By Cliff Rold - Follow the sweet science long enough and even a passing fan will hear, with sounds of awe, about an ‘original eight,’ about a bygone era when the sport’s weight classes were limited to just that number with (usually) just that many World champions. [details]
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The Top 20 Junior Featherweights of All-Time
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Originally posted by BIGPOPPAPUMP View PostBy Cliff Rold - Follow the sweet science long enough and even a passing fan will hear, with sounds of awe, about an ‘original eight,’ about a bygone era when the sport’s weight classes were limited to just that number with (usually) just that many World champions. [details]
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I can't wait to read the junior bantamweights list. That's the division at which many Japanese fighters became world champions. Jiro Watanabe will be included I guess. How about Masamori Tokuyama, he is a Korean though... Ceres Kobayashi, Satoshi Iida... I don't think they'll be there. Even so, it will be a good read. Post away ASAP Mr Rold.
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Can't argue with the first 6. Gomez is the gold standard of this division and probably always will be.
Ji-Won Kim is a huge reach at #7. The two "champions" he beat, Berna and Sung In-Suh, were C-level fighters who were put into the first IBF title fight and they beat each other in two fights before losing to Kim (Berna was coming off a brutal second-round knockout loss to Jaime Garza for the WBA title). Kim's most significant win was over longtime contender Ruben Dario Palacious in Korea.
Zaragoza, on the other hand, should be in the top 10. He fought 19 fights against champions, finishing with a 10-6-3 record against them
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Originally posted by OctoberRed View Postthis is a good listLast edited by Dave Rado; 03-18-2009, 01:27 PM.
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I'd swap Morales for Barrera, but I suppose that it interchangeable depending on who you had winning the first fight.
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