He was not a great fighter. He had two major flaws: a glass jaw and poor stamina.gilgamesh wrote: ↑19 May 2026, 22:27It happened to Wladimir. Wladimir is a great Champion.Ambling Alp II wrote: ↑19 May 2026, 22:21 Better career overall?Maybe in some stupid points system filled with meaningless title defenses against what passed for as contenders, but not in real life. If Klitschko was in Tyson's era, he would have been buried with Witherspoon, Thomas etc.
3 stoppages by losses by unranked opponents during his prime. Never happened to a great heavyweight champion.
Wladimir could've beaten most of Tyson's competition and vice versa. If you think Mike is better than Wlad that's perfectly reasonable, but they're definitely in the same league, and to me Wladimir ranks higher. Wladimir was the more consistent of the 2 over a longer period of time. Tyson was the more spectacular for a brief 3 to 4 year period.
For every other big name fighter the losses are inconsequential to you. For Wladimir, the losses are all there is.
Why Wladimir being credited as a great fighter is so offensive an idea to you, I don't know, but to pretend he wasn't a Great Champion is just ludicrous.
Klitschko did not get better after the Brewster loss. His best performances were actually before that.
His competition was a joke which was a huge factor why he didn't lose for those years.
You should be able to come with a decent list of great heavyweights who got stopped by three non-contenders during their prime. You can't. That speaks volumes.
Beat Chris Byrd. Defended the title for a lot time against stiffs. Got stopped by Purritty, Brewster, and Sanders. Not one of the greats. Nowhere near Mike Tyson. Tyson was unquestionably great from 1986 to the Douglas fight in 1990. Very good after that for several other years.