Best British Heavyweight of all time
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Mimmy
- Heavyweight

Best British Heavyweight of all time
was it Woodcock, Bruno, Horice Notice, Cooper?? who do you think was the best Heavyweight England ever produced.
( lets go without Lennox lewis as he was only born here and lets face it fought in the olympics as a Canadian)
( lets go without Lennox lewis as he was only born here and lets face it fought in the olympics as a Canadian)
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Goodnight, Irene
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Goodnight, Irene
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yiddo14
- Heavyweight

Re: Best British Heavyweight of all time
It's Bugner.mimmy123 wrote:was it Woodcock, Bruno, Horice Notice, Cooper?? who do you think was the best Heavyweight England ever produced.
( lets go without Lennox lewis as he was only born here and lets face it fought in the olympics as a Canadian)
Unless of course you are counting him as Hungarian...
The best ever British heavyweight is the man who used to carry the Union Jack into the ring, and was proud to represent Britain as World Champion...Lennox Lewis
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elmersalsa
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oliverfennell
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Mimmy
- Heavyweight

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Collins2000
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HomicideHenry
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Goodnight, Irene
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HomicideHenry
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It was a hard decision to make, but I don't think it would have been as outrageous as saying Don Cockell or Jack Boddell was a top 10 or higher British Heavyweight.
Tommy Farr was one of Louis' toughest opponents, and he gave alot of former champions and top contenders a tough time. His greatest win, was probably the robbery against Jim Braddock, that and maybe his wins over Max Baer and Tommy Laughran. But he also lost to Baer, and another knock against him was a succession of losses following Louis and for staying too long in the game. He was a great boxer yes, but his reign as British champion wasn't long.
Henry Cooper on the other hand failed against the more elite men of the Heavyweight division and even ducked some (he refused to face Marciano or Liston), but on the British/European level, there is no comparison. He, sadly, is best known as the biggest 'what if' in boxing mythology in the first Ali fight. Cooper was much more than that. People want to talk how easily he got cut, how he dropped Ali and the dubious amount of time in between the rounds; but this man was champion for damn near two decades. That's almost unheard of.
Frank Bruno, on the flip side, is the only Brit (other than Lewis and Fitzsimmons) to win a portion of the Heavyweight title under the Marquis of Queensbury rules. Bruno had alot of potential and always made for entertaining fights, as he gave Tyson trouble, and gave Lewis trouble as well. But, the only real knock against him is that he failed when it came to the more high profile fights of his career, and that he was more or less spoon fed a bunch of bums and over the hill ex contenders on the way up.
I can only imagine, had he come along today, how well he would have faired.
I guess maybe in retrospect I should turn it around, and have Bruno behind Farr, being as Bruno's championship reign on the Commonwealth level was even less than Farr's, and he didn't quite beat the same caliber of opponents that Farr had as well. I guess some of my basis for comparison was that Farr didn't have the Heavyweight fire power one would expect from a Heavyweight, but he did start as a Light Heavyweight, so I guess there's reason enough for it.
Jem Mace, Bob Fitzsimmons, Henry Cooper, Tommy Farr, then Frank Bruno.
Tommy Farr was one of Louis' toughest opponents, and he gave alot of former champions and top contenders a tough time. His greatest win, was probably the robbery against Jim Braddock, that and maybe his wins over Max Baer and Tommy Laughran. But he also lost to Baer, and another knock against him was a succession of losses following Louis and for staying too long in the game. He was a great boxer yes, but his reign as British champion wasn't long.
Henry Cooper on the other hand failed against the more elite men of the Heavyweight division and even ducked some (he refused to face Marciano or Liston), but on the British/European level, there is no comparison. He, sadly, is best known as the biggest 'what if' in boxing mythology in the first Ali fight. Cooper was much more than that. People want to talk how easily he got cut, how he dropped Ali and the dubious amount of time in between the rounds; but this man was champion for damn near two decades. That's almost unheard of.
Frank Bruno, on the flip side, is the only Brit (other than Lewis and Fitzsimmons) to win a portion of the Heavyweight title under the Marquis of Queensbury rules. Bruno had alot of potential and always made for entertaining fights, as he gave Tyson trouble, and gave Lewis trouble as well. But, the only real knock against him is that he failed when it came to the more high profile fights of his career, and that he was more or less spoon fed a bunch of bums and over the hill ex contenders on the way up.
I can only imagine, had he come along today, how well he would have faired.
I guess maybe in retrospect I should turn it around, and have Bruno behind Farr, being as Bruno's championship reign on the Commonwealth level was even less than Farr's, and he didn't quite beat the same caliber of opponents that Farr had as well. I guess some of my basis for comparison was that Farr didn't have the Heavyweight fire power one would expect from a Heavyweight, but he did start as a Light Heavyweight, so I guess there's reason enough for it.
Jem Mace, Bob Fitzsimmons, Henry Cooper, Tommy Farr, then Frank Bruno.
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Goodnight, Irene
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oliverfennell
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He lives in a mansion by the beach on a tropical island.Collins2000 wrote:Where does he live now?oliverfennell wrote:Lewis was born in Britain and only moved to Canada because his mum did. As soon as he was able to move back to Britain, he did. He flew the Union Jack at all his flight and was a British champion. He's spent more of his life in Britain than in Canada.
Which I think we would all choose to do if we had the money!
So the fact he retired to Jamaica is not a slight on his "Britishness".
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dempseyfire
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If we're not counting Lewis, Tommy Farr. People look at his record with his 30 losses and discount him, but the wide majority came when he was still a teenager and hadn't even grown into his HW body yet. At his best he gave Louis a good tussle for 15 rounds, beat Braddock, Neusel, Loughran, Baer, Burman, and Gaines. At his best only lost to Louis, Baer in a rematch, Burman (which he avenged 3 months later), and Nova in a war. His subsequent losses at the end of his career came in the 1950s after he decided to make comeback following the 2nd World War and a 10 year layoff.
I don't see Bruno or Cooper beating a peak Farr.
I don't see Bruno or Cooper beating a peak Farr.
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Collins2000
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HomicideHenry
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Goodnight, Irene
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Did he say why he wouldn't fight them? I mean, I can imagine. But it would be interesting to hear his take.HomicideHenry wrote:In Cooper's autobiography he said the two men he never would fight was Marciano and Liston. When The Rock was champion,Cooper I believe was ranked inside the top ten, and when Liston dethroned Patterson, he was also a contender, but shyed away from Liston.