Smokin Joe Frazier

BroughtonRulesRefuge
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Re: Smokin Joe Frazier

Post by BroughtonRulesRefuge »

I Feel Fine wrote:To say that Ali's lack of training and his being over weight during his inactive years does not matter is ludicrous. You cannot be serious with that comment. To my understanding he helped Jimmy Ellis train for Quarry, which was likely the most work he did during that exile, but otherwise he was not in the gym much and by 1970 he was not in any kind of boxing condition, believing that he would never fight again. To say that this had no effect on his immediate comeback is not credible analysis.
I don't see how people can pick Frazier peak for peak, but that is fair enough, it is subjective and we will never know. What I really don't understand is the constant repetition of how Ali was at his "peak" in the first fight. Even if he was, which I sort of doubt, it isn't really what keeps people from accepting that win as definitive. Leonard was certainly in his prime years for Kevin Howard... so what? Ali was 29, which I think most would agree is a prime year, but that is not really the issue. The issue is that he was not ready for that kind of fight after being back for only five months. He looked terrible with Bonavena and had to rush the Frazier fight because he had a Supreme Court date that Summer. You're telling me that Frazier would be ready to fight a prime, active Ali in five months after being off for 43 months? I doubt it.
- So instead you're gonna be telling us that Ali could be ready to fight as he was going blind in one eye, steadily building to a hypertensive/diabetic physical state with a left arm that was crooked from a poor set of a broken bone?

And you can show us pics of Ali in his layoff where he is fat? How could such cremepuff provide professional sparring for Ellis in a title fight?

You want to know when a prime Ali ever got tired? Go check out the Terrell fight where he expends much energy trying to KO a hurt Terrell in the 8th. Next round he checks out for most of the round and then changes strategy to just pick off Terrell from range to finish the fight. He was tired in a rough bout and wisely switched tactics to stay fresh.

Already been pointed out Ali had 6 months to prepare for Frazier. He didn't step from the street to the ring for Quarry. You keep bring up that he was no longer the same, well, he wasn't the same fighter at age 25 he was at age 22 either, nor would he be at age 29 or 32. It's all nonsense with you. He was 100 in his physical prime, 100% in the mental motivation to get to Frazier, and probably around 90% of his boxing sharpness and timing. Most fighters would take those figures hands down going into any fight.
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Re: Smokin Joe Frazier

Post by Mr E »

I said he sat down more on his punches thus punching harder, not that he came back stronger. As for him sitting around eating for 3 1/2 years, it's really not relevant unless he came back fat and out of shape which he clearly did not.
My point was that many people, not you specifically, make the argument that Ali came back stronger. I agree that he spent more time trading, and so to that extent "sat down on his punches more" when he returned in the 1970s but I attribute that to necessity rather than preference. Ali would always stay away and spear from long distance given the chance. And of course what he did during his lay-off is relevant to the broader discussion, whether you raise the point or not, of whether Ali did/could possibly have become stronger during the lay-off.
See this is were I fail to take you seriously. Certainly the Ali of 1967 could have beaten Frazier but to suggest that '67 Ali wins 10 out of 10 is imo ludicrous. Do you not agree that Frazier (and Norton for that matter) had the style to trouble Ali ? What would the superhuman Ali of 1967 have done differently from the decrepit wreck of '71 to shut out Frazier ?
"The" style to trouble Ali is an interesting way to put it as it seems to assume that there was only one. Frazier was a great great fighter and he would always have given Ali, and pretty nearly everyone else, "trouble". Saying I think Ali of 1967 would always have beaten him is a long way from saying I think Ali would have had no trouble with him, n'cest pas?

