Re: Vitaly Klitschko vs Sonny Liston
Posted: 01 Dec 2020, 14:40
liston actually quit more times than vit lol
Mental toughness? If you are mentally tough, you don't quit with three rounds left because of a shoulder injury. Durability? He got stopped both times in the only big fights he ever had. Stamina? He looked gassed after just a few rounds against Lewis.Cojimar 1946 wrote: ↑01 Dec 2020, 12:59 Vitali probably holds the edge in mental toughness, durability, physical strength, and stamina/workrate. There are fights were Vitali threw over 700/800 punches in 12 rounds. One path to beating Liston is simply outworking him.
That's actually not true.
Lol, what a biased liar you are. Vitali has triggered you to the acts of the outrage yet again.
He didn't officially quit.Ambling Alp II wrote: ↑01 Dec 2020, 16:38 Once again you have shown yourself to be quite the nice person.
Liston actually quit once. He didn't officially quit in the rematch with Ali. He didn't quit in normal boxing terminology. Therefore he didn't quit more than Klitschko. Therefore I didn't lie. I'm biased? (As if you are perfectly objective towards him.) I think he should be credited and criticized by the same standards as anyone else. That's not bias.
Liston couldn't have struggled less with PattersonJeff_lacy_ko wrote: ↑01 Dec 2020, 22:52 Vitali ate bombs from lewis i dont know why you'd question his chin.
Vitali shouldnt be in the hof in my view he lacks the record but he was clearly a good effective fighter
Would vitali struggle with floyd patterson?
People think Moorer let Big George put his teeth through his mouthguard to take a dive? As Churchill said I guess, the greatest argument against democracy is a conversation with the average voter.Onetimeonly wrote: ↑01 Dec 2020, 20:30 He was actually engaging when it was restopped. That and George/moorer crack me up the most with conspiracies. Ali clearly tagged him and George broke Mike's face.
In the hardest I've ever been punched thread on the history forum I don't think anyone has named Lewis as the hardest they've been hit. He could definitely hit but he isn't regarded as a puncher in the same vain as Foreman, Liston, Shavers etc. It doesn't mean he couldn't stand up to Liston's punching but it also shows there is no proof that he could. I think he could, but I think he takes a terrible beating if he does and the fight gets stopped.Jeff_lacy_ko wrote: ↑01 Dec 2020, 22:52 Vitali ate bombs from lewis i dont know why you'd question his chin.
Vitali shouldnt be in the hof in my view he lacks the record but he was clearly a good effective fighter
Would vitali struggle with floyd patterson?
What is Vitali's defining win?Onetimeonly wrote: ↑01 Dec 2020, 23:35 Agreed, much better than any of vitalis, but Sonny doesn't have a stacked resume.
That's right. And that's surely better than quitting because of being beaten up / frustrated and "throwing a fight", or how else "experts" with "more than 40 years of being a boxing fan resume" call it.p4p1 wrote: ↑02 Dec 2020, 03:35 On the topic of Mental toughness, I think there is a few things to consider. Yes Vitali quit while ahead with a torn rotator cuff. I don't think that has anything to do with mental toughness, I think he made a calculated decision to not destroy his shoulder and by extension his career over a win, so that he could come back and win another day. I've always looked at it as a decision that most fighters wouldn't have been smart enough to make. I would also say that it speaks to his self confidence that he believed that despite quitting he knew he could get to the top of the mountain again. I've never torn my rotator cuff so I don't know what the pain level is like, I have had a shoulder reconstruction though and it was fornicating horrible.
Doctors at the time said that Liston and torn a tendon in his shoulder. Other sources have confirmed the shoulder injury. One of his cornermen (who seems to be unnamed) said the shoulder injury was bullshit. A big difference is that Klitschko was fighting Chris Byrd, a footnote on the ass of boxing history. Liston was fighting Ali, the greatest fighter in boxing history.DrDuke wrote: ↑02 Dec 2020, 04:58That's right. And that's surely better than quitting because of being beaten up / frustrated and "throwing a fight", or how else "experts" with "more than 40 years of being a boxing fan resume" call it.p4p1 wrote: ↑02 Dec 2020, 03:35 On the topic of Mental toughness, I think there is a few things to consider. Yes Vitali quit while ahead with a torn rotator cuff. I don't think that has anything to do with mental toughness, I think he made a calculated decision to not destroy his shoulder and by extension his career over a win, so that he could come back and win another day. I've always looked at it as a decision that most fighters wouldn't have been smart enough to make. I would also say that it speaks to his self confidence that he believed that despite quitting he knew he could get to the top of the mountain again. I've never torn my rotator cuff so I don't know what the pain level is like, I have had a shoulder reconstruction though and it was fornicating horrible.
That's exactly comes as a proof, that Byrd's fight wasn't that important to risk in it. Vitali chose a career, he abandoned a possiblity of losing it and chose to lose just a single bout.p4p1 wrote: ↑02 Dec 2020, 06:33Doctors at the time said that Liston and torn a tendon in his shoulder. Other sources have confirmed the shoulder injury. One of his cornermen (who seems to be unnamed) said the shoulder injury was bullshit. A big difference is that Klitschko was fighting Chris Byrd, a footnote on the ass of boxing history. Liston was fighting Ali, the greatest fighter in boxing history.DrDuke wrote: ↑02 Dec 2020, 04:58That's right. And that's surely better than quitting because of being beaten up / frustrated and "throwing a fight", or how else "experts" with "more than 40 years of being a boxing fan resume" call it.p4p1 wrote: ↑02 Dec 2020, 03:35 On the topic of Mental toughness, I think there is a few things to consider. Yes Vitali quit while ahead with a torn rotator cuff. I don't think that has anything to do with mental toughness, I think he made a calculated decision to not destroy his shoulder and by extension his career over a win, so that he could come back and win another day. I've always looked at it as a decision that most fighters wouldn't have been smart enough to make. I would also say that it speaks to his self confidence that he believed that despite quitting he knew he could get to the top of the mountain again. I've never torn my rotator cuff so I don't know what the pain level is like, I have had a shoulder reconstruction though and it was fornicating horrible.
Sounds about right.Jeff_lacy_ko wrote: ↑02 Dec 2020, 11:34 Id rank vitalis best wins as
Off memory i might forget someone
Corrie sanders
Sam peter
Arreola
Chisora
Not murderers row and like i said i dont think he should be considered atg because his accomplishments fall short. But head to head he stacks up well with liston