most daunting run of world title fights
Posted: 02 Jun 2017, 16:14
A pretty daunting run of world title fights for me would be Iran Barkleys 4 fight run starting with Tommy Hearns and followed by Duran, Nunn and Benn ! Any others ?
Off the top of my head Froch had a pretty tough runlittlepug wrote:A pretty daunting run of world title fights for me would be Iran Barkleys 4 fight run starting with Tommy Hearns and followed by Duran, Nunn and Benn ! Any others ?
Pascal,taylor,Dirrell,kessler,abraham,johnson,ward and bute is a tough run by anyone standardControversial wrote:Off the top of my head Froch had a pretty tough runlittlepug wrote:A pretty daunting run of world title fights for me would be Iran Barkleys 4 fight run starting with Tommy Hearns and followed by Duran, Nunn and Benn ! Any others ?
Also many were outside the UK, he fought Taylor in America, Kessler in Denmark, Abraham in Finland, Johnson in America and Ward in America.littlepug wrote:Pascal,taylor,Dirrell,kessler,abraham,johnson,ward and bute is a tough run by anyone standardControversial wrote:Off the top of my head Froch had a pretty tough runlittlepug wrote:A pretty daunting run of world title fights for me would be Iran Barkleys 4 fight run starting with Tommy Hearns and followed by Duran, Nunn and Benn ! Any others ?
Aside from Pascal, Taylor, Kessler, Abraham, Johnson, and Bute it was a damned tough run... I'll go so far as say Froch was a great fighter (a little light on the boxing skills) but the only great fighter on Froch's list is Ward..littlepug wrote:Pascal,taylor,Dirrell,kessler,abraham,johnson,ward and bute is a tough run by anyone standard
On the surface it sounds unbelievable... But when you peel it back Louis was gone at that time... Charles was great for the first 2 Walcott fights...but Charles fell off a cliff in the 3rd fight and had nothing for the 4th fight.. Marciano was a tough first fight.. In the rematch Walcott cashed out and took an early count in the 1st round.. He could easily have gotten up if he wanted to continue.. So that's 3 tough fights against small Heavyweights -- all of which Walcott lost.APerno wrote:I am not sure if this fits the category as you mean it . . .
Jersey Joe Walcott's saga always moved me - winning it on the fifth try an all
'47 Louis L SD
'48 Louis L KO 11
'49 Charles L UD
'51 Charles L UD
'51 Charles W KO 7
'52 Charles W UD
'52 Marciano L KO 13
'53 Marciano L KO 1
Only Hagler looked fearsome ... All the rest were all DUCKS who Leonard fought to avoid Michael Nunn, Mike McCallum, and Julian Jackson.littlepug wrote:On paper Hagler, lalonde, hearns, Duran and Norris looks a fearsome run for leonard
leonard wasn't gonna take on the world at that stage of his career, he had already done that in his prime at welter, those guys you mentioned were too big and young for him at that time and wouldn't have got him the paydays the other guys did, in fact it was only the Duran fight that turned out to be a dud the other fights were quite entertainingKalan wrote:Only Hagler looked fearsome ... All the rest were all DUCKS who Leonard fought to avoid Michael Nunn, Mike McCallum, and Julian Jackson.littlepug wrote:On paper Hagler, lalonde, hearns, Duran and Norris looks a fearsome run for leonard
Leonard pulled a Canelo... First, he abandoned the Middleweight Title he won from Hagler –- cuz the top contenders were extremely tough at 160
Then the WBC—the most corrupt org in Boxing—created a new World Title for Leonard at 168.. Leonard bribed Donny Lalonde with millions to shed 7 pounds beyond his natural dried out weight of 175 to fight Ray for the new "vacant" title — but unlike Chad Dawson when he fought Andre Ward - or Iran Barkley when he fought James Toney — Lalonde's 175-pound title was ALSO at stake... Sooooooo accommodating of the WBC.
Then Leonard was allowed to defend his new 168 title at 160 — against whoever he pleased... Hearns and Duran had done nothing to earn legitimate World Title shots at 168... In fact, Duran weighed 158 for his 168 Title Fight vs Leonard... Hearns weighed 162.5... Leonard weighed 160 for both fights.
Next, Leonard still wanted to avoid the top 160-pounders... Terry Norris seemed like a chinny dude because he was iced by Julian Jackson a couple fights earlier – and he owned a World Title at 154... The fight was arranged... Like they say – Boxing is not a sport it's a business.
LOL.. Sugar Ray Leonard vs Michael Nunn would have been a blockbuster fight at that time... Fans would have loved it... Nunn was a big, tall, slick, undefeated southpaw boxer and a dangerous hitter... It would be Wladimir Klitschko taking on Anthony Joshua -- only Leonard was 10 years younger than Klitschkolittlepug wrote:leonard wasn't gonna take on the world at that stage of his career, he had already done that in his prime at welter, those guys you mentioned were too big and young for him at that time and wouldn't have got him the paydays
Can't use GGG as a comparison as he has been consistently active whilst leonards career was very much stop-start, Leonard was already on the slide by the time the Hagler fight came around and the Nunn fight was only seriously talked about after the Hearns rematch by which time he was very much on the slide and wouldn't of dreamt of taking on the number one guy in a division he really didn't belong in.Kalan wrote:LOL.. Sugar Ray Leonard vs Michael Nunn would have been a blockbuster fight at that time... Fans would have loved it... Nunn was a big, tall, slick, undefeated southpaw boxer and a dangerous hitter... It would be Wladimir Klitschko taking on Anthony Joshua -- only Leonard was 10 years younger than Klitschkolittlepug wrote:leonard wasn't gonna take on the world at that stage of his career, he had already done that in his prime at welter, those guys you mentioned were too big and young for him at that time and wouldn't have got him the paydays
Leonard was only 30 when he signed to fight Hagler and he had only 34 fights... So his next fight he needed to tone it down because of his age???
What if Gennady Golovkin said, "Hey man...I'm 35 years old.. Canelo is too young and strong for me.. I want Nathan Cleverly to come down to 168 and fight me for the vacant WBC Super Middleweight Title... Then I want both the Super Middleweight Title and Cleverly's Light Heavyweight Title to be on the line because I want both of them... Then I want the WBC to let me defend the Super Middleweight Title at 160 pounds and fight Kell Brook again. Forget Canelo, Eubank, and Jacobs... I'm not going to fight guys who are that dangerous and hard to beat at my age."
yeah Oscar de la hoya who had 20 odd consectutive fights against the good and the great of the welter, light middle and middleweight divisionsHyacinthusTurnipseed wrote:Might not be THE most daunting, but a difficult 8 fight streak (6 were title fights) for Rafael Herrera from late '71 through '74: C Castillo, Olivares, Pinder, Olivares again, R Martinez, Borkhorsor, Anaya and R Martinez again.
Not all of Holyfield's fights in this run could be called daunting, but just look at how many were! 1990-2003, again not all but mostly title fights: Douglas, Foreman, Cooper, Holmes, Bowe, Stewart, Bowe, Moorer, Mercer, Bowe, Czyz, Tyson, Tyson, Moorer, Bean, Lewis, Lewis, Ruiz, Ruiz, Ruiz, Rahman, Byrd and Toney. Ouch.
There's probably a few more like that but those were two that stood out after a bit of quick record re-checking.
Ossyrules wrote:Manny Pacquaio run is pretty impressive