best.
1889-1892 John L. Sullivan
1892-1894 Peter Jackson (considered better than Corbett till about 94)
1894-1897 James Corbett
1897-1899 Bob Fitzsimmons
1899-1903 Jim Jeffries
1903-1912 Jack Johnson (openly ducked by Jeffries)
1912-1916 Sam Langford (Johnson deteriorated, didin't give Langford another shot)
1916-1923 Harry Wills (Started to beat Langford from 1916 regularly Willard and Dempsey ducked Wills. Deteriorated from 1923)
1923-1926 Jack Dempsey (some would say from 1919 but I say from 1923, as Demsey avoided Wills)
1926-1928 Gene Tunney
1928-1929 VACANT (no obvious candidate around)
1929-1931 Jack Sharkey (took over with Stribling win, still held in higher regard than Schmeling after their first bout)
1931-1933 Max Schmeling (took over with KO over Stribling that convinced most doubter; 1932 loss to Sharkey was widely seen as robbery)
1933-1935 Max Baer (Braddock loss was seen as due to lack of preparation)
1935-1947 Joe Louis (takes over with knockout of Baer. Schmeling loss cost him but he was still considered the best heavyweight)
1947-1948 Jersey Joe Walcott (lost a fight to Louis that most thought he had won)
1948-1949 Joe Louis (the first to come back)
1949-1951 Ezzard Charles
1951-1952 Jersey Joe Walcott
1952-1956 Rocky Marciano
1956-1959 Floyd Patterson (there are doubts - avoided Folley, Machen; but there was no dominant challenger before 1960)
1959-1960 Ingemar Johannson (borderline - many considered Patterson's loss a slip, as it turned out to be)
1960-1964 Sonny Liston (ducked by Patterson, after victory over Folley widely considered the best heavyweight)
1964-1970 Muhammad Ali
1970-1973 Joe Frazier (since the Ellis win)
1973-1974 George Foreman
1974-1978 Muhammad Ali
1978-1985 Larry Holmes
1985-1986 Michael Spinks
1986-1990 Mike Tyson
1990-1992 Evander Holyfield
1992-1993 Riddick Bowe
1993-1994 Evander Holyfield
1994-1995 VACANT (all canddiates lost big fights in 94 - Holyfield, Moorer, Lewis and there is noone obvious to pick)
1995-1996 Mike Tyson
1996-1999 Evander Holyfield
1999-2004 Lennox Lewis (retired in early 2004)
2004-2006 Vitali Klitschko (retired in early 2006)
2006- Vlad Klitschko (since the Byrd win)
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pundit
- Heavyweight

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The Great John L
- Heavyweight

- Posts: 4351
- Joined: 26 Jul 2005, 19:37
Re: Langford ranking
Really?? How so?pundit wrote:...Vitali would be an all-time great, to the chagrin of some).
Hmmm, I noticed that you had used the very logical VACANT before, but obviously you are looking to start another flame war? 8)pundit wrote:2004-2006 Vitali Klitschko (retired in early 2006)
2006- Vlad Klitschko (since the Byrd win)