The greatest journeyman fighter of all-time???
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elmersalsa
- Heavyweight

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The greatest journeyman fighter of all-time???
Who is the greatest journeyman fighter of all-time?
He got to have the following characteristics:
1. Never fought for a world title
2. Fought and beat the very best fighters of his time
3. Was used as a ladder for upcoming prospects and future champions
Anything else could be add on?
He got to have the following characteristics:
1. Never fought for a world title
2. Fought and beat the very best fighters of his time
3. Was used as a ladder for upcoming prospects and future champions
Anything else could be add on?
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elmersalsa
- Heavyweight

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- Joined: 02 Feb 2003, 03:50
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dagosd2000
- Heavyweight

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overhand_right
- Heavyweight

I guess Jesse Ferguson doesn't qualify as he fought Bowe for thye undisputed title.
I don't think you can 'beat the best of your time' and be a journeyman at the same time, i dont think the 2 go together.
Garing Lane and Frankie Swindell, as well as Ross Puritty bumped off a long list of pretenders and were capable of giving legit contenders a real hard night, when it suited them.
Tricky...
I don't think you can 'beat the best of your time' and be a journeyman at the same time, i dont think the 2 go together.
Garing Lane and Frankie Swindell, as well as Ross Puritty bumped off a long list of pretenders and were capable of giving legit contenders a real hard night, when it suited them.
Tricky...
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BigJuicyHog
- Heavyweight

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I always like Ross Purrity and Frankie Swindell as journeymen. You knew they were usually gonna give someone a very tough fight, if not win. Purrity has a very good chin and had some good power to go along with it. Swindell was a big fat body who somehow threw a bunch of punches. To me, they were the ultimate gatekeepers of the HW division. To get to the real contenders you had to beat them first.
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elmersalsa
- Heavyweight

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dagosd2000
- Heavyweight

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We've got to recent posts:Greatest Journeyman and Greatest Fighter Who Never Became Champ. You could make case for some fighters falling into both categories. We could go on forever trying to conclude if Azteca was in one or the other like many others. Let's say Azteca was a great journeyman.Decagon wrote:He wasn't a journeyman; he was a solid fighter, and one of the most popular fighters in Mexico. He held the knockout record for Latin-Americans at 82 for 40 years, until Julio Cesar Chavez unseated him. He had wins over Izzy Jannazzo, the Cocoa Kid, Young Peter Jackson, Cerefino Garcia and Joe Glick. He's arguably one of the 60 or 70 greatest welterweights of all time.dagosd2000 wrote:Here's one,Kid Azteca
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dagosd2000
- Heavyweight

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scartissue
- Heavyweight

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elmersalsa
- Heavyweight

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Controversial
- Heavyweight

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Re: The greatest journeyman fighter of all-time???
How about heavyweight Everett 'Bigfoot' Martin. He had a couple of decent wins, Bert Cooper and Witherspoon and fought just about every top ranked fighter about, Qawi, Foreman, Mason, Damiani, Holmes, Klitscko, Bowe, Hide, Moorer, Tucker, Tubbs, Smith etc...etc...elmersalsa wrote:Who is the greatest journeyman fighter of all-time?
He got to have the following characteristics:
1. Never fought for a world title
2. Fought and beat the very best fighters of his time
3. Was used as a ladder for upcoming prospects and future champions
Anything else could be add on?
He mostly went the distance with them and was hardly ever knocked down.
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elmersalsa
- Heavyweight

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- Joined: 02 Feb 2003, 03:50
Re: The greatest journeyman fighter of all-time???
That may be a good pickControversial wrote:How about heavyweight Everett 'Bigfoot' Martin. He had a couple of decent wins, Bert Cooper and Witherspoon and fought just about every top ranked fighter about, Qawi, Foreman, Mason, Damiani, Holmes, Klitscko, Bowe, Hide, Moorer, Tucker, Tubbs, Smith etc...etc...elmersalsa wrote:Who is the greatest journeyman fighter of all-time?
He got to have the following characteristics:
1. Never fought for a world title
2. Fought and beat the very best fighters of his time
3. Was used as a ladder for upcoming prospects and future champions
Anything else could be add on?
He mostly went the distance with them and was hardly ever knocked down.
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HomicideHenry
- Heavyweight

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Iono if this particular fighter I am going to name should be in here, or more up for the 'greatest no-name fighter of all time'...
"The Milwaukee Caveman" Bob Moha
He was the first 175 pound champion (when it was first made it was known as 'comission weight'), but it wouldn't be until Jack Dillion became champion that the title became more legit and respected among the sport.
In sparring he knocked out Ad Wolgadst, and put a hurting on everyone from welterweight to heavyweight. He was so good, in fact, that after working out with Jack Johnson, he was asked by Johnson if the Heavyweight champ could manage him.
He was known as the 'White Walcott', and at being no more than 5'4" he toppled many of the leading contenders, and was even a claimer to the Middleweight championship.
The only knock you could have against the Caveman was that he would take time off at the worst times. He would be at the peak of success, when people wanted him the most, and he would disappear. That or he wouldn't train always the best, but still even at 240 pounds, he could give a heavyweight hell.
"The Milwaukee Caveman" Bob Moha
He was the first 175 pound champion (when it was first made it was known as 'comission weight'), but it wouldn't be until Jack Dillion became champion that the title became more legit and respected among the sport.
In sparring he knocked out Ad Wolgadst, and put a hurting on everyone from welterweight to heavyweight. He was so good, in fact, that after working out with Jack Johnson, he was asked by Johnson if the Heavyweight champ could manage him.
He was known as the 'White Walcott', and at being no more than 5'4" he toppled many of the leading contenders, and was even a claimer to the Middleweight championship.
The only knock you could have against the Caveman was that he would take time off at the worst times. He would be at the peak of success, when people wanted him the most, and he would disappear. That or he wouldn't train always the best, but still even at 240 pounds, he could give a heavyweight hell.