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  • MiketheSnowM Offline
    MiketheSnowM Offline
    MiketheSnow
    replied to kiwiinmelb on last edited by
    #1000

    @kiwiinmelb said in Boxing Thread:

    @MiketheSnow respect where it’s due for AJ taking this ,

    I mean you would think after the consecutive losses the thing to do would be to take a couple of easy fights to get the confidence back ,

    Kind of surprised it’s happening, but rapt it is

    Nothing to lose

    No brainer

    Nobody is expecting him to win after two consecutive losses

    And he has the built in excuse of not enough time between fighting Usyk and then Fury

    Fury is taking a massive risk

    But he obviously smells blood in the water

    kiwiinmelbK CrucialC 2 Replies Last reply
    2
  • kiwiinmelbK Offline
    kiwiinmelbK Offline
    kiwiinmelb
    replied to MiketheSnow on last edited by
    #1001

    @MiketheSnow said in Boxing Thread:

    @kiwiinmelb said in Boxing Thread:

    @MiketheSnow respect where it’s due for AJ taking this ,

    I mean you would think after the consecutive losses the thing to do would be to take a couple of easy fights to get the confidence back ,

    Kind of surprised it’s happening, but rapt it is

    Nothing to lose

    No brainer

    Nobody is expecting him to win after two consecutive losses

    And he has the built in excuse of not enough time between fighting Usyk and then Fury

    Fury is taking a massive risk

    But he obviously smells blood in the water

    I guess it’s make or break , and the pressure comes off a bit compared to the last usyk fight , if he loses I think that’s 4 losses in 5 fights though off the top of my head ,

    I’m expecting Tyson to win but does have a bit of a banana skin feel about it with the unification fight with usyk just around the corner

    1 Reply Last reply
    1
  • CrucialC Offline
    CrucialC Offline
    Crucial
    replied to MiketheSnow on last edited by
    #1002

    @MiketheSnow said in Boxing Thread:

    @kiwiinmelb said in Boxing Thread:

    @MiketheSnow respect where it’s due for AJ taking this ,

    I mean you would think after the consecutive losses the thing to do would be to take a couple of easy fights to get the confidence back ,

    Kind of surprised it’s happening, but rapt it is

    Nothing to lose

    No brainer

    Nobody is expecting him to win after two consecutive losses

    And he has the built in excuse of not enough time between fighting Usyk and then Fury

    Fury is taking a massive risk

    But he obviously smells blood in the water

    Or AJ is facing up to the realisation of his ceiling and is taking what he can with a chance. It's kind of all or nothing for him. He won't want to be a gateway fighter (and is too good for that anyway) so if he can't be at the very top then that's it.
    If you are at JPs level you get to hover in the zone of paydays and challenges for a while as others are willing to fight you.

    MN5M 1 Reply Last reply
    1
  • MN5M Online
    MN5M Online
    MN5
    replied to kiwiinmelb on last edited by
    #1003

    @kiwiinmelb said in Boxing Thread:

    @MN5 said in Boxing Thread:

    @kiwiinmelb said in Boxing Thread:

    @MN5 said in Boxing Thread:

    @Windows97 said in Boxing Thread:

    One of my fondest childhood sporting memories and possibly one of the best all-time was the Riddick Bowe Andrew Golota II fight.

    The grudge match rematch of epic proportions.

    Come a few rounds in and it had descended into a mythical brawl the likes of which I've never seen. All technique, professionalism, maybe even higher brain function and basic humanity had deserted both men.

    Two punch drunk fighters stumbling around the ring like a pair of drunks with their shoelaces tied together throwing haymakers at each other like they had 20kg dumb bells in their hands instead of boxing gloves.

    Me and the old man were watching it laughing uproariously, it started as a professional boxing bout and went south at incredible speed into two men staggering around the ring throwing enormous hay makers at each other. I've never seen anything so funny in professional sport, even after all these years it brings tears of mirth to my eye's recalling the event.

    Bowe won, how he remained standing I don't know, he took some incredible hits. I don't think he actually fought high profile after that again, pretty sure that fight ended his career, a few days on his speech was still slurred after the fight.

    Golota went on to fight and lose badly to Lennox Lewis, I think the Bowe fight ended him as well.

    Ahh the fond memories, boxing certainly is a sport like no other.

    Big Daddy Bowe was a tremendous fighter. Incredible record, just the one loss and that was to Evander Holyfield who he beat twice as well.

    Not rated too highly in the annals of boxing history, then again it could be argued he didn’t fight many names…….

    Never fought Lewis which was a shame, that would have been incredible and I think he might have had the goods to beat Tyson if they fought as well.

    Andrew Golota had the talent to be a legend but was completely fucked in the head. There was some controversy over how he quit vs Tyson but apparently he was badly injured and hadn’t recovered ?

    They say that is one fight Tyson didn’t want , they went to school together and they say bowe was the biggest toughest kid around when they were growing up ,

    Not sure if it was psychological or just out of respect through being school friends, but it’s the one fight he didn’t want to happen .

    ….and that’s the beauty of it isn’t it ?

    Tyson looked more formidable than ANYONE when on form and demolishing guys….but against someone bigger and not afraid the tables often got turned.

    Lots of experts reckon Bowe would have done a Lewis on him even at their respective bests.

