He didn't in the second fight. He threw only jabs and then went down on a half assed punch two minutes into the fight. In the first fight he was throwing and landing power shots, getting hit with punches that were opening up cuts and busting up his face, and he didn't stop until he dislocated his shoulder. Quite a stark difference in Liston's willingness to make the fight look good between fight number one and fight number two. Again, to me the second fight shows why the first fight was not a fix... Liston was not a bright guy, not a great actor, and he didn't know how to make a fix look good.Goodnight, Irene wrote: If, hypothetically, Liston threw it, he has to make it look at least moderately respectable, does he not?
To me it just seems that we're taking the controversy over the second fight, which is legitimate, and falsely using that to cast doubts on the first fight. The second fight, Liston may or may not have been paid off. Maybe he was afraid of snipers so he went down early to get out of the ring ASAP. But the first time I think he felt he was in there with a nobody and underestimated an opponent who he should not have underestimated, and he got beat in a competitive fight.
Lets just use Jones as an example. Jones lost a decision to Zora Folley. A few months later he knocks Folley out. Same two fighters, only the difference of a few months... but a different outcome. What happened? I would say that's just how boxing is. One night you're on, the next night you're not.Goodnight, Irene wrote:He surely did take Liston more seriously. However, we're still talking about the same inexperienced kid in the ring. He performs better against a better opponent, absolutely, but it's still the same guy at the end of the day.
Larry Merchant had a nice quote, that "If you don't take an opponent seriously you make him a serious opponent." Ali was clearly a much better fighter than Jones, but he didn't take Jones seriously, thought it would be a fourth round knock out, and he ended up winning only by a close decision. Liston, who had fought three rounds in three years, didn't train too hard for this fight, was a bit overweight, thought he would stop Clay in one round... while Clay, on the other hand, was 150% more serious for Liston than he was for Jones and Cooper (who were only set up fights for his real goal of getting Liston), and Clay was also developing as a fighter... and he scored the upset. A year later as Ali he put on a beautiful show against Patterson. In that fight he looked like Ali, he had all the tools we would attribute to a prime Ali. And he was only 23 in that fight. He was a young fighter who was getting better fight by fight... I don't see why that's hard too understand.
And there are so many upsets in boxing history... to act like there are no surprises in boxing is foolish.
I'll say it again, but Ali's career is very badly over analyzed.
