Fighters Who Carried Their Punch When Moving Up In Weight
Fighters Who Carried Their Punch When Moving Up In Weight
I was taking a break from thinking about scantily clad women when driving home from work the other day and started thinking about how few fighters I could think of who carried their punch when moving up the divisions. Ray Robinson, Hearns and Arguello arguably did but many others haven't, such as Duran and Bob Foster.
Whre better to ask for some examples of people who did carry their punch than here, any thoughts?
Whre better to ask for some examples of people who did carry their punch than here, any thoughts?
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HomicideHenry
- Heavyweight

- Posts: 18722
- Joined: 08 Sep 2005, 00:43
Duran didn't carry his Lightweight punch but he was far from feather fisted. Especially at Welterweight. He came close to stopping Leonard a few times and Leonards guts are what stopped it from happening.
Dropped the iron chinned Palamino.
Then you're talking about dropping Barkley & pazienza near 40 and over 40lbs from where he started.
Dropped the iron chinned Palamino.
Then you're talking about dropping Barkley & pazienza near 40 and over 40lbs from where he started.
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TheRiverCityHippy
- Middleweight
- Posts: 8466
- Joined: 08 Mar 2014, 15:39
Re: Fighters Who Carried Their Punch When Moving Up In Weigh
you named the most obvious one to me at least, i lost count the amount of times tommy hearns put a tough durable light heavy like dennis andries on the deck.Flump wrote:I was taking a break from thinking about scantily clad women when driving home from work the other day and started thinking about how few fighters I could think of who carried their punch when moving up the divisions. Ray Robinson, Hearns and Arguello arguably did but many others haven't, such as Duran and Bob Foster.
Whre better to ask for some examples of people who did carry their punch than here, any thoughts?
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elmersalsa
- Heavyweight

- Posts: 15678
- Joined: 02 Feb 2003, 03:50
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Alabama_Man
- Heavyweight

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Diamond WEAPON
- Heavyweight

- Posts: 1729
- Joined: 19 Nov 2006, 01:32
Certainly at 168, his knockout of Prince Charles Williams was a classic but he only managed to stop Holyfield at heavyweight, the rest lasted the distance though he hit hard enough to keep them from walking through him.Diamond WEAPON wrote:James Toney, he was a destroyer from 160-168, brutally demolished and single-handedly washed up Vassily Jirov himself then went on to beat the hell out of Holyfield and snap the elastic out of the heads of guys like Ruiz, Rahman, and Peter despite his advanced age and worsened shape.
I'm really disappointed with Toney though, classic skills, 70+ fights on his resume, proper old school fighter, then he gets done for steriods, twice. Shame, this will lose him respect in the years ahead even in a sport as seemingly unconcerned with this sort of thing as boxing.
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Alabama_Man
- Heavyweight

I agree. James Toney is the closest you will get to a perfect fighter on his best days. It's too bad he lost his battle against Burger King, he could've been a lot more.Flump wrote:
I'm really disappointed with Toney though, classic skills, 70+ fights on his resume, proper old school fighter, then he gets done for steriods, twice. Shame, this will lose him respect in the years ahead even in a sport as seemingly unconcerned with this sort of thing as boxing.