klompton wrote: ↑15 Aug 2019, 15:31
Fourie might have been made a favorite over Mundine, although thats debateable but if he was it would have had more to do with the fact that he would have forced Mundine to come to South Africa to fight where the judges would have protected Fourie.
Knowing that Fourie fought well for 30 rounds against Bob Foster, and held his own against Victor Galindez for another 30, I have no doubt that he would have beaten Mundine. Fourie would even have beaten Mundine in Australia. Fourie was simply a better performer than Mundine against world class foes in the 175 lbs. division. I believe that most sophisticated fans of the '70s boxing scene would agree with me here.
klompton wrote: ↑15 Aug 2019, 15:31
Regardless, they (Fourie and Mundine) fought nothing alike so its a bad indicator.
It's easy to argue otherwise. Consider the following.
Both Fourie and Mundine fought from medium-to-long distance from their foes, probing for openings with their lead punches. Both relied on foot speed (mobility) to jump away from punches, and to step in and capitalize on punch openings. Essentially, each guy had a tactical, technical, "boxing" approach to squarring off with their foes. Hand speed was a strong area for both guys.
They differed in that Fourie was all about scoring repeatedly with his rapier-like jab, and with his quick, sweeping, but light left-hooks. He also exhibited more upper-body defensive manuevering than Tony. As for Mundine, he had a greater variety of lead punches (he often used sneaky right uppercuts as leads), and if he could connect with his lead punch, he tried to follow up with big bombs that would score the KO. Mundine also swung hard to the body. But until openings appeared, Mundine -- like Fourie -- stayed on the outside and boxed.
According to newspaper reports, Quarry fought Fourie from the outside, dancing on his toes, and slapping the crap out of him with his peppery left. If Quarry could box that effectively on the outside against a defensive fighter like Fourie, then it stands to reason that Quarry could have handled Mundine similarly. Note also that Quarry had no problem puncturing Fourie's normally tight defense. That tells us that Quarry could definitely find Mundine's chin too.
klompton wrote: ↑15 Aug 2019, 15:31
Stylistically its just a bad matchup for Mike. You are painting him as this talented boxer who didnt get hit and could punch and he wasnt.
That's not quite what I said.
I wrote that Quarry was a notoriously light hitter. A feather fisted puncher. And, I admitted that Quarry had lots of crappy nights where he hung on the ropes, got banged around, or recklessly traded with opponents. However, I correctly pointed out that Quarry was capable of fighting differently; that he could actually dance in circles and rapidly pop opponents with his efficient, persistent left jab and quick, slapping left-hook. That version of Quarry -- the way he fought on his better nights -- was a competent defensive boxer by any measure.
klompton wrote: ↑15 Aug 2019, 15:31
He was an average fighter who traded on the name recognition of his big brother. He was tough and brave and had spirit but he wasnt particularly fast, wasnt a particularly talented boxer, didnt hit hard at all and like his older brother could be drawn into shootouts very easily.
I'm very aware of Quarry's limitations. He passed much of his career in that twilight zone between being an authentic, world-class contender versus being just an advanced clubfighter. Mike was a marginal contender at best. However, when he fought his best, he could sometimes beat world-class foes. And Mundine, at light-heavyweight, may not really have amounted to a world-class fighter.
Quarry was quick, but not super-fast. Still, his hand and foot speed were good enough to trouble or even defeat a 175 pounder of Mundine's caliber. If Steve Aczel, Ernie Barr, and Ronnie Wilson could extend Mundine, then Quarry could do that much better.
klompton wrote: ↑15 Aug 2019, 15:31
The only thing Quarry did better than Mundine was eat punches.
I think I already admitted that Quarry could not fight this way against Mundine. If he did, he'd be beaten. But Quarry didn't always fight stupidly, allowing himself to get drawn into shooting wars. Sometimes he fought better than that. Much better, at times.
klompton wrote: ↑15 Aug 2019, 15:31
And given the fact that Quarry couldnt punch a lick he wouldnt have stopped or intimidated Mundine. Its as simple as that.
Quarry wouldn't have needed to hurt Mundine. That's because Quarry, on his best night, might have boxed circles around the Aussie, moving away from punches and staying on top of the scorecards with lots of peppery, light shots to the head. Look at how technical boxing Mate Parlov beat Mundine by fighting this way. Mike Quarry might have accomplished the same.
Why would a moderate talent like Quarry have beaten Mundine this way? Because, as I've said before, the lightheavyweight version of Tony Mundine
simply wasn't that good. Tony was past his prime at 175 lbs. He was beatable. Dangerous as hell, but beatable.
Finally, given that Mundine had a potato chip for a chin, it's possible that even light-hitting Mike Quarry could have gotten lucky and hurt or floored him. You can't deny that.