Jimmy Young vs Smokin' Joe Frazier, in their primes.
Posted: 20 Jul 2008, 12:48
What happens?
Young lost a unanimous decision to a fat , out of shape , past his prime, thirty four year old two hundred thirty pound Ali who was so disinterested in the fight that he literally wagged his ample buttocks while he was on the ropes and called it the "rolling fanny"...BoxBuzz wrote:Well....Joe chases him......and chases him.....and chases him.....and chases him relentlessy, but I'm not sure if he catches him enough or if he just catches a lot of incoming over the course of 12 rounds. Good one. granberry will be hard pressed to pick one...as these are his two favorites as I recall.
I think Joe chases him down, wears him down, cuts of the ring, deals with a LOT of incoming and ultimates wins in the eyes of the judges. I wouldn't want to be Joe's face or Jimmy's body at the end of the exchange. It will be a bad day for both.
Hey, we agree on something.TheOneIsHere2008 wrote:Young lost a unanimous decision to a fat , out of shape , past his prime, thirty four year old two hundred thirty pound Ali who was so disinterested in the fight that he literally wagged his ample buttocks while he was on the ropes and called it the "rolling fanny"...BoxBuzz wrote:Well....Joe chases him......and chases him.....and chases him.....and chases him relentlessy, but I'm not sure if he catches him enough or if he just catches a lot of incoming over the course of 12 rounds. Good one. granberry will be hard pressed to pick one...as these are his two favorites as I recall.
I think Joe chases him down, wears him down, cuts of the ring, deals with a LOT of incoming and ultimates wins in the eyes of the judges. I wouldn't want to be Joe's face or Jimmy's body at the end of the exchange. It will be a bad day for both.
Joe Frazier would walk through whatever he threw at him the way he walked through Jimmy Ellis' punches in 1970 and knock him out in five rounds ...
Jimmy Young's claim to fame is his 34-19 record, his running out of the ring twice against a morbidly obese Muhammad Ali, losing a split decision to Ken Norton and beating George Foreman who was still smarting from his loss to Muhammad Ali...
Earnie Shaver was a slugger and he dropped Jimmy Young in three rounds...Joe Frazier was a swarmer/slugger...I don't see much hope for him...He's not nearly strong enough to hang with Smokin Joe...
By the way I watched the Frazier-Eliis fight two weeks ago on ESPN...Jimmy Ellis was doing everything right...The problem was Joe just walked through his punches...yancey wrote:Hey, we agree on something.TheOneIsHere2008 wrote:Young lost a unanimous decision to a fat , out of shape , past his prime, thirty four year old two hundred thirty pound Ali who was so disinterested in the fight that he literally wagged his ample buttocks while he was on the ropes and called it the "rolling fanny"...BoxBuzz wrote:Well....Joe chases him......and chases him.....and chases him.....and chases him relentlessy, but I'm not sure if he catches him enough or if he just catches a lot of incoming over the course of 12 rounds. Good one. granberry will be hard pressed to pick one...as these are his two favorites as I recall.
I think Joe chases him down, wears him down, cuts of the ring, deals with a LOT of incoming and ultimates wins in the eyes of the judges. I wouldn't want to be Joe's face or Jimmy's body at the end of the exchange. It will be a bad day for both.
Joe Frazier would walk through whatever he threw at him the way he walked through Jimmy Ellis' punches in 1970 and knock him out in five rounds ...
Jimmy Young's claim to fame is his 34-19 record, his running out of the ring twice against a morbidly obese Muhammad Ali, losing a split decision to Ken Norton and beating George Foreman who was still smarting from his loss to Muhammad Ali...
Earnie Shaver was a slugger and he dropped Jimmy Young in three rounds...Joe Frazier was a swarmer/slugger...I don't see much hope for him...He's not nearly strong enough to hang with Smokin Joe...![]()
Frazier indeed walks through Young, for the reasons you listed.
I'm pretty surprised others see it as going the distance with a close decision.
I would like to hear Granberry's take, but I would be surprised if he replies on this one.
First off, Joe would have been a great champ with a long reign in almost any era...His challenge to Ali and the way Ali met that challenge is what defined him...BoxBuzz wrote:Well to claim the above scenario brings Ali's stock back up....and I was reticent to do that in a public forum and risk the wrath of "con".
Folley was someone that Ali treated very well. He was definitely past prime when he met Ali, and had been screwed out of deserved title shots. Ali got him a nice payday, they respected each other, and Folley was able to go back to Arizona and buy a house.TheOneIsHere2008 wrote:First off, Joe would have been a great champ with a long reign in almost any era...His challenge to Ali and the way Ali met that challenge is what defined him...BoxBuzz wrote:Well to claim the above scenario brings Ali's stock back up....and I was reticent to do that in a public forum and risk the wrath of "con".
Jimmy Young lost a unanimous decision to a thirty four year old , 230 pound Muhammad Ali, who was so contemptuos of him that he literally layed on the ropes and wiggled his ample buttocks to the delight of the crowd...
You don't beat the champ by sticking your head out the ropes twice...
Here's what a prime Ali did to a great "classical" boxer:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kfII9Smfq70
Does this even look like the same man?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cQ07gp2ZFOE
Here's what Folley said about Ali:
"...There's no way to train yourself for what he does. The moves the speed, the punches, and the way he changes style every time you have him figured. The right hands Ali hit me just had no business landing but they did. They came from nowhere. Many times he was in the wrong position but he hit me anyway. I've never seen anybody who could do that. The knockdown punch was so fast I never saw it. He has lots of snaps, and when the punches land they dizzy your head.; they fuzz up your mind. He's smart. The trickiest fighter I have ever seen. He's had twenty nine fights and acts like had one hundred. He could write the book on boxing , and anyone that fights him should be made to read it."