But more to the point, or more to what I take your point to be, yes, Frazier's ability to come forward, low and quickly, and to keep punching through Ali's own punches would always cause Ali problems. However, don't lose sight of the fact that the trouble went both ways. Frazier was always vulnerable to both the straight right and the right uppercut because of the way he cocked his left and also because he was so aggressive and those were Ali's 2 best punches. He was also vulnerable to using up his energy before the end of the fight when he lost his head, as happened in the Bonavena rematch, the 2nd and 3rd Ali fights, and even the Bugner fight. IMO, Frazier would never have knocked Ali out and, as long as Ali was standing, at least the 67 version of Ali would always have won more rounds than Frazier would have won, due to his sizzling handspeed and ability to wrestle Frazier in close and push him back out. That's more or less how he won the 2nd and 3rd fights and I believe very strongly he was not nearly as good by then.
It seems like any attempt to convey a balanced view of Ali as a fighter is met with shouts of "Ali hater"
Are you suggesting that Frazier never walked Ali down ? Chuvalo, like Frazier, was a pressure fighter and he was at times able to back Ali up and trap him on the ropes. He could do this only because of his chin you suggest while as Frazier I assume would have been knocked out by the pre-layoff Ali if he had ever tried to force the fight like he did in 1971 ?
Ali-hater was a poor choice of words here because I did not mean to imply that you were one of them. I was speaking more broadly at that point.

Beyond that, though, geez louise, I really hate the Chuvalo-Frazier comparison. They fought almost nothing alike except in the broadest, most general sense that some might I guess call them both pressure fighters. Chuvalo stood up walked in and winged punches for a while until he ran out of gas and then he would catch a 2nd wind and go do the same thing again. Every once in a while, he lumbered past Ali and landed a couple. Since he was indestructible, he could last 15 or 50 rounds doing this -- and losing nearly every one of them in the process.

The argument that, well, golly, Frazier was just like Chuvalo except better, and Chuvalo did land a few in 66, so Frazier would probably knock Ali out or beat him or however you see the comparison working is, to use your own word, "ludicrous." Frazier was faster, hit harder, was much harder to hit cleanly, had better stamina, was more coordinated, athletic, and talented in every respect -- except that he didn't take nearly as good a punch. Frazier could make Ali miss, which Chuvalo couldn't do, but Ali could hurt Frazier, which he could not really do to Chuvalo. There is no analogy to be drawn between the two fighters.
I never said that Chuvalo fought Ali close or that he ever could have. My point was that Ali at times was not able to get away from him, even the infallible pre-layoff version of Ali.
Again, Chuvalo's ability to hit the Ali of 1966 occassionally has no bearing on the likely outcome of a match between '67 Ali and '71 Frazier. And, who said Ali was infallible?

Finally, I never said that Ali was not in the best shape into which he could then get, and was not still a great heavyweight, during the first Frazier fight -- indeed through and including the 3rd Frazier fight, Ali was still a great fighter. My point is that Ali was not AS great as he had been, not that he was washed up or a bum. Putting it another way, my view is that, if the 85-90% version of Ali in the 1970s beat Frazier 2 out of 3, the 100% version of Ali in 1967 would have beaten him 3 out of 3.

[And, yes, I also think Dempsey was past his best, though still great, when he lost to Tunney, and that prime Dempsey would have planted prime Tunney into the mat.]

But, Hell, this is all speculation. Anyone here, me included, who doesn't allow for the possibility that he could be wrong needs to check his ego at the door.
Last edited by Mr E on 17 Sep 2009, 13:46, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Smokin Joe Frazier

Post by I Feel Fine »

BroughtonRulesRefuge wrote: - So instead you're gonna be telling us that Ali could be ready to fight as he was going blind in one eye, steadily building to a hypertensive/diabetic physical state with a left arm that was crooked from a poor set of a broken bone?

And you can show us pics of Ali in his layoff where he is fat? How could such cremepuff provide professional sparring for Ellis in a title fight?

You want to know when a prime Ali ever got tired? Go check out the Terrell fight where he expends much energy trying to KO a hurt Terrell in the 8th. Next round he checks out for most of the round and then changes strategy to just pick off Terrell from range to finish the fight. He was tired in a rough bout and wisely switched tactics to stay fresh.