    Not to mention that Tyson never once got up to win after being knocked down and his resume lacked beating really top flight fighters at their best ( like Bowe I guess )

    > I believe there is no such thing as an unbeatable fighter , even if some do make it through undefeated

    All can and usually do at some point meet their own personal type of fighter that can make life awkward for them ,

    Even Ali , who we like to think of as the greatest , lost fights . Frazier and Norton were not great match ups for him , he beat them and took losses, but he got hit and hit hard in the process , which is something we didn’t normally associate with him due to his elite defence ,

    Tyson was a fucken machine at his best , but still had his moments where he looked vulnerable , particularly in the second half of fights if he didn’t get the early stoppage

    Definitely. I think Liston or Foreman would have destroyed Marciano if they fought ( Joe Frazier principle )

    Ali fought EVERYONE though and even not at his best usually got the job done. I believe overall he was the greatest.

    kiwiinmelbK 1 Reply Last reply
    1
  • MN5M Online
    MN5M Online
    MN5
    replied to Crucial on last edited by
    #1004

    @Crucial said in Boxing Thread:

    @MiketheSnow said in Boxing Thread:

    @kiwiinmelb said in Boxing Thread:

    @MiketheSnow respect where it’s due for AJ taking this ,

    I mean you would think after the consecutive losses the thing to do would be to take a couple of easy fights to get the confidence back ,

    Kind of surprised it’s happening, but rapt it is

    Nothing to lose

    No brainer

    Nobody is expecting him to win after two consecutive losses

    And he has the built in excuse of not enough time between fighting Usyk and then Fury

    Fury is taking a massive risk

    But he obviously smells blood in the water

    Or AJ is facing up to the realisation of his ceiling and is taking what he can with a chance. It's kind of all or nothing for him. He won't want to be a gateway fighter (and is too good for that anyway) so if he can't be at the very top then that's it.
    If you are at JPs level you get to hover in the zone of paydays and challenges for a while as others are willing to fight you.

    He has hit his ceiling. His upcoming fight will be very interesting

    CrucialC 1 Reply Last reply
    1
  • kiwiinmelbK Offline
    kiwiinmelbK Offline
    kiwiinmelb
    replied to MN5 on last edited by
    #1005

    @MN5 said in Boxing Thread:

    @kiwiinmelb said in Boxing Thread:

    @MN5 said in Boxing Thread:

    @kiwiinmelb said in Boxing Thread:

    @MN5 said in Boxing Thread:

    @Windows97 said in Boxing Thread:

    One of my fondest childhood sporting memories and possibly one of the best all-time was the Riddick Bowe Andrew Golota II fight.

    The grudge match rematch of epic proportions.

    Come a few rounds in and it had descended into a mythical brawl the likes of which I've never seen. All technique, professionalism, maybe even higher brain function and basic humanity had deserted both men.

    Two punch drunk fighters stumbling around the ring like a pair of drunks with their shoelaces tied together throwing haymakers at each other like they had 20kg dumb bells in their hands instead of boxing gloves.

    Me and the old man were watching it laughing uproariously, it started as a professional boxing bout and went south at incredible speed into two men staggering around the ring throwing enormous hay makers at each other. I've never seen anything so funny in professional sport, even after all these years it brings tears of mirth to my eye's recalling the event.

    Bowe won, how he remained standing I don't know, he took some incredible hits. I don't think he actually fought high profile after that again, pretty sure that fight ended his career, a few days on his speech was still slurred after the fight.

    Golota went on to fight and lose badly to Lennox Lewis, I think the Bowe fight ended him as well.

    Ahh the fond memories, boxing certainly is a sport like no other.

    Big Daddy Bowe was a tremendous fighter. Incredible record, just the one loss and that was to Evander Holyfield who he beat twice as well.

    Not rated too highly in the annals of boxing history, then again it could be argued he didn’t fight many names…….

    Never fought Lewis which was a shame, that would have been incredible and I think he might have had the goods to beat Tyson if they fought as well.

    Andrew Golota had the talent to be a legend but was completely fucked in the head. There was some controversy over how he quit vs Tyson but apparently he was badly injured and hadn’t recovered ?

    They say that is one fight Tyson didn’t want , they went to school together and they say bowe was the biggest toughest kid around when they were growing up ,

    Not sure if it was psychological or just out of respect through being school friends, but it’s the one fight he didn’t want to happen .

    ….and that’s the beauty of it isn’t it ?

    Tyson looked more formidable than ANYONE when on form and demolishing guys….but against someone bigger and not afraid the tables often got turned.

    Lots of experts reckon Bowe would have done a Lewis on him even at their respective bests.

    Not to mention that Tyson never once got up to win after being knocked down and his resume lacked beating really top flight fighters at their best ( like Bowe I guess )

    > I believe there is no such thing as an unbeatable fighter , even if some do make it through undefeated

    All can and usually do at some point meet their own personal type of fighter that can make life awkward for them ,

    Even Ali , who we like to think of as the greatest , lost fights . Frazier and Norton were not great match ups for him , he beat them and took losses, but he got hit and hit hard in the process , which is something we didn’t normally associate with him due to his elite defence ,

    Tyson was a fucken machine at his best , but still had his moments where he looked vulnerable , particularly in the second half of fights if he didn’t get the early stoppage

    Definitely. I think Liston or Foreman would have destroyed Marciano if they fought ( Joe Frazier principle )

    Ali fought EVERYONE though and even not at his best usually got the job done. I believe overall he was the greatest.

    I believe he was too and I wasn’t intending to put him down , but more emphasis there are styles that can trouble different fighters ,

    And going back over what I said , Frazier and Norton stylistically gave him some issues, both had some success , then foreman absolutely demolishes those two ,

    Everyone is predicting foreman to destroy Ali based on those fights , then we know what happens next , it’s not always that straight forward

    In the current era many knowledgeable people are saying usyk s continuous movement and southpaw stance may cause fury big problems

    MN5M 1 Reply Last reply
    0
  • MN5M Online
    MN5M Online
    MN5
    replied to kiwiinmelb on last edited by MN5
    #1006

    @kiwiinmelb said in Boxing Thread:

    @MN5 said in Boxing Thread:

    @kiwiinmelb said in Boxing Thread:

    @MN5 said in Boxing Thread:

    @kiwiinmelb said in Boxing Thread:

    @MN5 said in Boxing Thread:

    @Windows97 said in Boxing Thread:

    One of my fondest childhood sporting memories and possibly one of the best all-time was the Riddick Bowe Andrew Golota II fight.

    The grudge match rematch of epic proportions.

    Come a few rounds in and it had descended into a mythical brawl the likes of which I've never seen. All technique, professionalism, maybe even higher brain function and basic humanity had deserted both men.

    Two punch drunk fighters stumbling around the ring like a pair of drunks with their shoelaces tied together throwing haymakers at each other like they had 20kg dumb bells in their hands instead of boxing gloves.

