Huh????Jaybee From The Castle wrote:Are you thinking about Ibeabuchi and Tua? I think their 97' versions would have been beaten Ali and Frazier respectively, but given the short duration of their reigns, I wouldn't call either a 'Great'.Klee Gluckman wrote: These what if matches a mouth watering its unfortunate that we have not seen two greats while in thier primes for ten years.
David Tua in any incarnation gets shut out by Ali, literally . . .shut out. Doesn't win a round. Tua could hardly win rounds vs a C level stick and move plan by the slow as molasses Hasim Rahman for crying out loud.
Ibeabuchi along with Bowe is a great big woulda coulda shoulda story. Barely beating Tua and knocking out a light HW doesn't equate to me having near the ability to beat Ali. Ike was not fast enough and didn't have a top-flight jab, he would've been soundly outpointed. Maybe if he'd shown a way to beat Lewis, the Klit brothers, and others you'd have an argument, but as to what actually happened no way jose.
As to Frazier, if Ike could almsot lose to Tua, he's losing handidly to the much superior Frazier. And Ibeabuchi was a decent puncher but not in the league of a Foreman/Tyson who could take out Frazier before he got set. I'd actually give Tua a better chance at pulling the upset b/c he had the type of power to shock Joe early. But don't see the Tuaman finishing him off.