True but I don't think anybody even back then thought that Bruce Seldon and Francesco Damiani in the mid 90s was anything to really scream over. Damiani basically lost all of his appeal following his loss to Ray Mercer, and Seldon in his next fight would also get stopped by Riddick Bowe and of course would also lose to Tony Tubbs and Mike Tyson in the future.keithmoonhangover wrote: ↑11 Jan 2023, 15:31He beat the unbeaten Seldon and Damiani. Those wins made him a contender. Then he beat a Hall of Famer and successfully defended against another one.HomicideHenry wrote: ↑11 Jan 2023, 15:24 Context is everything and Oliver McCall prior to his shocking upset win over Lennox Lewis was basically seen as a glorified journeyman or trial horse. Only in retrospect is he held in greater esteem then he was at the time.
I will say that Oliver McCall in a sense is a bit like Ken Norton in which Ken Norton was saw as a stepping stone for Muhammad Ali but pulled off a major upset. Following the upset both men improved dramatically showing that they really did belong among the top 10 or top 5 heavyweights of their era.
But if one watches the build-up to Oliver McCall versus Lennox Lewis nobody gave McCall a shot and quite frankly that is what caused the upset to begin with because anytime Lennox Lewis was ever in danger or lost it was because he did not take the opposition seriously at all.
The very fact that Lennox Lewis would later hire Emanuel Stewart who was Oliver McCall's trainer kind of tells you everything. And mind you it took a long time for Lennox Lewis to get back his public image because the loss to Oliver McCall was seen as something truly detrimental at the time.