    Me and the old man were watching it laughing uproariously, it started as a professional boxing bout and went south at incredible speed into two men staggering around the ring throwing enormous hay makers at each other. I've never seen anything so funny in professional sport, even after all these years it brings tears of mirth to my eye's recalling the event.

    Bowe won, how he remained standing I don't know, he took some incredible hits. I don't think he actually fought high profile after that again, pretty sure that fight ended his career, a few days on his speech was still slurred after the fight.

    Golota went on to fight and lose badly to Lennox Lewis, I think the Bowe fight ended him as well.

    Ahh the fond memories, boxing certainly is a sport like no other.

    Big Daddy Bowe was a tremendous fighter. Incredible record, just the one loss and that was to Evander Holyfield who he beat twice as well.

    Not rated too highly in the annals of boxing history, then again it could be argued he didn’t fight many names…….

    Never fought Lewis which was a shame, that would have been incredible and I think he might have had the goods to beat Tyson if they fought as well.

    Andrew Golota had the talent to be a legend but was completely fucked in the head. There was some controversy over how he quit vs Tyson but apparently he was badly injured and hadn’t recovered ?

    They say that is one fight Tyson didn’t want , they went to school together and they say bowe was the biggest toughest kid around when they were growing up ,

    Not sure if it was psychological or just out of respect through being school friends, but it’s the one fight he didn’t want to happen .

    ….and that’s the beauty of it isn’t it ?

    Tyson looked more formidable than ANYONE when on form and demolishing guys….but against someone bigger and not afraid the tables often got turned.

    Lots of experts reckon Bowe would have done a Lewis on him even at their respective bests.

    Not to mention that Tyson never once got up to win after being knocked down and his resume lacked beating really top flight fighters at their best ( like Bowe I guess )

    > I believe there is no such thing as an unbeatable fighter , even if some do make it through undefeated

    All can and usually do at some point meet their own personal type of fighter that can make life awkward for them ,

    Even Ali , who we like to think of as the greatest , lost fights . Frazier and Norton were not great match ups for him , he beat them and took losses, but he got hit and hit hard in the process , which is something we didn’t normally associate with him due to his elite defence ,

    Tyson was a fucken machine at his best , but still had his moments where he looked vulnerable , particularly in the second half of fights if he didn’t get the early stoppage

    Definitely. I think Liston or Foreman would have destroyed Marciano if they fought ( Joe Frazier principle )

    Ali fought EVERYONE though and even not at his best usually got the job done. I believe overall he was the greatest.

    I believe he was too and I wasn’t intending to put him down , but more emphasis there are styles that can trouble different fighters ,

    And going back over what I said , Frazier and Norton stylistically gave him some issues, both had some success , then foreman absolutely demolishes those two ,

    Everyone is predicting foreman to destroy Ali based on those fights , then we know what happens next , it’s not always that straight forward

    In the current era many knowledgeable people are saying usyk s continuous movement and southpaw stance may cause fury big problems

    Norton is a tough one to rate. Gave Ali absolute fits with his style…….but George Foreman, Earnie Shavers and Gerry Cooney punched him out relatively easily ( could be argued he was past it by the time he fought Cooney )

    Then again Ali couldn’t knock out Norton in 45 rounds but knocked out Liston in one which to me confirms he took a dive…..

    I personally can’t see Usyk causing Fury any issues as he’ll use his bulk to nullify any forward momentum but I could be completely wrong.

    kiwiinmelbK 1 Reply Last reply
    1
  • kiwiinmelbK Offline
    kiwiinmelbK Offline
    kiwiinmelb
    replied to MN5 on last edited by
    #1007

    @MN5 said in Boxing Thread:

    @kiwiinmelb said in Boxing Thread:

    @MN5 said in Boxing Thread:

    @kiwiinmelb said in Boxing Thread:

    @MN5 said in Boxing Thread:

    @kiwiinmelb said in Boxing Thread:

    @MN5 said in Boxing Thread:

    @Windows97 said in Boxing Thread:

    One of my fondest childhood sporting memories and possibly one of the best all-time was the Riddick Bowe Andrew Golota II fight.

    The grudge match rematch of epic proportions.

    Come a few rounds in and it had descended into a mythical brawl the likes of which I've never seen. All technique, professionalism, maybe even higher brain function and basic humanity had deserted both men.

    Two punch drunk fighters stumbling around the ring like a pair of drunks with their shoelaces tied together throwing haymakers at each other like they had 20kg dumb bells in their hands instead of boxing gloves.

    Me and the old man were watching it laughing uproariously, it started as a professional boxing bout and went south at incredible speed into two men staggering around the ring throwing enormous hay makers at each other. I've never seen anything so funny in professional sport, even after all these years it brings tears of mirth to my eye's recalling the event.

    Bowe won, how he remained standing I don't know, he took some incredible hits. I don't think he actually fought high profile after that again, pretty sure that fight ended his career, a few days on his speech was still slurred after the fight.

    Golota went on to fight and lose badly to Lennox Lewis, I think the Bowe fight ended him as well.

    Ahh the fond memories, boxing certainly is a sport like no other.

    Big Daddy Bowe was a tremendous fighter. Incredible record, just the one loss and that was to Evander Holyfield who he beat twice as well.

    Not rated too highly in the annals of boxing history, then again it could be argued he didn’t fight many names…….

    Never fought Lewis which was a shame, that would have been incredible and I think he might have had the goods to beat Tyson if they fought as well.

    Andrew Golota had the talent to be a legend but was completely fucked in the head. There was some controversy over how he quit vs Tyson but apparently he was badly injured and hadn’t recovered ?

    They say that is one fight Tyson didn’t want , they went to school together and they say bowe was the biggest toughest kid around when they were growing up ,

    Not sure if it was psychological or just out of respect through being school friends, but it’s the one fight he didn’t want to happen .

    ….and that’s the beauty of it isn’t it ?

    Tyson looked more formidable than ANYONE when on form and demolishing guys….but against someone bigger and not afraid the tables often got turned.

