Yes I can....Me.Can you name one person of note who shares your views about Hagler ?
And me being me, I am the only one who counts when it comes to my opinion.
Face it your hero wasn't all he was cracked up to be.
dr_devious wrote:Have you ever seen any of Hagler's fights ringlicker?
I was just re-watching some video of the Seoul 1988 olympic boxing coverage over the weekend, and the NBC announcers mention on numerous occasions that RJJ's dad was a pro and fought Hagler.Terence wrote:I heard a rumour that this was a different Roy Jones. Not the father of the Roy we know. Any truth in that?
kick asner wrote:I think with ringsider his main issue when it comes to Hagler is his style. You seem to lean more tawoards the flashier type of fighter which that in itself their is nothing wrong with. But now if you say a guy isn't any good just because he fights with a style that you find to be not to your liking then I think you have to reassess and look at it from the viewpoint that what makes boxing interesting is it's diversity and the different tools and aproaches fighters use, and how a fighter can be effective inspite of not being flashy. It shouldn't make that much difference how a guy looks in the ring as long as he is knocking people out. Lots of fighters have used an unothadox style with great effect. Use another sport just as an example. Magic Johnson used to shoot the ball with one hand. Now that goes against everything that is fundelmentally sound, yet he is one of the top five all time great basketball players.
Briscoe was completely washed up when he fought Hagler.dr_devious wrote:I agree that most of Hagler's career defining defences were against fighters moving out of the lower weights, and the other genuine 160 lbers in the 80s werent great. But Hagler had a very tough route to the top in the mid-late 70s, beating some very notable middleweights such as Briscoe, Hart, Seales, Finnegan etc.
Horsesh*t.dr_devious wrote:Briscoe wasnt at his peak but he wasnt shot either - he gave Hagler a good fight
Not where the other hand is not even touching the ball as the way Magic shot the ball. But that was just an example. The main point was athletes use a variety of techniques to acheive an outcome. Lee travino didn't have the perfect golf swing, but it won him tournaments. Babe Ruth had a unique batting style and swing but he hit home runs with it. Juan Maricial had an unorthadox pitching motion but he is in the hall of fame.granberry wrote:kick asner wrote:I think with ringsider his main issue when it comes to Hagler is his style. You seem to lean more tawoards the flashier type of fighter which that in itself their is nothing wrong with. But now if you say a guy isn't any good just because he fights with a style that you find to be not to your liking then I think you have to reassess and look at it from the viewpoint that what makes boxing interesting is it's diversity and the different tools and aproaches fighters use, and how a fighter can be effective inspite of not being flashy. It shouldn't make that much difference how a guy looks in the ring as long as he is knocking people out. Lots of fighters have used an unothadox style with great effect. Use another sport just as an example. Magic Johnson used to shoot the ball with one hand. Now that goes against everything that is fundelmentally sound, yet he is one of the top five all time great basketball players.
Good grief, asner.
All the great jump shot shooters shot with one hand.
Jerry West would be interested in your comment.
So would Dr. J.
I'm sure you know as much about boxing as you do about basketball.
Good grief asner.kick asner wrote: Babe Ruth had a unique batting style and swing but he hit home runs with it. .
My memory was a little fuzzy on Briscoe’s career in the late 70’s so I checked and discovered that after losing to Vinales in April ’72 Briscoe lost to Monzon, Griffith, Valdez and Antuofermo in the 6+ years before Hagler beat him in ’78.granberry wrote:Horsesh*t.dr_devious wrote:Briscoe wasnt at his peak but he wasnt shot either - he gave Hagler a good fight
Briscoe was losing to nobodies by that time.
Your arguing for the sake of it here. We can debate different styles of athletes all day long but I only intended them as examples to demonstrate that some styles seem unorthadox but yet are effective.granberry wrote:Good grief asner.kick asner wrote: Babe Ruth had a unique batting style and swing but he hit home runs with it. .
Babe Ruth said he saw Shoeless Joe Jackson hit and adopted Jackson's batting style. "That was good enough for me," Ruth said.
Ruth drew back his back hip and turned his entire bone structure and spine back, so that he could come forward the opposite way with full force.
Exactly the way Dempsey punched.
You think there is something odd about Babe Ruth and Shoeless Joe Jackson's batting stance?
You picked a loser there.
I suppose you are going to tell me Dr. J always shot the ball with two hands.
He often shot it with a flick of the fingers of one hand.