He even consoled Folley's son who was crying at ringside...Another boxer who died tragically under suspicious conditions...yancey wrote:Folley was someone that Ali treated very well. He was definitely past prime when he met Ali, and had been screwed out of deserved title shots. Ali got him a nice payday, they respected each other, and Folley was able to go back to Arizona and buy a house.TheOneIsHere2008 wrote:First off, Joe would have been a great champ with a long reign in almost any era...His challenge to Ali and the way Ali met that challenge is what defined him...BoxBuzz wrote:Well to claim the above scenario brings Ali's stock back up....and I was reticent to do that in a public forum and risk the wrath of "con".
Jimmy Young lost a unanimous decision to a thirty four year old , 230 pound Muhammad Ali, who was so contemptuos of him that he literally layed on the ropes and wiggled his ample buttocks to the delight of the crowd...
You don't beat the champ by sticking your head out the ropes twice...
Here's what a prime Ali did to a great "classical" boxer:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kfII9Smfq70
Does this even look like the same man?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cQ07gp2ZFOE
Here's what Folley said about Ali:
"...There's no way to train yourself for what he does. The moves the speed, the punches, and the way he changes style every time you have him figured. The right hands Ali hit me just had no business landing but they did. They came from nowhere. Many times he was in the wrong position but he hit me anyway. I've never seen anybody who could do that. The knockdown punch was so fast I never saw it. He has lots of snaps, and when the punches land they dizzy your head.; they fuzz up your mind. He's smart. The trickiest fighter I have ever seen. He's had twenty nine fights and acts like had one hundred. He could write the book on boxing , and anyone that fights him should be made to read it."
p.s. That fight was nationally televised, and I've always suspected Ali carried him a bit, in order not to embarass Folley.
Surprised to see you thinking it goes the distance, but maybe you are right.Robinson wrote:This makes for a good match up prime for prime.
I think Frazier wears into Young, though hard to catch
for a head hunter, Frazier's body assaults takes away
Young's movement and guile.
I do not see Frazier stopping Young, but I do see good
exchanges and a pretty competitive match. Frazier wins
a good decision.
The slick moves can only take you so far when the other guy does not feel your punches- see Frazier-Ellis, Shavers -Young ...Cooney-Young...yancey wrote:Surprised to see you thinking it goes the distance, but maybe you are right.Robinson wrote:This makes for a good match up prime for prime.
I think Frazier wears into Young, though hard to catch
for a head hunter, Frazier's body assaults takes away
Young's movement and guile.
I do not see Frazier stopping Young, but I do see good
exchanges and a pretty competitive match. Frazier wins
a good decision.
I just see Frazier forcing Young to defend and fight at a pace he is not used to, and breaking him down and overwhelming him inside 8. The slick moves can only take you so far if you have a relentless swarmer hunting you down and not much firepower to hold him off.
TheOneIsHere2008 wrote:The slick moves can only take you so far when the other guy does not feel your punches- see Frazier-Ellis, Shavers -Young ...Cooney-Young...yancey wrote:Surprised to see you thinking it goes the distance, but maybe you are right.Robinson wrote:This makes for a good match up prime for prime.
I think Frazier wears into Young, though hard to catch
for a head hunter, Frazier's body assaults takes away
Young's movement and guile.
I do not see Frazier stopping Young, but I do see good
exchanges and a pretty competitive match. Frazier wins
a good decision.
I just see Frazier forcing Young to defend and fight at a pace he is not used to, and breaking him down and overwhelming him inside 8. The slick moves can only take you so far if you have a relentless swarmer hunting you down and not much firepower to hold him off.
Just because he lost a controversial decision to an old, fat Muhammad Ali and edged a scattered
George Foreman does not mean he beats a Prime Joe Frazier...Look at his record...Watch some of his fights...Hector Cammacho hits harder ...
Agree 100% with your opinion of '68-'71 Frazier.elmersalsa wrote:Not many fighters or heavyweights would have beaten the great Joe Frazier of the Quarry I, Ellis I and the fight of the century with Ali. He was a devastating fighter. What a left hook.
Joe Frazier, circa 1968-71, was as great as it gets.
Frazier by KO in 8 rounds.
Jimmy Young certainly was a better boxer than Ali.Collins2000 wrote: In the fictional universe inhabited by granberry and elmo, Jimmy Young was 'the greatest boxer of his era'.
granberry wrote:Jimmy Young certainly was a better boxer than Ali.Collins2000 wrote: In the fictional universe inhabited by granberry and elmo, Jimmy Young was 'the greatest boxer of his era'.
Jimmy Young made an ass out of Ali for 15 rounds.
Ali didn't have a clue how to fight Young.
Angelo Dundee said after the fight of Ali, "He never looked so bad."
Ferdie Pacheco said, "Jimmy Young was fighting a legend, and he did very, very well."
That is why Young is so hated by the members of the Religion of Ali.
He made an ass out of Ali.
Young and Frazier sparred a lot when they were young. And Harold Johnson sparred a lot with the two of them.yancey wrote:Granberry,
Any thoughts on how Jimmy would have fared against Frazier?
granberry wrote:Harold Johnson said, "Jimmy Young beat Clay."
But what does he know about boxing.
LOL