    Lots of experts reckon Bowe would have done a Lewis on him even at their respective bests.

    Not to mention that Tyson never once got up to win after being knocked down and his resume lacked beating really top flight fighters at their best ( like Bowe I guess )

    > I believe there is no such thing as an unbeatable fighter , even if some do make it through undefeated

    All can and usually do at some point meet their own personal type of fighter that can make life awkward for them ,

    Even Ali , who we like to think of as the greatest , lost fights . Frazier and Norton were not great match ups for him , he beat them and took losses, but he got hit and hit hard in the process , which is something we didn’t normally associate with him due to his elite defence ,

    Tyson was a fucken machine at his best , but still had his moments where he looked vulnerable , particularly in the second half of fights if he didn’t get the early stoppage

    Definitely. I think Liston or Foreman would have destroyed Marciano if they fought ( Joe Frazier principle )

    Ali fought EVERYONE though and even not at his best usually got the job done. I believe overall he was the greatest.

    I believe he was too and I wasn’t intending to put him down , but more emphasis there are styles that can trouble different fighters ,

    And going back over what I said , Frazier and Norton stylistically gave him some issues, both had some success , then foreman absolutely demolishes those two ,

    Everyone is predicting foreman to destroy Ali based on those fights , then we know what happens next , it’s not always that straight forward

    In the current era many knowledgeable people are saying usyk s continuous movement and southpaw stance may cause fury big problems

    Norton is a tough one to rate. Gave Ali absolute fits with his style…….but George Foreman, Earnie Shavers and Gerry Cooney punched him out relatively easily ( could be argued he was past it by the time he fought Cooney )

    Then again Ali couldn’t knock out Norton in 45 rounds but knocked out Liston in one which to me confirms he took a dive…..

    I personally can’t see Usyk causing Fury any issues as he’ll use his bulk to nullify any forward momentum but I could be completely wrong.

    I think alot are basing it on a cruiserweight with movement Cunningham giving him issues , and Usyk is better than Cunnigham , but its worth noting Fury ran him over in the end anyway ,

    @African-Monkey is a big Usyk fan , and he thinks Usyk will win

    A 1 Reply Last reply
    2
  • CrucialC Offline
    CrucialC Offline
    Crucial
    replied to MN5 on last edited by
    #1008

    @MN5 said in Boxing Thread:

    @Crucial said in Boxing Thread:

    @MiketheSnow said in Boxing Thread:

    @kiwiinmelb said in Boxing Thread:

    @MiketheSnow respect where it’s due for AJ taking this ,

    I mean you would think after the consecutive losses the thing to do would be to take a couple of easy fights to get the confidence back ,

    Kind of surprised it’s happening, but rapt it is

    Nothing to lose

    No brainer

    Nobody is expecting him to win after two consecutive losses

    And he has the built in excuse of not enough time between fighting Usyk and then Fury

    Fury is taking a massive risk

    But he obviously smells blood in the water

    Or AJ is facing up to the realisation of his ceiling and is taking what he can with a chance. It's kind of all or nothing for him. He won't want to be a gateway fighter (and is too good for that anyway) so if he can't be at the very top then that's it.
    If you are at JPs level you get to hover in the zone of paydays and challenges for a while as others are willing to fight you.

    He has hit his ceiling. His upcoming fight will be very interesting

    I agree. He could still get lucky but he's never going to hold the top position for long. My point was more that he can clock up fights as the guy that you prove your worth against. He's no bum and has shown an ability to mix it. If you want a crack at the top see if you can show out against someone like JP first. That's where his paydays are.

    kiwiinmelbK 1 Reply Last reply
    0
  • kiwiinmelbK Offline
    kiwiinmelbK Offline
    kiwiinmelb
    replied to Crucial on last edited by
    #1009

    @Crucial said in Boxing Thread:

    @MN5 said in Boxing Thread:

    @Crucial said in Boxing Thread:

    @MiketheSnow said in Boxing Thread:

    @kiwiinmelb said in Boxing Thread:

    @MiketheSnow respect where it’s due for AJ taking this ,

    I mean you would think after the consecutive losses the thing to do would be to take a couple of easy fights to get the confidence back ,

    Kind of surprised it’s happening, but rapt it is

    Nothing to lose

    No brainer

    Nobody is expecting him to win after two consecutive losses

    And he has the built in excuse of not enough time between fighting Usyk and then Fury

    Fury is taking a massive risk

    But he obviously smells blood in the water

    Or AJ is facing up to the realisation of his ceiling and is taking what he can with a chance. It's kind of all or nothing for him. He won't want to be a gateway fighter (and is too good for that anyway) so if he can't be at the very top then that's it.
    If you are at JPs level you get to hover in the zone of paydays and challenges for a while as others are willing to fight you.

    He has hit his ceiling. His upcoming fight will be very interesting

    I agree. He could still get lucky but he's never going to hold the top position for long. My point was more that he can clock up fights as the guy that you prove your worth against. He's no bum and has shown an ability to mix it. If you want a crack at the top see if you can show out against someone like JP first. That's where his paydays are.

    I feel a lot more optimistic with Joe now , not so much with saying he will scale the mountain , but more fighting at his true potential , he has good people around him ,

    I watched this interview with Andy the other day , he is in better hands now than when he was with Barry

    he has a big fight with Joyce next weekend for the mandatory position , that is a big challenge , Joyce is a tough bastard, probably a crossroads fight in a lot of ways

    with being good mates with Tyson , and Andy Lee Tysons cousin , I think their plan would be to hover around , keep improving , and have one last crack when Tyson retires , and usyk is 35 , its worth noting Joe is only 30 and does have time on his hands .

    CrucialC 1 Reply Last reply
    1
  • Rancid SchnitzelR Offline
    Rancid SchnitzelR Offline
    Rancid Schnitzel
    replied to MN5 on last edited by
    #1010

    @MN5 said in Boxing Thread:

    @kiwiinmelb said in Boxing Thread:

    @MN5 said in Boxing Thread:

    @Windows97 said in Boxing Thread:

    One of my fondest childhood sporting memories and possibly one of the best all-time was the Riddick Bowe Andrew Golota II fight.

