Posted: 04 Feb 2006, 00:10
Sorry if the truth bores you. So are you saying no mas?DoubleM wrote:Listen:
Leonard was being soundly outboxed by Thomas Hearns until Hearns, who came in under his desired weight, lost his skinny little legs and got himself stopped.
What an acurrate description of what happened.You forgot to mention that Leonard had Hearns in serious trouble several times during the fight and that Hearns never hurt Leonard. Skinny legs? Under desired weight? He weighed a whole 2 pounds under the limit.
Most importantly, Leonard won the fight.
How did Duran do against Hearns? He got knocked unconscious, fell on his face, out cold. Make all the excuses you want for Duran, that's embarrasing.
That never happened to Leonard.
Leonard was forced to fight in the trenches with Duran, and lost. Yes, forced to. Leonard even admits this himself. Duran won convincingly, too. He made a fool out of Leonard in the fifteenth, putting his hands by his sides and making Leonard miss with a nine-punch salvo, and later on, offering Leonard his chin, avoiding Leonard's punches and jabbing him back in the face. It must be noted that Leonard's wife went hysterical during the second and third rounds while watching her husband take a beating, before fainting in the eighth.
The fight was competitive. Leonard won several rounds and there were a few that were close. Did it ever occurr to you that Leonard was being gracious to his opponent? He did that with many of his other opponets as well.
Leonard beat Hagler controversially. Many fans score it for Hagler, including myself. Yea, it was impressive that Leonard could win like that after such a long lay off... But Hagler was no spring chicken either. He might have only been thirty two, but he had battled through consistently tough competition for sixty six fights, and was well past his best. This is apparent from the film. Compare Hagler from the Minter fight to the one from the Leonard fight. The difference is astounding. It was Leonard's speed which 'won' him that fight - Hagler was, by that point, horribly slow and sluggish.
Just because the decison was controversial doesn't mean it was wrong. Hagler did nothing in the first 4 rounds and couldn't catch up. Yes, if they would have fought a few years earlier, Hagler would have been faster. So would Leonard.
Leonard got a draw against Thomas Hearns... An unfair decision. Leonard was again outboxed through most of the fight, and was knocked down twice.
You could certainly argue that Hearns should have got the decison. However, Leonard wasn't outboxed through most of the fight. He landed more punches than Hearns. In 2 rounds he battered Hearns all over the ring, and two of the judges scored those rounds 10-8, which is why the fight ended in a draw.
Leonard beat an ageing Duran... Means virtually nothing. Both lacked real motivation and youth.
I pretty much agree. Although, shouldn't Leonard get a little credit for easily beating the man who had just beatne the great Iran Barkley?![]()
Leonard's most convincing win was over Benitez - and even that was not without controversy. The stoppage was horrible. All the credit to Leonard though, he beat Benitez, an excellent boxer in his own right, convincingly.
Yes he did beat Benitz convincingly. Benitez did beat Duran of course.
Now - I'm not saying Leonard wasn't a great fighter. But his fights were not nearly as clear cut and impressive as they look on paper.
No, they were more impressive than they appear on paper.
Take Roberto Duran though... Lost only twice in his prime in seventy five fights, and both times he was undertrained. Duran had something wrong with him in the second Leonard fight - what it was, we can't be sure. It was Duran's fault he never trained properly... It was Duran's fault he gorged a steak just two hours before the fight... It was Duran's fault he lost. But I believe at his best, he would have beaten Leonard similarly to the first time they fought. To Leonard's credit, he did devise a new and improved gameplan... And make no mistake about it, the fight would be closer than the first. But a prime Roberto Duran takes him.
The dog ate my homework excuse again. Roberto didn't train his hardest or he would have won.
Duran beat Buchanan and DeJesus - two excellent fighters. And he didn't beat them controversially - he whupped them both. Alright, the Buchanan win could be described as controversial - but come on, Buchanan was hitting Duran after the bell. To the former streetfighting Duran, this signalled a free-for-all, and so he proceeded to neutralize Buchanan in the most efficient way possible. Buchanan's fault. He shouldn't have hit Duran after the bell. Even so, Duran was kicking his ass anyway. Nobody treated Buchanan like that before.
