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Top 15 Hardest Hitters 1940-1950 Heavyweight Division

Posted: 23 Nov 2011, 12:55
by BrocktonBlockbuster49
Note: I only included men who were at their BEST in the 40s. So a young Marciano, Nova, Baer, Galento do not make the list.

1. Joe Louis- 6'2 207lb
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2. Hatchetman Sheppard- 5'11 185lb
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3. Turkey Thompson- 5'8 210lb
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4. Lem Franklin- 6'2 200lb
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5. Elmer Ray- 6'2 190lb
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5. Tommy Gomez- 5'10 185lb
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6. Lee Q Murray- 6'3 210lb
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7. Buddy Baer- 6'7 250lb
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8. Jersey Joe Walcott- 6'0 195lb
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9. Archie Moore- 5'11 180lb
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Re: Top 15 Hardest Hitters 1940-1950 Heavyweight Division

Posted: 23 Nov 2011, 12:56
by BrocktonBlockbuster49
continued.....


10. Harry Bobo- 6'4 215lb
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11. Tami Mauriello- 5'11 195lb
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12. Pat Comiskey- 6'3 220lb
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13. Abe Simon 6'4 260lb
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14. Johnny Haynes- 6'4 220lb
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15. Sid Peaks- 6'4 220lb
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Honorable Mentions:

Joe Baksi- 6'1 220lb
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Al Big Boy Brown(Joe Louis' Cousin)- 6'1 245lb
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Rusty Payne

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Re: Top 15 Hardest Hitters 1940-1950 Heavyweight Division

Posted: 23 Nov 2011, 15:55
by Crease
No Rex Layne?
:oo

Re: Top 15 Hardest Hitters 1940-1950 Heavyweight Division

Posted: 23 Nov 2011, 18:10
by The Great John L
Nice list BB

Re: Top 15 Hardest Hitters 1940-1950 Heavyweight Division

Posted: 23 Nov 2011, 18:34
by BrocktonBlockbuster49
Layne was not a 1940s fighter Crease, he was a 1950's fighter :TU:

Thanks John L, took me a while to compile!

Re: Top 15 Hardest Hitters 1940-1950 Heavyweight Division

Posted: 23 Nov 2011, 19:52
by muray
Lorenzo Pack

Re: Top 15 Hardest Hitters 1940-1950 Heavyweight Division

Posted: 24 Nov 2011, 02:47
by Goodnight, Irene
Id say Marciano could be considered to be in his prime from 1950.

Re: Top 15 Hardest Hitters 1940-1950 Heavyweight Division

Posted: 24 Nov 2011, 03:48
by crusader
Big Boy Brown's record doesn't suggest a monster hitter, but I know records tell only a small part of the tale. Can you explain why he was given an HM?

Re: Top 15 Hardest Hitters 1940-1950 Heavyweight Division

Posted: 24 Nov 2011, 12:18
by dempseyfire
Good list BB and enjoy the photos.

I think Mauriello should be a little higher, definitely above Walcott; the guy went knocked out lots of normally durable guys once he moved up to HW and also had Louis reeling from a single right hand in their short contest (but he broke the cardinal rule of boxing . . though shall not trade punches with Joe Louis)
Also think Peaks and Haynes should be higher. While they were clearly not as good all-around fighters as the guys above them (Haynes was downright amateurish), judging by pure hitting ability they were huge punchers.

Re: Top 15 Hardest Hitters 1940-1950 Heavyweight Division

Posted: 25 Nov 2011, 02:22
by BoxBuzz
Wouldn't Galento be here somewhere?

Re: Top 15 Hardest Hitters 1940-1950 Heavyweight Division

Posted: 25 Nov 2011, 02:48
by Jaclem
...ezzard charles sometimes coming in at 180 or less knocked out a couple of those guys (i don't differentiate between tko and ko) and scored a decision over a couple of others.

nice pictures, but is the walcott kayo of ezzard the ONLY picture of walcott scoring a kayo?. I: would thin during this holiday season you could show me a little charity.

Re: Top 15 Hardest Hitters 1940-1950 Heavyweight Division

Posted: 25 Nov 2011, 13:22
by dempseyfire
BoxBuzz wrote:Wouldn't Galento be here somewhere?
Galento's career was more or less over by 1940 (the year he got stopped by Max Baer, the following year he got stopped by Max's brother and that was pretty much it)

Re: Top 15 Hardest Hitters 1940-1950 Heavyweight Division

Posted: 25 Nov 2011, 18:50
by BoxBuzz
Yep, that makes sense.....thanks.

Re: Top 15 Hardest Hitters 1940-1950 Heavyweight Division

Posted: 25 Nov 2011, 20:57
by BrocktonBlockbuster49
Lorenzo Pack, and Tony Galento were 1930s fighters. Rocky Marciano was a 1950s fighter.

Jaclem old buddy,

Ezzard Charles was a terrific all around puncher, an all time great technician, but he was not a concussive one punch artist at the heavyweight level in the 1940s in my opinion. Also the 1940s had quite a few big punchers, it was a deep era. Did Charles really have a lot of brute force in one punch at heavyweight level?

Re: Top 15 Hardest Hitters 1940-1950 Heavyweight Division

Posted: 28 Nov 2011, 02:43
by Jaclem
...brockton my dear old young friend...no, ezzard did not have that brutal one punch power against strong heavyweights...when he was a heavyweight.....but when he was virtually a light heavy he did pretty good against them.my point was that without that kind of power he scored wins over some of those heavyweights listed...sometimes by knockout..other times by decision.

i forget how long we've been communicating here....i guess you're out of school by now? are the only exams you're taking these days that cautious young men take after a night out with painted ladies? still wrestling? :OhYes:

Re: Top 15 Hardest Hitters 1940-1950 Heavyweight Division

Posted: 28 Nov 2011, 22:13
by Crease
BrocktonBlockbuster49 wrote:Layne was not a 1940s fighter Crease, he was a 1950's fighter :TU:
He was indeed, I misread the title thread, my bad.
:TU:

Great pics by the way.
:bow:

Re: Top 15 Hardest Hitters 1940-1950 Heavyweight Division

Posted: 28 Sep 2018, 04:10
by BuddyscottsGS
Buddy Scott

Re: Top 15 Hardest Hitters 1940-1950 Heavyweight Division

Posted: 08 Oct 2018, 15:00
by pound per pound
BrocktonBlockbuster49 wrote: 23 Nov 2011, 12:55 Note: I only included men who were at their BEST in the 40s. So a young Marciano, Nova, Baer, Galento do not make the list.

1. Joe Louis- 6'2 207lb
Image

2. Hatchetman Sheppard- 5'11 185lb
Image

3. Turkey Thompson- 5'8 210lb
Image

4. Lem Franklin- 6'2 200lb
Image

5. Elmer Ray- 6'2 190lb
Image

5. Tommy Gomez- 5'10 185lb
Image

6. Lee Q Murray- 6'3 210lb
Image

7. Buddy Baer- 6'7 250lb
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8. Jersey Joe Walcott- 6'0 195lb
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9. Archie Moore- 5'11 180lb
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Thanks for the photos. Why didn't Joe Louis meet any of the black fighter son the list, aside from Walcott?