Goodnight, Irene wrote:DempseyFire...
I know I've seen footage of Hart in the ring against an opponent in a doco with a French narrator (Maybe Kings Of The Ring?) but we'll save Dempsey-Johnson for another time, at any rate.
As for Dempsey-Holyfield, I don't see why my prediction is so far-fetched. I'm not making a case for Henry Akinwande or Fres Oquendo or someone of that class. We're talking about a prime Evander Holyfield. Dempsey was a competent dirty fighter (just a plain bad ass, in fact) but I don't see him possessing the same subtlety with fouls Holyfield makes work for him. Maybe Dempsey can stop him, but I don't see Holyfield getting counted out. I have a hard time seeing Dempsey getting KO'd as well. But I think Holyfield can outpoint him, slip between boxing & trench-fighting, & absorb Dempsey's best shots along the way (Maybe not without incident, but absorb them nonetheless). Just curious --- how big an upset would you consider it if, hypothetically, Holyfield found a way to win?
Decagon...
No, I wasn't, "basically just passing on the question." But your presumptuous post is much welcomed. David Tua's performance was laughable against Lennox Lewis. In the old days, he would have had his purse withheld, & rightly so. Look at him against Ike Ibeabuchi, it's like two different people. No surprise after fighting Lewis he faded into oblivion. Lewis enjoyed all manner of physical advantages over Ray Mercer as well, yet suffered through life-&-death to eek out a Majority Decision. His first performance against a shot Holyfield was as impressive as his effort in the rematch was contemptible. A pair of nights very good & equally bad for Lewis.
As to who Dempsey beat, DempseyFire beat me to it, & I wouldn't disagree with who he identified. Michael Grant. Priceless.
I personally would consider it a fairly big upset. I just don't see Holyfield as possessing the tools to beat a fighter like Dempsey. Very good, but not great, boxing ability. Fair, but not outstanding, punching power. Fairly good, but not great, stamina (althought it was usually better than that of the overweight guys he fought at HW). Holyfield's big meal ticket was his ability combined with his heart and durability, and in Dempsey's time that's not a special attribute . . .from their fights one can see Brennan, Carpantier (look at the Tunney fight

), Williard etc. were as tough and durable as you could get. You had to be to rise to the top in that era . . there were no coddled 22-0 prospects getting title shots.
I think you're mistaken regarding Dempsey's ability and dirtiness on the inside . . .Holyfield had nothing on Dempsey in regards to the rough stuff. Out of the fighters I picked Dempsey to beat, I can more easily see Foreman and Holmes beating the Manassa Mauler than Holyfield. But hey in HW boxing strange things can happen!