Already been pointed out Ali had 6 months to prepare for Frazier. He didn't step from the street to the ring for Quarry. You keep bring up that he was no longer the same, well, he wasn't the same fighter at age 25 he was at age 22 either, nor would he be at age 29 or 32. It's all nonsense with you. He was 100 in his physical prime, 100% in the mental motivation to get to Frazier, and probably around 90% of his boxing sharpness and timing. Most fighters would take those figures hands down going into any fight.
He sparred with Ellis in '68, about a year into his exile, as I said. That has little bearing on what his condition was in 1970, he couldn't even go into a fake dance in AKA Cassius Clay without getting out of breath, he had to rush himself into condition for Quarry and was knocked down in sparring. You cannot obfuscate the fact that Ali was legitimately retired, it wasn't a vacation.
Assuming that Ali was lying when he said that he carried Terrell, which is fair enough, I take it for granted that a fighter with a big lead doesn't put himself at risk by going all out. I'm sure that Terrell would wish that Ali was as fatigued as you are trying to make him out to be, he might have caught less of a beating round after around after round. Ali didn't take too many breaks with Chuvalo either, and in his comeback he had more than one rally in the championship rounds.
I already said to Goodnight Irene that fighters have won in worse condition than Ali was in the first fight. But if you're trying to say that the rust played no part, or that five-six months was enough time to get ready for Frazier, then I'm not going to agree. To me the discussion is rather pointless in the first place, Frazier can have his win, it does not make up for his two losses.
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Re: Smokin Joe Frazier

Post by hhaehre »

I Feel Fine wrote:Well a more active Ali with a busier schedule not coming off the long layoff showed in Manila that he could fight at a high pace and get a second win and beat Frazier.
When did Ali ever throw more punches in his career ? I seem to remember a record was set for most punches thrown in a hw title fight that night but I guess an even faster pace was called for. Could this be a case for the 'lost Ali prime' Ali ?
I Feel Fine wrote: I think he showed in many of his fights that he was great in the championship rounds. There is something to the idea that he was better able to pace himself in later fights, but making adjustments and winning is what all great boxers do, which is why Ali won the trilogy and Frazier didn't and which is why one fight is never more important than a series.
So if two fighters fight each other in their prime and then 10 years later when both are shot, the fights are of equal importance ? The first fight was by far the best fight of the series, the fight where both were closest to their primes. It was, is and always will be the most important fight of the series.
I Feel Fine wrote: My point about Bonavena is that he showed rust, he was better against Frazier but the rust was still there in the late going.
So he was sharp and accurate in the early going but then the rust set in ? That makes no sense to me at all, if anything it should work the other way around, he should shake of the rust as he got going,
I Feel Fine wrote: It is one thing to say that the pace and Frazier's punches slowed him down, that goes without saying, but you would expect Ali to be able to get more of a second wind than he had in that fight, and in a close fight the difference of two or three rounds is important.
Yes Ali was cruising before those championship rounds, he especially dominated the 11th
I Feel Fine wrote: Between the rematch in the Garden and the rubber match in Manila, Ali has nothing to prove to Joe Frazier. Aside from their head to head fights, Frazier never regained the belt like Ali did, never beat Foreman, didn't fight the Liston's or the Patterson's or the Lyle's, didn't fight Shavers at 35 as an easy target, Joe had less defenses, Joe turned pro when Ali was champion and left for his real retirement (aside from the Cummings misadventure) when Ali was champion... Joe's career falls short of Ali's in every conceivable way, never mind that he lost head to head 2/3. Frazier's hardcore fans do not like it, but he comes out second best however you want to look at it.
Here we go, Ali had more fights, fought better fighters, had a longer career and so on and on and on. But guess what, Frazier beat your guy up in the biggest fight of Alis career and that is a fact.
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Re: Smokin Joe Frazier