Oh and Duran had defended his title for seven years, too. Whatever you think of his competition, there were a few good fighters there. Aside from the aforementioned Buchanan and DeJesus, there was Viruet, Lampkin and the Japanese guy whose name I've forgotten. Duran beat most of them pretty damn convincingly. All the bums in between? He was keeping busy. Nothing wrong with that. He was not defending his title against those same bums (except Rojas, a replacement), so there's nothing to complain about.
Yes, there were a few good lightweights in the 1970's, very few. There is nothing wrong with him fighting "bums", as long as you aren't impressed with the sheer number of his wins and knockouts.
You left out that Duran never gave Buchanan a rematch, even though he fought as a lightweight for many more years. You also forgot to mention that DeJesus beat Duran once, (knocked him down once)and knocked Duran down in their 3rd fight as well.
Anyway - then comes the Palomino win. Carlos was a very good welterweight, a former champion infact, and even though he may have been past his best, he was still a solid fighter. Duran educated him in the art of boxing, and schooled him over ten rounds. Duran won nine out of ten.
Then there's Leonard, of course. Duran was up from his best weight, and beat this top three welterweight quite convincingly. If only Duran had retained that same power he possessed at lightweight... Could we have seen a stoppage? Probably.
Leonard went toe to toe with Duran for 15 rounds and Duran couldn't stop him.
So... Duran beats Leonard, and celebrates. He's on top of the world, understandably, and celebrates for weeks. He piles on the weight. A vengeance-seeking Leonard makes sure a rematch is made immediately! Duran has plenty of time to prepare, but doesn't. Again, his own fault. Whatever happened that night, Duran quit, and lost. Big blotch on his record.
Yes that a big big blotch on his record. He quit in one of the biggest fights of his career.
Alright though... He still has all that lightweight dominance and the brief but brilliant successes at welterweight. Duran is a solidified legend already. Commentators, critics, historians, experts, The Pope, all these guys were putting Duran up with the likes of Ray Robinson, Henry Armstrong, Harry Greb, Willie Pep, Joe Gans, Benny Leonard, Joe Louis, as early as 1974. Come 1978, many considered him the greatest lightweight of all time, and if not, easily in the top three along with Joe Gans and Benny Leonard. By 1980, after the first Leonard win, some were considering calling him the greatest fighter of all time. And with good reason.
That's funny, I never heard anyone compare Duran to those guys or call him the greatest of all time during his lightweight days.
Anyway - Duran, already the great he is, goes on to fight longer than he really should have, and at a weight he was not comfortable at. It must be noted that Duran's power was well below average once he reached middleweight, something which played a big part in his success early on. Duran relied on his skill, experience and toughness to beat the absolute piss out of Pipino Cuevas. Deserving Hall of Famer or not, Duran beat the shit out of him nonetheless. Then he did the same to Davey Moore - a, for some reason, highly regarded fighter. Both wins came with Duran the underdog.
So he beat up Cuevas? 5 other guys knocked him out, 14 other guys beat him. Going inot the duran fight, Cuevas had lost previous fight to Roger Stafford.
Davey Moore? this was what, his 13th fight? He was knocked out by other guys as well.
After giving Marvelous Marvin Hagler a run for his money, Duran scored another huge upset by beating Iran "The Blade" Barkley - an underrated fighter fresh off of a fluke win over Thomas Hearns. That's right, I said underrated. Barkley was very methodical in the Duran fight, making use of his jab, not rushing in, keeping his defense tight. Now... Duran had the build of a true lightweight. Barkley on the other hand could have comfortably carried 175lbs on his tall frame, and fought without too much difficulty. He hit much harder than Duran, was stronger, younger, could probably take a bigger punch at that weight, and was just generally naturally bigger. Close decision or not, Duran's achievement was special. He even knocked the big guy down, and surprisingly, was the stronger of the two in the late rounds and took command of the fight, despite being the smaller man.
Iran Barkley was underrated? Wow. His defense was tight? Iran Barkley?![]()
Duran by this point was pretty much a shot fighter though. He lacked motivation, was well past his best, and wasn't getting any younger. Even so, the old master with legendary status continued to have a couple more career redemptions. Despite officially losing, in reality, he probably won second fights with Hector Camacho Sr. and Vinny Pazienza. How old was Duran? Off the top of my head, probably about eighty five.
Roberto Duran is a true legend, and nobody can tell anyone otherwise. He is, by general consensus, deservedly rated above Ray Leonard on a list of great fighters...
I don't wish to debate this post, because to be quite honest, these Ray Leonard debates bore me after so long. Hopefully someone finds this post helpful.