    The grudge match rematch of epic proportions.

    Come a few rounds in and it had descended into a mythical brawl the likes of which I've never seen. All technique, professionalism, maybe even higher brain function and basic humanity had deserted both men.

    Two punch drunk fighters stumbling around the ring like a pair of drunks with their shoelaces tied together throwing haymakers at each other like they had 20kg dumb bells in their hands instead of boxing gloves.

    Me and the old man were watching it laughing uproariously, it started as a professional boxing bout and went south at incredible speed into two men staggering around the ring throwing enormous hay makers at each other. I've never seen anything so funny in professional sport, even after all these years it brings tears of mirth to my eye's recalling the event.

    Bowe won, how he remained standing I don't know, he took some incredible hits. I don't think he actually fought high profile after that again, pretty sure that fight ended his career, a few days on his speech was still slurred after the fight.

    Golota went on to fight and lose badly to Lennox Lewis, I think the Bowe fight ended him as well.

    Ahh the fond memories, boxing certainly is a sport like no other.

    Big Daddy Bowe was a tremendous fighter. Incredible record, just the one loss and that was to Evander Holyfield who he beat twice as well.

    Not rated too highly in the annals of boxing history, then again it could be argued he didn’t fight many names…….

    Never fought Lewis which was a shame, that would have been incredible and I think he might have had the goods to beat Tyson if they fought as well.

    Andrew Golota had the talent to be a legend but was completely fucked in the head. There was some controversy over how he quit vs Tyson but apparently he was badly injured and hadn’t recovered ?

    They say that is one fight Tyson didn’t want , they went to school together and they say bowe was the biggest toughest kid around when they were growing up ,

    Not sure if it was psychological or just out of respect through being school friends, but it’s the one fight he didn’t want to happen .

    ….and that’s the beauty of it isn’t it ?

    Tyson looked more formidable than ANYONE when on form and demolishing guys….but against someone bigger and not afraid the tables often got turned.

    Lots of experts reckon Bowe would have done a Lewis on him even at their respective bests.

    Not to mention that Tyson never once got up to win after being knocked down and his resume lacked beating really top flight fighters at their best ( like Bowe I guess )

    The thing is that 20 year old champion Tyson was based on speed, skill and punching power. He wasn't tall and most people he fought had greater reach. Cus even gave him shit for being too short for a heavyweight. Once he stopped giving a shit, stopped moving and just went for the knock out he was always going to come unstuck against an opponent who wasn't scared and had the ability to survive those early rounds. I put fit, motivated and Rooney trained Tyson up there with anyone. He was a straight out freak. It's a shame that we never really saw peak form Tyson. He was either snorting coke or in prison snorting coke.

    MN5M 1 Reply Last reply
    1
  • CrucialC Offline
    CrucialC Offline
    Crucial
    replied to kiwiinmelb on last edited by
    #1011

    @kiwiinmelb said in Boxing Thread:

    @Crucial said in Boxing Thread:

    @MN5 said in Boxing Thread:

    @Crucial said in Boxing Thread:

    @MiketheSnow said in Boxing Thread:

    @kiwiinmelb said in Boxing Thread:

    @MiketheSnow respect where it’s due for AJ taking this ,

    I mean you would think after the consecutive losses the thing to do would be to take a couple of easy fights to get the confidence back ,

    Kind of surprised it’s happening, but rapt it is

    Nothing to lose

    No brainer

    Nobody is expecting him to win after two consecutive losses

    And he has the built in excuse of not enough time between fighting Usyk and then Fury

    Fury is taking a massive risk

    But he obviously smells blood in the water

    Or AJ is facing up to the realisation of his ceiling and is taking what he can with a chance. It's kind of all or nothing for him. He won't want to be a gateway fighter (and is too good for that anyway) so if he can't be at the very top then that's it.
    If you are at JPs level you get to hover in the zone of paydays and challenges for a while as others are willing to fight you.

    He has hit his ceiling. His upcoming fight will be very interesting

    I agree. He could still get lucky but he's never going to hold the top position for long. My point was more that he can clock up fights as the guy that you prove your worth against. He's no bum and has shown an ability to mix it. If you want a crack at the top see if you can show out against someone like JP first. That's where his paydays are.

    I feel a lot more optimistic with Joe now , not so much with saying he will scale the mountain , but more fighting at his true potential , he has good people around him ,

    I watched this interview with Andy the other day , he is in better hands now than when he was with Barry

    he has a big fight with Joyce next weekend for the mandatory position , that is a big challenge , Joyce is a tough bastard, probably a crossroads fight in a lot of ways

    with being good mates with Tyson , and Andy Lee Tysons cousin , I think their plan would be to hover around , keep improving , and have one last crack when Tyson retires , and usyk is 35 , its worth noting Joe is only 30 and does have time on his hands .

    Interesting comments about Joyce in that clip.
    I watched his fight against Takam and could see exactly what Andy Lee meant. Joyce is quite slow and unco and relies on being able to take punches. Takam was hitting him easily when he used hand speed but wasn't doing it enough.

    kiwiinmelbK 1 Reply Last reply
    0
  • MN5M Online
    MN5M Online
    MN5
    replied to Rancid Schnitzel on last edited by
    #1012

    @Rancid-Schnitzel said in Boxing Thread:

    @MN5 said in Boxing Thread:

    @kiwiinmelb said in Boxing Thread:

    @MN5 said in Boxing Thread:

    @Windows97 said in Boxing Thread:

    One of my fondest childhood sporting memories and possibly one of the best all-time was the Riddick Bowe Andrew Golota II fight.

    The grudge match rematch of epic proportions.

    Come a few rounds in and it had descended into a mythical brawl the likes of which I've never seen. All technique, professionalism, maybe even higher brain function and basic humanity had deserted both men.

    Two punch drunk fighters stumbling around the ring like a pair of drunks with their shoelaces tied together throwing haymakers at each other like they had 20kg dumb bells in their hands instead of boxing gloves.