Post by I Feel Fine »

I believe Ali-Norton II set some sort of power punches record, I don't remember.
Ali and Frazier in the heat of Manila set the record for most over all punches thrown in a Heavyweight fight until Tua-Ibeabuchi.
Ali wasn't ready for that kind of tough 15 rounder, he wasn't at his peak, and the rematch was three years later, not ten. Fighter's careers don't live or die on the basis of one fight, to say otherwise is arbitrary selective reasoning.
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Re: Smokin Joe Frazier

Post by Mr E »

So if two fighters fight each other in their prime and then 10 years later when both are shot, the fights are of equal importance ? The first fight was by far the best fight of the series, the fight where both were closest to their primes. It was, is and always will be the most important fight of the series.
You have to be pretty big Joe Frazier cheerleader to say with a straight face that Ali was in his prime during 1971 despite taking 3 1/2 years off between the ages of 26 and 29 -- a notion that is wholly implausible and flies in the face of everything we know about basic human training and physiology -- yet at the same time suggest that FRAZIER was further removed from his prime than Ali was during the 2nd and 3rd fights. Are you kidding me?

Most people concede that Ali outhit Frazier by a considerable margin during the 1st fight but justify the decision in favor of Frazier on the grounds that his were the harder, more damaging punches (and obviously that he scored a knockdown). I am one of those people.

But if your position is going to be that Frazier was so diminished after the first fight that the subsequent Ali-Frazier results somehow don't count, then I guess it was Ali who really did the most damage that night in the Garden after all, right? In that case, perhaps the decision should be reconsidered.

No question that Ali was slower, less mobile, and had less stamina when he returned. Further, he was no stronger and he hit no harder. It is illogical to pretend it could possibly have been otherwise.
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Re: Smokin Joe Frazier

Post by Collins2000 »

Mr E wrote:
So if two fighters fight each other in their prime and then 10 years later when both are shot, the fights are of equal importance ? The first fight was by far the best fight of the series, the fight where both were closest to their primes. It was, is and always will be the most important fight of the series.
You have to be pretty big Joe Frazier cheerleader to say with a straight face that Ali was in his prime during 1971 despite taking 3 1/2 years off between the ages of 26 and 29 -- a notion that is wholly implausible and flies in the face of everything we know about basic human training and physiology -- yet at the same time suggest that FRAZIER was further removed from his prime than Ali was during the 2nd and 3rd fights. Are you kidding me?

Most people concede that Ali outhit Frazier by a considerable margin during the 1st fight but justify the decision in favor of Frazier on the grounds that his were the harder, more damaging punches (and obviously that he scored a knockdown). I am one of those people.

But if your position is going to be that Frazier was so diminished after the first fight that the subsequent Ali-Frazier results somehow don't count, then I guess it was Ali who really did the most damage that night in the Garden after all, right? In that case, perhaps the decision should be reconsidered.

No question that Ali was slower, less mobile, and had less stamina when he returned. Further, he was no stronger and he hit no harder. It is illogical to pretend it could possibly have been otherwise.

Not to the haters. To them this was absolute prime for prime, or, when you meet a walking bucket of puke like granberry, it is absolute peak Ali vs slightly past his best Frazier.

:KO:
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Re: Smokin Joe Frazier

Post by I Feel Fine »

There were three men who were in the best position to say which version, 60s or 70s, was better; Ali himself, Chuvalo and Patterson. I don't remember if Patterson said anything about it, Ali was out of shape in their rematch anyway so you would not want him to decide since his choice would be so obvious, but both Ali and Chuvalo were clear that 60s Ali was better, Ali said of himself that he believes that the 60s version of himself would beat the 70s version, and Chuvalo said that 60s Ali was better in pretty much every way. To ignore their opinions and try to put ourselves as higher authorities is risible.
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Re: Smokin Joe Frazier

Post by The Great John L »

