David Tua.
http://www.boxrec.com/boxer_display.php?boxer_id=4343
Ken Norton.
http://www.boxrec.com/boxer_display.php?boxer_id=000168
Maybe. Eddie Futch stated that a number of times in interviews over the years and who am I to argue with the late Eddie Futch!! But when Norton fought Shavers and Cooney you could also argue Norton was on the slide anyway. (more so with Cooney) and getting battered by Foreman could happen to almost anyone.Senya13 wrote:Norton always froze against big punchers. Prime Tua was a quick starter.
He had quite a short prime wouldnt you say? You can track it down to a few fights it seems. Do you think the Tua that fought Ike would have fared better agains Lewis? You don't see it as a styles issue vs a prime issue? Maybe so. I was leaning toward styles vs prime.Victor*KC wrote:Buzz Tua was not in his prime when he faced Lewis.. and Dec Oleg is a much more durable and tougher fighter than Norton..,.
Yes I do he was more hungry when he fought Ike when he fought Lewis he was overweight and no loger fighting with the same Heart he only fought Lewis to get paid he didn't really try to get on the inside he perferred to stay on the outside and eat jabs all day,,BoxBuzz wrote:He had quite a short prime wouldnt you say? You can track it down to a few fights it seems. Do you think the Tua that fought Ike would have fared better agains Lewis? You don't see it as a styles issue vs a prime issue? Maybe so. I was leaning toward styles vs prime.Victor*KC wrote:Buzz Tua was not in his prime when he faced Lewis.. and Dec Oleg is a much more durable and tougher fighter than Norton..,.
I know I may be in the minority here but I actually enjoy watching Lewis vs Tua. Many here call it a boring fight but I enjoy watching Lewis putting on a fine display on how to fight a short, pressure fighter.Victor*KC wrote:Yes I do he was more hungry when he fought Ike when he fought Lewis he was overweight and no loger fighting with the same Heart he only fought Lewis to get paid he didn't really try to get on the inside he perferred to stay on the outside and eat jabs all day,,BoxBuzz wrote:He had quite a short prime wouldnt you say? You can track it down to a few fights it seems. Do you think the Tua that fought Ike would have fared better agains Lewis? You don't see it as a styles issue vs a prime issue? Maybe so. I was leaning toward styles vs prime.Victor*KC wrote:Buzz Tua was not in his prime when he faced Lewis.. and Dec Oleg is a much more durable and tougher fighter than Norton..,.
Tua had a very good chin anyone who Can take Lewis and Ike' shots at will can definately take a punch..BoxBuzz wrote:Tua is always going to have problems with the greats due to his weak defense. I have no quarrel with the way the sim came out here. Though perhaps the SIM underestimates his chin a bit. I think David may have just short of the "freeze power" that was proven to do the trick with Norton.
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Well part of the reason I think is the fight was very one sided..KOJOE90 wrote:I know I may be in the minority here but I actually enjoy watching Lewis vs Tua. Many here call it a boring fight but I enjoy watching Lewis putting on a fine display on how to fight a short, pressure fighter.Victor*KC wrote:Yes I do he was more hungry when he fought Ike when he fought Lewis he was overweight and no loger fighting with the same Heart he only fought Lewis to get paid he didn't really try to get on the inside he perferred to stay on the outside and eat jabs all day,,BoxBuzz wrote: He had quite a short prime wouldnt you say? You can track it down to a few fights it seems. Do you think the Tua that fought Ike would have fared better agains Lewis? You don't see it as a styles issue vs a prime issue? Maybe so. I was leaning toward styles vs prime.
I can't accept that Norton would perform about the way John Ruiz did if faced with the TuaMan. Just does not compute. Although Norton and Ruiz would now be an interesting combination to run a sim on.Minotauro wrote:Tua would win early his style is terrible for Norton. Look at Foreman, Shavers and Cooney. Tua would just use the same strategy.
I think it's just because people are thinking that this is apples and apples because they were both highly rated at some point. But the difference in talent between the two eras is pretty huge. I mean would Tua be a blip on the radar screen in that era? I'd say probably yes but a pretty small blip..dempseyfire wrote:Tua is so over-rated in fantasy fights it is ridiculous.
His work-rate sucked, even in his 'prime'. His defense was awful . . he was completely one dimensional.
Norton wins this with the jab alone. Norton would have little trouble avoiding the much shorter Tua's hooks. Norton was far superior to Fres Oquendo, Daneel Nicholson, and John Ruiz.
Look at Maskaev . . he got creamed by Whitaker and friggin' Corey Sanders.
But he had little trouble outboxing Tua in his 12TH PROFESSIONAL FIGHT until he got caught late.
But Norton, who at his best only got knocked out by a prime George Foreman, loses to David Tua in the 1st?
Some of this deductive reasoning is bogus.
And Eddie Futch also predicted his protoge Duane Bobick, a good puncher, would defeat Norton as Norton "froze" against punchers.
See how that one turned out. Futch was great but it doesn't mean he was always right. Norton after the fight stated "I guess Eddie doesn't know me as well as he thought he did"
I disagree, I think way too many people deify the 70's as if no other era could possibly touch it, there's too much nostalgia for too many people there. The 90's were one of HW boxing's best eras and although not quite on the level as the 70's they were pretty damn close given all the competition there was. I like to be more realistic about the 70's and I think Tua would've destroyed Norton not quite as quickly as Ruiz, but within the first 6 nontheless. Norton outboxes Tua early but eventually gets caught with combos and put out, Tyson would likely do it in similar but quicker fashion since he was more varied in ability.BoxBuzz wrote:I think it's just because people are thinking that this is apples and apples because they were both highly rated at some point. But the difference in talent between the two eras is pretty huge. I mean would Tua be a blip on the radar screen in that era? I'd say probably yes but a pretty small blip..dempseyfire wrote:Tua is so over-rated in fantasy fights it is ridiculous.
His work-rate sucked, even in his 'prime'. His defense was awful . . he was completely one dimensional.
Norton wins this with the jab alone. Norton would have little trouble avoiding the much shorter Tua's hooks. Norton was far superior to Fres Oquendo, Daneel Nicholson, and John Ruiz.
Look at Maskaev . . he got creamed by Whitaker and friggin' Corey Sanders.
But he had little trouble outboxing Tua in his 12TH PROFESSIONAL FIGHT until he got caught late.
But Norton, who at his best only got knocked out by a prime George Foreman, loses to David Tua in the 1st?
Some of this deductive reasoning is bogus.
And Eddie Futch also predicted his protoge Duane Bobick, a good puncher, would defeat Norton as Norton "froze" against punchers.
See how that one turned out. Futch was great but it doesn't mean he was always right. Norton after the fight stated "I guess Eddie doesn't know me as well as he thought he did"
After some thought...he might be a blimp on the radar screen....like maybe Jumbo Cummings.
Once again I understand what your saying because he would go into a sort of Ken Norton style at times....and he would do the other things you mention....however the word I should have used was "effective" blocking" he would go through the motions but would still be hit. He had the idea but in my eyes he just didn't have it down effectively. ONce again maybe because the guy was pretty much impervious to being bothered by the incoming.Senya13 wrote:On the contrary, when he's in close you see him cover the head with one hand, and the body with another, moving his head and upper body a lot (although he does get hit still, but he slips, blocks or rolls with a lot of punches too) between throwing short hooks to the body and head. More or less prime Tua that is, I'm speaking about.