    Me and the old man were watching it laughing uproariously, it started as a professional boxing bout and went south at incredible speed into two men staggering around the ring throwing enormous hay makers at each other. I've never seen anything so funny in professional sport, even after all these years it brings tears of mirth to my eye's recalling the event.

    Bowe won, how he remained standing I don't know, he took some incredible hits. I don't think he actually fought high profile after that again, pretty sure that fight ended his career, a few days on his speech was still slurred after the fight.

    Golota went on to fight and lose badly to Lennox Lewis, I think the Bowe fight ended him as well.

    Ahh the fond memories, boxing certainly is a sport like no other.

    Big Daddy Bowe was a tremendous fighter. Incredible record, just the one loss and that was to Evander Holyfield who he beat twice as well.

    Not rated too highly in the annals of boxing history, then again it could be argued he didn’t fight many names…….

    Never fought Lewis which was a shame, that would have been incredible and I think he might have had the goods to beat Tyson if they fought as well.

    Andrew Golota had the talent to be a legend but was completely fucked in the head. There was some controversy over how he quit vs Tyson but apparently he was badly injured and hadn’t recovered ?

    They say that is one fight Tyson didn’t want , they went to school together and they say bowe was the biggest toughest kid around when they were growing up ,

    Not sure if it was psychological or just out of respect through being school friends, but it’s the one fight he didn’t want to happen .

    ….and that’s the beauty of it isn’t it ?

    Tyson looked more formidable than ANYONE when on form and demolishing guys….but against someone bigger and not afraid the tables often got turned.

    Lots of experts reckon Bowe would have done a Lewis on him even at their respective bests.

    Not to mention that Tyson never once got up to win after being knocked down and his resume lacked beating really top flight fighters at their best ( like Bowe I guess )

    The thing is that 20 year old champion Tyson was based on speed, skill and punching power. He wasn't tall and most people he fought had greater reach. Cus even gave him shit for being too short for a heavyweight. Once he stopped giving a shit, stopped moving and just went for the knock out he was always going to come unstuck against an opponent who wasn't scared and had the ability to survive those early rounds. I put fit, motivated and Rooney trained Tyson up there with anyone. He was a straight out freak. It's a shame that we never really saw peak form Tyson. He was either snorting coke or in prison snorting coke.

    Tyson is undoubtedly compelling. At his best ( which actually wasn’t a long period ) that combo as you say of speed, power, aggression and skill was just breathtaking…..and of course he had that “fear” factor…..guys like Marvin Frazier and Michael Spinks were beaten before the bell even rung….and what an absolutely fascinating human being, I’d love to have a yarn with him over a cup of herbal tea ( I don’t think he allows himself anything stronger nowadays )

    BUT ( and maybe I’ve read too much about boxing ) there is a school of thought that even at his very best he wasn’t unbeatable. There’s a great article which I’ll try and find which states that ( in order of their reigns ) Sonny Liston, Muhammad Ali, Joe Frazier, George Foreman, Larry Holmes and Lennox Lewis would have beaten him. Liston was huge, mean, powerful, skilled…..Ali I don’t need to mention…..Frazier was the closest to Tyson but a Pit Bull who NEVER gave up…..Foreman was a slightly inferior Liston ( Jesus what a terrifying thought )…..Holmes had the best jab ever and Lewis was a cautious but masterful boxer with power.

    Again, just one guys opinion and when I see footage of Tyson at his best fucking guys shit up I find it hard to believe but worthy of a discussion all the same.

    Rancid SchnitzelR 1 Reply Last reply
    2
  • Rancid SchnitzelR Offline
    Rancid SchnitzelR Offline
    Rancid Schnitzel
    replied to MN5 on last edited by
    #1013

    @MN5 said in Boxing Thread:

    @Rancid-Schnitzel said in Boxing Thread:

    @MN5 said in Boxing Thread:

    @kiwiinmelb said in Boxing Thread:

    @MN5 said in Boxing Thread:

    @Windows97 said in Boxing Thread:

    One of my fondest childhood sporting memories and possibly one of the best all-time was the Riddick Bowe Andrew Golota II fight.

    The grudge match rematch of epic proportions.

    Come a few rounds in and it had descended into a mythical brawl the likes of which I've never seen. All technique, professionalism, maybe even higher brain function and basic humanity had deserted both men.

    Two punch drunk fighters stumbling around the ring like a pair of drunks with their shoelaces tied together throwing haymakers at each other like they had 20kg dumb bells in their hands instead of boxing gloves.

    Me and the old man were watching it laughing uproariously, it started as a professional boxing bout and went south at incredible speed into two men staggering around the ring throwing enormous hay makers at each other. I've never seen anything so funny in professional sport, even after all these years it brings tears of mirth to my eye's recalling the event.

    Bowe won, how he remained standing I don't know, he took some incredible hits. I don't think he actually fought high profile after that again, pretty sure that fight ended his career, a few days on his speech was still slurred after the fight.

    Golota went on to fight and lose badly to Lennox Lewis, I think the Bowe fight ended him as well.

    Ahh the fond memories, boxing certainly is a sport like no other.

    Big Daddy Bowe was a tremendous fighter. Incredible record, just the one loss and that was to Evander Holyfield who he beat twice as well.

    Not rated too highly in the annals of boxing history, then again it could be argued he didn’t fight many names…….

    Never fought Lewis which was a shame, that would have been incredible and I think he might have had the goods to beat Tyson if they fought as well.

    Andrew Golota had the talent to be a legend but was completely fucked in the head. There was some controversy over how he quit vs Tyson but apparently he was badly injured and hadn’t recovered ?

    They say that is one fight Tyson didn’t want , they went to school together and they say bowe was the biggest toughest kid around when they were growing up ,

    Not sure if it was psychological or just out of respect through being school friends, but it’s the one fight he didn’t want to happen .

    ….and that’s the beauty of it isn’t it ?

    Tyson looked more formidable than ANYONE when on form and demolishing guys….but against someone bigger and not afraid the tables often got turned.

    Lots of experts reckon Bowe would have done a Lewis on him even at their respective bests.