Mr E wrote:
So if two fighters fight each other in their prime and then 10 years later when both are shot, the fights are of equal importance ? The first fight was by far the best fight of the series, the fight where both were closest to their primes. It was, is and always will be the most important fight of the series.
You have to be pretty big Joe Frazier cheerleader to say with a straight face that Ali was in his prime during 1971 despite taking 3 1/2 years off between the ages of 26 and 29 -- a notion that is wholly implausible and flies in the face of everything we know about basic human training and physiology -- yet at the same time suggest that FRAZIER was further removed from his prime than Ali was during the 2nd and 3rd fights. Are you kidding me?
He didn't say that Ali was in his prime in 1971. He said that the two were closest to their primes in their first fight than in the other two, and that seems pretty logical.

And yes, I think a fair number of people might say that Joe was farther removed from his prime in Manila than Ali was from his prime. No one knows for sure, but it's hardly an indefensible position.
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Re: Smokin Joe Frazier

Post by Mr E »

He didn't say that Ali was in his prime in 1971. He said that the two were closest to their primes in their first fight than in the other two, and that seems pretty logical.
He didn't say it there but he said it elsewhere unless I completely misunderstood him. He can correct me if I'm wrong but I think there's no question he believes that Ali was at his peak against Frazier in 1971.
And yes, I think a fair number of people might say that Joe was farther removed from his prime in Manila than Ali was from his prime. No one knows for sure, but it's hardly an indefensible position.
But if you take that position don't you also have to concede that Ali did more damage to Frazier in the 1st fight than Frazier did to him?
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Re: Smokin Joe Frazier

Post by The Great John L »

Mr E wrote:
He didn't say that Ali was in his prime in 1971. He said that the two were closest to their primes in their first fight than in the other two, and that seems pretty logical.
He didn't say it there but he said it elsewhere unless I completely misunderstood him. He can correct me if I'm wrong but I think there's no question he believes that Ali was at his peak against Frazier in 1971.
And yes, I think a fair number of people might say that Joe was farther removed from his prime in Manila than Ali was from his prime. No one knows for sure, but it's hardly an indefensible position.
But if you take that position don't you also have to concede that Ali did more damage to Frazier in the 1st fight than Frazier did to him?
Of course not, that's way too simplistic. Everybody ages differently, and there are a lot of factors involved.

BTW I was responding more to the tone of your post that seemed to imply that it was pretty unreasonable to think that Frazier may have declined more than Ali between FOTC and Manila. It's hardly a black and white issue.
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Re: Smokin Joe Frazier

Post by hhaehre »

Mr E wrote: He didn't say it there but he said it elsewhere unless I completely misunderstood him. He can correct me if I'm wrong but I think there's no question he believes that Ali was at his peak against Frazier in 1971.
Just to help you out and keep you from making up stuff you think I might have said while quoting me on something completely different, here is the actual quote from page 2 in the thread:
hhaehre wrote:I subscribe to the view that Ali was very close to his prime in '71.
Now if you look closely you might spot the words "very close" but not "at his peak" as you suggested. I base "very close" on Alis performance in the actual fight, not on what Chuvalo said or what Patterson might have said had he said something or what Ali himself said or the Manilla fight or the Bonavena fight or what Ali ate while suspended.
Did Ali look sooo much better against Terrell or Foley in '67 ? Not in my opinion. Could '67 Ali have beaten a prime Frazier ? Sure, but he could just as well have lost.
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Re: Smokin Joe Frazier

Post by Mr E »

