Jake Lamotta vs Bernard Hopkins 160LB
Jake Lamotta vs Bernard Hopkins 160LB
Too bad there is not a way to keep track of dream fights,and when posts pop up that have already been,reroute them to their place.Can Hopkins keep the hard pressuring slugger off of him?I think Lamotta would win a unanimous decision.Hopkins would hang tough,but couldn't win this.
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wolverine1
- Heavyweight

- Posts: 102
- Joined: 11 Nov 2005, 05:30
hopkins/La motta
Hopkins likes his opponents to come to him, and Jake would have obliged in a devastating fashion for Hopkins.
Jake's body shots would have broken Hopkins down in a matter of 6 rounds or less, then KO'ing him brutally.
Hopkins is a tricky boxer who knows all the moves, but his style would be his downfall against a punisher like La Motta.
Jake's body shots would have broken Hopkins down in a matter of 6 rounds or less, then KO'ing him brutally.
Hopkins is a tricky boxer who knows all the moves, but his style would be his downfall against a punisher like La Motta.
I can picture Hopkins outboxing LaMotta, and I can picture LaMotta pounding out a hard fought decision. However, I couldnt imagine either knocking the other out.Hopkins likes his opponents to come to him, and Jake would have obliged in a devastating fashion for Hopkins.
Jake's body shots would have broken Hopkins down in a matter of 6 rounds or less, then KO'ing him brutally.
I was being ironic dec, maybe i should have been clearer.Decagon wrote:Dauthuille was a strong fighter who'd never been knocked out. LaMotta wasn't known as a puncher, and he'd previously lost to Dauthuille.theone wrote:I imagine alot people did against Dauthuille; they just didnt expect it so dramatically.No one imagined LaMotta getting KO/TKO victories over Cerdan and Dauthuille, either.That's simply not how Hopkins fought, even in his prime. He'd be totally out of his element if he tried to fight that way.m1kee50 wrote:If LaMotta can get inside effectively, KO by the 10th. B-HOP may have been able to stick and move for a UD, but I reckon the raging bull wins this one.LaMotta is a thug, a fight-thrower, a wifebeater and a child molestor. Hopkins is a role model to all ex-cons and an ambassador to the sport of boxing. I'd be behind Hopkins all day longm1kee50 wrote:best question is - who would we prefer to win?
LaMotta all day long eh?
lol, maybe I have been swayed by the media (and i dont mean raging bull, i mean every time B-hop gets in front of a camera or tape recorder.)
i meant that hopkins would not be able to trade with LaMotta, and would be 'forced' to fight at a longer range and with greater mobility. Indeed, if what you say is true then i revise my opinion - LaMotta wins every which way.
LaMotta was not a KO artist - 30 from 83, but he was a hard puncher, known at the time as one by his opponents (no better judge).
Hopkins does have 32 from 47, ill give you that, and while the number is impressive, the calibre of Hopkins opponents has in the majority of cases to be questioned.
Just my opinion......
I'll Take Hopkin's by SD I can see Jake wearing him down but B-Hop is a very intelligent fighter and can fight on the inside as counterpunch I don't think Lamotta would outwork B-Hop who always comes in at excellent condition even at his age right now.. If I think a WW benitez could trouble Lamotta a natural 160 fighter like B-Hop can do it B-Hop by Close UD/SD
Your right but both would try to outbox Lamotta Benitez would have success but would lose because he is not strong enough or hit's hard enough to be able to keep Lamotta B-Hop on the other Hand is much bigger and I don't see both trying to engage Lamotta in a war not to mention B-Hop has better inside skill's than Benitez would and that would prove the difference
Oh Yeah!! Why don't you tell us who would win instead of playing the role of GOD Saying What's wrong and rightDecagon wrote:That's even sillier. You simply can't compare the two, defensively. Benitez would make LaMotta chase him, while Hopkins would stand right in front of him and make him miss. There's more than one type of defensive fighter.
BTW I never compared their defense in my previous post just pointing some things out..
watch some tapes of him and you'll get it. watch the fight where Robinson stopped him even and you'll see how much he landed on Robinson throughout the fight. LaMotta wasn't Rocky Balboa, he could box very well, there's a misperception around that he was just a punchbag with a hard chin and good stamina, I don't know where it comes from, maybe Raging Bull
I watched the tapes. Smaller Robinson outboxing him silly the time Ray wasn't standing on the ropes without defending himself (usual problem for middleweight Ray). Eugene Hairston, outboxing him all the way, only to be robbed of decision. Smaller Dauthuille outboxing him silly. And so on, and so on.
Hopkins may choose to fight on backfoot, he had no problem with that. Or he could slug it out, easily, tough and dirty, he had no problem with that. His chin and durability are at least as good as LaMotta's, I'd say they are even better than LaMotta's. He's a harder puncher, much more skillful (in different league), much better defense and offense, fighting inside or outside. He'll box LaMotta's ears off, possibly wearing him down enough to stop him late in the fight.
Hopkins may choose to fight on backfoot, he had no problem with that. Or he could slug it out, easily, tough and dirty, he had no problem with that. His chin and durability are at least as good as LaMotta's, I'd say they are even better than LaMotta's. He's a harder puncher, much more skillful (in different league), much better defense and offense, fighting inside or outside. He'll box LaMotta's ears off, possibly wearing him down enough to stop him late in the fight.
Those were the years when he won the middleweight title and defended it twice. Against Hairston he even weighed as a light heavyweight, didn't help him. You've seen any footage of LaMotta prior to Cerdan? And he was only 29 or 30 years old by this point, with less than 100 fights under his belt, an average of 10 fights per year, or less than 1 fight per month.
Hopkins also struggled making 160lb, he said in his yesterday interview that even 168lb wouldn't have been quite comfortable weight for him last 10 something years.
Hopkins also struggled making 160lb, he said in his yesterday interview that even 168lb wouldn't have been quite comfortable weight for him last 10 something years.
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dr_devious
- Heavyweight

- Posts: 5348
- Joined: 29 Dec 2005, 09:19
You don't have to be old to know about boxing I am sure Dec has wasted money to get fights and seeing fighters from different Era'sRed Medicine wrote:Wow, now we're getting elitist about forum sections!
Don't worry, I have no intentions of staying in this forum. It's a bit too delusional for my taste. But have fun spinning your ridiculous and unprovable arguments about who would beat who. Wait, who am I kidding? The fighter who was born the earliest always wins, because it turns out that he's close to your age. You old geyser.