    Not to mention that Tyson never once got up to win after being knocked down and his resume lacked beating really top flight fighters at their best ( like Bowe I guess )

    The thing is that 20 year old champion Tyson was based on speed, skill and punching power. He wasn't tall and most people he fought had greater reach. Cus even gave him shit for being too short for a heavyweight. Once he stopped giving a shit, stopped moving and just went for the knock out he was always going to come unstuck against an opponent who wasn't scared and had the ability to survive those early rounds. I put fit, motivated and Rooney trained Tyson up there with anyone. He was a straight out freak. It's a shame that we never really saw peak form Tyson. He was either snorting coke or in prison snorting coke.

    Tyson is undoubtedly compelling. At his best ( which actually wasn’t a long period ) that combo as you say of speed, power, aggression and skill was just breathtaking…..and of course he had that “fear” factor…..guys like Marvin Frazier and Michael Spinks were beaten before the bell even rung….and what an absolutely fascinating human being, I’d love to have a yarn with him over a cup of herbal tea ( I don’t think he allows himself anything stronger nowadays )

    BUT ( and maybe I’ve read too much about boxing ) there is a school of thought that even at his very best he wasn’t unbeatable. There’s a great article which I’ll try and find which states that ( in order of their reigns ) Sonny Liston, Muhammad Ali, Joe Frazier, George Foreman, Larry Holmes and Lennox Lewis would have beaten him. Liston was huge, mean, powerful, skilled…..Ali I don’t need to mention…..Frazier was the closest to Tyson but a Pit Bull who NEVER gave up…..Foreman was a slightly inferior Liston ( Jesus what a terrifying thought )…..Holmes had the best jab ever and Lewis was a cautious but masterful boxer with power.

    Again, just one guys opinion and when I see footage of Tyson at his best fucking guys shit up I find it hard to believe but worthy of a discussion all the same.

    It's difficult to gauge different eras etc. And ultimately what constitutes the best boxer? Is it consistency over many years or being the best when everything was perfectly in place? That old boxing guru Bert Sugar pumped for Louis because he reckoned he had a knock-out punch for every round.

    MN5M 1 Reply Last reply
    1
  • A Offline
    A Offline
    African Monkey
    replied to kiwiinmelb on last edited by
    #1014

    @kiwiinmelb Sure do, and I'm a huge Fury fan too, but Usyk's extra speed, the fact that he is a southpaw and his ring iq won't allow Fury to lean all over him and tire him out physically. Usyk also isn't gonna stand and trade in the pocket like Wilder and Whyte have tried to do against Fury.

    Fury barely scraped past Wallin, the last southpaw he faced, and Wallin ain't anywhere near the quality of Usyk.

    kiwiinmelbK 1 Reply Last reply
    1
  • MN5M Online
    MN5M Online
    MN5
    replied to Rancid Schnitzel on last edited by MN5
    #1015

    @Rancid-Schnitzel said in Boxing Thread:

    @MN5 said in Boxing Thread:

    @Rancid-Schnitzel said in Boxing Thread:

    @MN5 said in Boxing Thread:

    @kiwiinmelb said in Boxing Thread:

    @MN5 said in Boxing Thread:

    @Windows97 said in Boxing Thread:

    One of my fondest childhood sporting memories and possibly one of the best all-time was the Riddick Bowe Andrew Golota II fight.

    The grudge match rematch of epic proportions.

    Come a few rounds in and it had descended into a mythical brawl the likes of which I've never seen. All technique, professionalism, maybe even higher brain function and basic humanity had deserted both men.

    Two punch drunk fighters stumbling around the ring like a pair of drunks with their shoelaces tied together throwing haymakers at each other like they had 20kg dumb bells in their hands instead of boxing gloves.

    Me and the old man were watching it laughing uproariously, it started as a professional boxing bout and went south at incredible speed into two men staggering around the ring throwing enormous hay makers at each other. I've never seen anything so funny in professional sport, even after all these years it brings tears of mirth to my eye's recalling the event.

    Bowe won, how he remained standing I don't know, he took some incredible hits. I don't think he actually fought high profile after that again, pretty sure that fight ended his career, a few days on his speech was still slurred after the fight.

    Golota went on to fight and lose badly to Lennox Lewis, I think the Bowe fight ended him as well.

    Ahh the fond memories, boxing certainly is a sport like no other.

    Big Daddy Bowe was a tremendous fighter. Incredible record, just the one loss and that was to Evander Holyfield who he beat twice as well.

    Not rated too highly in the annals of boxing history, then again it could be argued he didn’t fight many names…….

    Never fought Lewis which was a shame, that would have been incredible and I think he might have had the goods to beat Tyson if they fought as well.

    Andrew Golota had the talent to be a legend but was completely fucked in the head. There was some controversy over how he quit vs Tyson but apparently he was badly injured and hadn’t recovered ?

    They say that is one fight Tyson didn’t want , they went to school together and they say bowe was the biggest toughest kid around when they were growing up ,

    Not sure if it was psychological or just out of respect through being school friends, but it’s the one fight he didn’t want to happen .

    ….and that’s the beauty of it isn’t it ?

    Tyson looked more formidable than ANYONE when on form and demolishing guys….but against someone bigger and not afraid the tables often got turned.

    Lots of experts reckon Bowe would have done a Lewis on him even at their respective bests.

    Not to mention that Tyson never once got up to win after being knocked down and his resume lacked beating really top flight fighters at their best ( like Bowe I guess )

    The thing is that 20 year old champion Tyson was based on speed, skill and punching power. He wasn't tall and most people he fought had greater reach. Cus even gave him shit for being too short for a heavyweight. Once he stopped giving a shit, stopped moving and just went for the knock out he was always going to come unstuck against an opponent who wasn't scared and had the ability to survive those early rounds. I put fit, motivated and Rooney trained Tyson up there with anyone. He was a straight out freak. It's a shame that we never really saw peak form Tyson. He was either snorting coke or in prison snorting coke.