Of course not, that's way too simplistic. Everybody ages differently, and there are a lot of factors involved.
That's what I get for taking shortcuts. Generally, the folks who say Frazier faded early will tell you that his last great fight was the first fight against Ali. If that's the position, and I emphasize I do not personally subscribe to it, then my question to you was not so terribly simplistic. Now, if the position is that Frazier just faded early because his take-no-prisoners style put too much strain on his body to sustain a long career, and that the first Ali fight, rather than being a watermark of deterioration, was just another stop along the way, then I concede your point.
BTW I was responding more to the tone of your post that seemed to imply that it was pretty unreasonable to think that Frazier may have declined more than Ali between FOTC and Manila. It's hardly a black and white issue.
Oh, it's not a black and white issue to me at all. But I don't draw a bright line between prime Frazier of the first Ali fight and past-prime Frazier of the Stander, Daniels fights and beyond. I think that's the distinction.
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Re: Smokin Joe Frazier

Post by I Feel Fine »

To put yourself as a higher authority than a fighter who actually met him in both decades in the ring is ridiculous. Some fans think too much of themselves.
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Re: Smokin Joe Frazier

Post by hhaehre »

Collins2000 wrote:
Mr E wrote:
So if two fighters fight each other in their prime and then 10 years later when both are shot, the fights are of equal importance ? The first fight was by far the best fight of the series, the fight where both were closest to their primes. It was, is and always will be the most important fight of the series.
You have to be pretty big Joe Frazier cheerleader to say with a straight face that Ali was in his prime during 1971 despite taking 3 1/2 years off between the ages of 26 and 29 -- a notion that is wholly implausible and flies in the face of everything we know about basic human training and physiology -- yet at the same time suggest that FRAZIER was further removed from his prime than Ali was during the 2nd and 3rd fights. Are you kidding me?

Most people concede that Ali outhit Frazier by a considerable margin during the 1st fight but justify the decision in favor of Frazier on the grounds that his were the harder, more damaging punches (and obviously that he scored a knockdown). I am one of those people.

But if your position is going to be that Frazier was so diminished after the first fight that the subsequent Ali-Frazier results somehow don't count, then I guess it was Ali who really did the most damage that night in the Garden after all, right? In that case, perhaps the decision should be reconsidered.

No question that Ali was slower, less mobile, and had less stamina when he returned. Further, he was no stronger and he hit no harder. It is illogical to pretend it could possibly have been otherwise.

Not to the haters. To them this was absolute prime for prime, or, when you meet a walking bucket of puke like granberry, it is absolute peak Ali vs slightly past his best Frazier.

:KO:
So what is your take on Ali in the "fight of the century" ? A crap performance, a mere shadow of the mythical '68 Ali ?
BTW what does it take to qualify as a "hater of Ali" ? Suggesting Ali looked good in 1971 is obviously enough. How 'bout mentioning the name Kenny Norton ?
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Re: Smokin Joe Frazier

Post by Mr E »

I subscribe to the view that Ali was very close to his prime in '71.
Okay, but let's not play word games. What do you mean by "very close"? You wrote that once but then went on to write several posts in which, as far as I can tell, you refuse to concede that the 1967 Ali would have done any better against Frazier than the 1971 Ali did. But I won't make any assumptions: you tell me-- do you, in fact, think that the Ali of 1967 would have done better that night at the Garden then the Ali of 1971 did? Yes or no?
Did Ali look sooo much better against Terrell or Foley in '67 ?
Absolutely. No question about it.
Could '67 Ali have beaten a prime Frazier ? Sure, but he could just as well have lost.
What is "could just as well" supposed to mean? Do you believe the fight would have been a toss-up? Seems to me you are equivocating all over the place now.
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Re: Smokin Joe Frazier

Post by Mr E »

So what is your take on Ali in the "fight of the century" ? A crap performance, a mere shadow of the mythical '68 Ali ?
I can't understand why people get so riled up about these things. The Ali of 1971 was a great fighter who fought a great fight and lost a close but just decision. The fact that Ali was not quite AS great as he once was does not mean he was a mere shadow or that he put in a "crap performance," nor does it mean Frazier did not perform heroically that night, which he most certainly did.
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Re: Smokin Joe Frazier

Post by hhaehre »