I will help your fuzzy memory.The Great John L wrote:My memory was a little fuzzy on Briscoe’s career in the late 70’s so I checked and discovered that after losing to Vinales in April ’72 Briscoe lost to Monzon, Griffith, Valdez and Antuofermo in the 6+ years before Hagler beat him in ’78.granberry wrote:Horsesh*t.dr_devious wrote:Briscoe wasnt at his peak but he wasnt shot either - he gave Hagler a good fight
Briscoe was losing to nobodies by that time.
If you consider those guys “nobodies”, who do you consider quality opposition?
Sorry, but those fights were after the Hagler fight. I agree that Briscoe was well past it, but your original statement was horses**t. Briscoe was not "losing to nobodies by that time". He may have been heading down into the abyss, but he wasn't quite at that point yet. Certainly not the same fighter that fought Monzon, but he had something left.granberry wrote:I will help your fuzzy memory.
Briscoe at his best fought Monzon in 1972.
It was 1978 when old Briscoe, who had been fighting since 1962, fought Hagler.
In his very next fight after Hagler, Briscoe lost to worldbeater David Love.
In his next fight, which I saw, Briscoe was very old and tired as he fought inexperienced Nick Ortiz at the DC Arena.
Hagler fought a washed up, old Briscoe.
Two fights prior to Hagler, Briscoe had beaten fringe contender Tony Chiaverini and it had only been about 10 months since he lost a title fight to Valdev. While the Valdez fight wasn't particularly close, Valdez wasn't able to blow Briscoe out either. And I recall that Chiaverini was actually a pretty good fighter. Not a HOF fighter, but a solid journeyman/fringe contender.dr_devious wrote:Yeah, Briscoe had lost to those "nobodies" Rodrigo Valdez and Vito Antuofermo before he fought Hagler.
Yes I think we all agree that Briscoe wasn’t as good as he was 5 years earlier. However, he was still dangerous, as I think one of your earlier posts mentioned.granberry wrote:At the time Briscoe fought Hagler, he could no longer fight effectively at long range, only in close.
Yes, a peak Briscoe would have stopped Love. What I was objecting to was your rather simplistic discounting of Love because he had 12 loses. This sounds like an argument that a young inexperienced boxing fan would use, not someone who knows the sport well. Love was a pretty good fighter, and as I recall he beat some other pretty good fighters and flirted with a top 15 ranking a few times during his career. No world beater, but certainly he was also not a “nobody”.granberry wrote:The good Briscoe would never have lost to David Love.
It’s a little easy to pick one fight from someone’s career in order to disparage them. This is a pretty disappointing argument from someone who seems to have good boxing knowledge. Chiavirini beat some good fighters during his career and was a world ranked contender for a while when that actually meant something. Losing to Benitez is certainly nothing to be ashamed of, and does little to detract from a pretty good ring career.granberry wrote:Chiaveroni was a second rater who was stopped by Wilfred Benitez, a welterweight who was never a big puncher.
Neither Chiavrini nor Love was a championship fighter, which Briscoe was for over a decade. Love, of course added up to more than Chiavrini.The Great John L wrote:Yes I think we all agree that Briscoe wasn’t as good as he was 5 years earlier. However, he was still dangerous, as I think one of your earlier posts mentioned.granberry wrote:At the time Briscoe fought Hagler, he could no longer fight effectively at long range, only in close.
Yes, a peak Briscoe would have stopped Love. What I was objecting to was your rather simplistic discounting of Love because he had 12 loses. This sounds like an argument that a young inexperienced boxing fan would use, not someone who knows the sport well. Love was a pretty good fighter, and as I recall he beat some other pretty good fighters and flirted with a top 15 ranking a few times during his career. No world beater, but certainly he was also not a “nobody”.granberry wrote:The good Briscoe would never have lost to David Love.
It’s a little easy to pick one fight from someone’s career in order to disparage them. This is a pretty disappointing argument from someone who seems to have good boxing knowledge. Chiavirini beat some good fighters during his career and was a world ranked contender for a while when that actually meant something. Losing to Benitez is certainly nothing to be ashamed of, and does little to detract from a pretty good ring career.granberry wrote:Chiaveroni was a second rater who was stopped by Wilfred Benitez, a welterweight who was never a big puncher.
Care to insult some other fighters from the past? In fact, Briscoe lost to club fighter Vinales just 2 fights prior to his fight with Monzon. Does that mean he was a second rater also?