    Tyson is undoubtedly compelling. At his best ( which actually wasn’t a long period ) that combo as you say of speed, power, aggression and skill was just breathtaking…..and of course he had that “fear” factor…..guys like Marvin Frazier and Michael Spinks were beaten before the bell even rung….and what an absolutely fascinating human being, I’d love to have a yarn with him over a cup of herbal tea ( I don’t think he allows himself anything stronger nowadays )

    BUT ( and maybe I’ve read too much about boxing ) there is a school of thought that even at his very best he wasn’t unbeatable. There’s a great article which I’ll try and find which states that ( in order of their reigns ) Sonny Liston, Muhammad Ali, Joe Frazier, George Foreman, Larry Holmes and Lennox Lewis would have beaten him. Liston was huge, mean, powerful, skilled…..Ali I don’t need to mention…..Frazier was the closest to Tyson but a Pit Bull who NEVER gave up…..Foreman was a slightly inferior Liston ( Jesus what a terrifying thought )…..Holmes had the best jab ever and Lewis was a cautious but masterful boxer with power.

    Again, just one guys opinion and when I see footage of Tyson at his best fucking guys shit up I find it hard to believe but worthy of a discussion all the same.

    It's difficult to gauge different eras etc. And ultimately what constitutes the best boxer? Is it consistency over many years or being the best when everything was perfectly in place? That old boxing guru Bert Sugar pumped for Louis because he reckoned he had a knock-out punch for every round.

    Joe Louis sounded like the absolute man. Even in shitty old grainy footage his economy of movement, skill and power was something else.

    He fought forever too, just listen to these experts talk about him. Fighting at the age of 76 is incredible.

    1 Reply Last reply
    1
  • kiwiinmelbK Offline
    kiwiinmelbK Offline
    kiwiinmelb
    replied to Crucial on last edited by
    #1016

    @Crucial said in Boxing Thread:

    @kiwiinmelb said in Boxing Thread:

    @Crucial said in Boxing Thread:

    @MN5 said in Boxing Thread:

    @Crucial said in Boxing Thread:

    @MiketheSnow said in Boxing Thread:

    @kiwiinmelb said in Boxing Thread:

    @MiketheSnow respect where it’s due for AJ taking this ,

    I mean you would think after the consecutive losses the thing to do would be to take a couple of easy fights to get the confidence back ,

    Kind of surprised it’s happening, but rapt it is

    Nothing to lose

    No brainer

    Nobody is expecting him to win after two consecutive losses

    And he has the built in excuse of not enough time between fighting Usyk and then Fury

    Fury is taking a massive risk

    But he obviously smells blood in the water

    Or AJ is facing up to the realisation of his ceiling and is taking what he can with a chance. It's kind of all or nothing for him. He won't want to be a gateway fighter (and is too good for that anyway) so if he can't be at the very top then that's it.
    If you are at JPs level you get to hover in the zone of paydays and challenges for a while as others are willing to fight you.

    He has hit his ceiling. His upcoming fight will be very interesting

    I agree. He could still get lucky but he's never going to hold the top position for long. My point was more that he can clock up fights as the guy that you prove your worth against. He's no bum and has shown an ability to mix it. If you want a crack at the top see if you can show out against someone like JP first. That's where his paydays are.

    I feel a lot more optimistic with Joe now , not so much with saying he will scale the mountain , but more fighting at his true potential , he has good people around him ,

    I watched this interview with Andy the other day , he is in better hands now than when he was with Barry

    he has a big fight with Joyce next weekend for the mandatory position , that is a big challenge , Joyce is a tough bastard, probably a crossroads fight in a lot of ways

    with being good mates with Tyson , and Andy Lee Tysons cousin , I think their plan would be to hover around , keep improving , and have one last crack when Tyson retires , and usyk is 35 , its worth noting Joe is only 30 and does have time on his hands .

    Interesting comments about Joyce in that clip.
    I watched his fight against Takam and could see exactly what Andy Lee meant. Joyce is quite slow and unco and relies on being able to take punches. Takam was hitting him easily when he used hand speed but wasn't doing it enough.

    yeah he is a tough tough man , but is there to be hit , his hands are slow but heavy , and he keeps coming forward ( to quote Ali talking about Foreman ) like a big Mummy 🙂

    Joe seems completly refreshed , i liked what i saw in Chisora 2 ,

    the old Joe that took breaks I would be concerned about , but if he builds on thatlast performance , it should be interesting

    1 Reply Last reply
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  • kiwiinmelbK Offline
    kiwiinmelbK Offline
    kiwiinmelb
    replied to African Monkey on last edited by
    #1017

    @African-Monkey said in Boxing Thread:

    @kiwiinmelb Sure do, and I'm a huge Fury fan too, but Usyk's extra speed, the fact that he is a southpaw and his ring iq won't allow Fury to lean all over him and tire him out physically. Usyk also isn't gonna stand and trade in the pocket like Wilder and Whyte have tried to do against Fury.

    Fury barely scraped past Wallin, the last southpaw he faced, and Wallin ain't anywhere near the quality of Usyk.

    You arent the only one that thinks that , Boxing forums are full of people saying pretty similar things,

    GGG too old for Canelo now ?

    I think canelo at 168 might stop him now at 40

    A 1 Reply Last reply
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  • A Offline
    A Offline
    African Monkey
    replied to kiwiinmelb on last edited by
    #1018

    @kiwiinmelb I think so. Don't think Canelo will stop him as GGG has an awesome chin, but he wins a fairly comfortable decision.

    kiwiinmelbK 1 Reply Last reply
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  • kiwiinmelbK Offline
    kiwiinmelbK Offline
    kiwiinmelb
    replied to African Monkey on last edited by kiwiinmelb
    #1019

    @African-Monkey said in Boxing Thread:

    @kiwiinmelb I think so. Don't think Canelo will stop him as GGG has an awesome chin, but he wins a fairly comfortable decision.

    I watched ggg last middleweight title fight against the jap whose name escapes me ,

    And he looked clearly uncomfortable when hit to the body , grimacing and changing his guard to cover up ,

    And I thought how will he go being hit to the body by a 168 canelo ,

    If there is a stoppage I think it’s off the back of body shots, not your traditional knockout as such

    A 1 Reply Last reply
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