I Feel Fine wrote:To put yourself as a higher authority than a fighter who actually met him in both decades in the ring is ridiculous. Some fans think too much of themselves.
Right, so when evaluating Alis performance against Frazier in 1971 it is not so important to look at the actual fight, far more relevant to research other fights Ali had and what his opponents felt about those fights.
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Re: Smokin Joe Frazier

Post by I Feel Fine »

Gibberish response. The question is which version of Ali was better, 60s or early 70s. Chuvalo very much knows more about Ali's state decade for decade than you or I do, don't kid yourself.
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Re: Smokin Joe Frazier

Post by hhaehre »

Mr E wrote: Okay, but let's not play word games. What do you mean by "very close"? You wrote that once but then went on to write several posts in which, as far as I can tell, you refuse to concede that the 1967 Ali would have done any better against Frazier than the 1971 Ali did. But I won't make any assumptions: you tell me-- do you, in fact, think that the Ali of 1967 would have done better that night at the Garden then the Ali of 1971 did? Yes or no?
No
Mr E wrote: What is "could just as well" supposed to mean? Do you believe the fight would have been a toss-up? Seems to me you are equivocating all over the place now.
Look, all three fights between them were reasonably close and so would a fight between a prime Frazier and the '67 Ali have been imo. I would slightly favor Frazier but I'm not going to say he would have won for sure.

We simply disagree on the difference between the '67 Ali and the '71 Ali. You think the difference was big. I say small, fair enough.
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Re: Smokin Joe Frazier

Post by Mr E »

We simply disagree on the difference between the '67 Ali and the '71 Ali. You think the difference was big. I say small, fair enough.
Fair enough indeed, amigo. Nice sparring with you.
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Re: Smokin Joe Frazier

Post by hhaehre »

I Feel Fine wrote:Gibberish response. The question is which version of Ali was better, 60s or early 70s. Chuvalo very much knows more about Ali's state decade for decade than you or I do, don't kid yourself.
My argument was "Ali looked very close to peak in his first fight with Frazier". What Chuvalo says about two other Ali fights means dick in that respect.
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Re: Smokin Joe Frazier

Post by I Feel Fine »

Your argument is wrong and your arguments for your argument are incredibly ignorant. The question is when was Ali closer to his peak, in the 60s or in the early 70s, and that Chuvalo could better compare the Ali of both eras is a clear enough point, if it does not register with you that is because you are not being objective. That Ali "looked" good against Frazier does not answer the question of whether he at that stage in his career was better than he had been; the answer of the man who fought him in both eras was an emphatic "no."

Granberry > Sugar Ray Robinson

Yancey > Ingemar Johannson

HHaehre > George Chuvalo

:confused:
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Re: Smokin Joe Frazier

Post by hhaehre »

I Feel Fine wrote:Your argument is wrong and your arguments for your argument are incredibly ignorant. The question is when was Ali closer to his peak, in the 60s or in the early 70s,
That may be your question but it sure as hell is not mine. What I am saying is: "Ali performed very close to his peak the night he fought Frazier in '71" not "Ali was better in the 70's".
For the record I also think Frazier performed close to his best a couple of times after he had peaked (Quarry II and Manila)

I Feel Fine wrote: and that Chuvalo could better compare the Ali of both eras is a clear enough point, if it does not register with you that is because you are not being objective.
Again, not comparing eras, talking about Alis performance in a single fight.

I Feel Fine wrote: That Ali "looked" good against Frazier does not answer the question of whether he at that stage in his career was better than he had been;
Not talking about that stage, talking about THAT FIGHT.
I Feel Fine
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Re: Smokin Joe Frazier

Post by I Feel Fine »

The question is foolish if there is no context about what he was like before. It is arbitrary to just say "he was at his best here." How do you know, you don't know what 60s Ali would look like against Frazier. Chuvalo has context, he can compare and contrast when he was better and when he was worse. But whatever, these conversations are pointless.
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