Originally posted by BennyST
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Ring Magazine's Greatest Lightweights
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Originally posted by Perfect Plex View PostIn 2001
1.Roberto Duran
2.Benny Leonard
3.Pernell Whitaker
4.Joe Gans
5.Ike Williams
6.Joe Brown
7.Carlos Ortiz
8.Tony Canzoneri
9.Bob Montgomery
10.Beau Jack
11.Lou Ambers
12.Freddie Welsh
13.Shane Mosley
14.Henry Armstrong
15.Esteban De Jesus
16.Ken Buchanan
17.Jack McAuliffe
18.Ismael Laguna
19.Ad Wolgast
20.Oscar De La Hoya
nothing wrong at all with that top 5
after that it gets a bit wishy washy
but what list doesn't?
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Originally posted by BennyST View PostI must disagree with people when they say Mosley was best at lightweight. I really think his best work was well and truly as a welter. He was always a little drained at lightweight and really wasn't a natural 135 guy and so he was usually fatigued and lethargic. Didn't have the same snap and combinations that he showed later on at 147.
If he had gone to 140 I think he would have been more comfortable and that might have been his best weight, but I always think his best performances were well and truly out of the LW division. He just didn't look the same on the whole at 135. Always struggled with his stamina, got tired and lethargic looking overall.
Anyway, I do agree that there are many better LW's than Mosley. The three after him should be above him in my opinion. Ken Buchanan should be above Mosley. His resume at 135 ****s on Mosley's with a monster dump. Armstrong's is the same, De Jesus is the same. Each of those guys should be above Mosley.
The top ten at lightweight is really hard. Truly the best division all time with WW and MW. I think the top three are definite; Gans, Duran and Leonard in whatever order. From there though you could change them up without much argument. Canzoneri and Ortiz could rightly be placed above Whitaker. I think Ortiz gets underrated these days. He genuinely has one of the greatest lightweight resumes of all time. His era was maybe the best lightweight era outside of Leonard's and he fought and usually beat everyone. Without Duran's dominance over the ATG lightweights Buchanan and De Jesus you could easily make a case that Ortiz should be higher. Hell, he should be higher than what he is anyway. I think out of all the guys on that list, he is the most underrated by far.
You want a lightweight resume? Check this out for size; Flash Elorde x 2, Johnny Bizarro, Joe Brown, Ismael Laguna x 2, Sugar Ramos x 2, Kenny Lane, then you have the many non title fights like Dave Charnley, Battling Torres, Cisco Andrade etc that he won. His only losses were to lightweight greats like Buchanan, Kenny Lane, Laguna. Only Buchanan could stop him because he was past his best.
He unified the division, made ten defenses over two reigns. That's the ****! What a resume! Then you have his win over ATG Duilo Loi, along with Kenny Lane and Battling Torres at 140 too. Not that it should affect his standing at lightweight.
Yeah...Ortiz huh? Great fighter.
Other than Benny Leonard, Ortiz' resume is the most impressive resume in Lightweight History, IMO.
I feel that if you can make a case for Duran being the greatest Lightweight of all time then you can absolutely make a case for Ortiz. I just can't see how you can for one and not the other.
I don't know if you have read my thread on Carlos Ortiz and his Lightweight Ranking but if you haven't you should give it a read I think you'll like it.
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Originally posted by IronDanHamza View PostI think you can easily make an argument for Ortiz being higher with those wins for Duran.
Other than Benny Leonard, Ortiz' resume is the most impressive resume in Lightweight History, IMO.
I feel that if you can make a case for Duran being the greatest Lightweight of all time then you can absolutely make a case for Ortiz. I just can't see how you can for one and not the other.
I don't know if you have read my thread on Carlos Ortiz and his Lightweight Ranking but if you haven't you should give it a read I think you'll like it.
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I barely had Mosley in the top 25; his comp was laughable compared to others (including castillo shortly after him) and he didn't beat either of the two best fighters in the division besides him (Nazarov and Johnston). Mosley was a good, not great, Welterweight fihting low in the day before weigh-in era.
11 to 25: http://www.boxingscene.com/-top-25-l...e-11-25--22737
Top Ten: http://www.boxingscene.com/-top-25-l...top-ten--22968
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Originally posted by joseph5620 View PostI always felt Duran was number one based on resume. But I did read your thread on Ortiz and you made a great case for him.
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Originally posted by joseph5620 View PostThat's true but he was also the undisputed champion and beat every lightweight who mattered. Not only did he beat them he destroyed them.
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