For all you Americans out there that were promoting Fury as not only a better, more worthy, higher ranked heavyweight than AJ in the build up for the first Wilder fight, but were talking non stop about how he was "lineal champion"....does Wilder calling it bull**** change your opinion? Are you still going to post on here about how this is a "champ v champ" fight?
Joshua has been great for boxing. We have millions of new fans thanks to him. But it also means a lot of his fans are very casual in nature, new to the sport, and have no idea what the lineal title is or why it's been considered so important for so long, especially at heavyweight.
These are people who think the IBO is a world title. If Joshua was lineal champion, they'd be talking about how important it is. Joshua's promoter prominently features the Ring Magazine belt whenever one of his fighter's hold it, even though most promoters ignore it. I guarantee you if Joshua was Ring champion Hearn would be talking every day about how it's the most important belt.
- -Guaranteed 4 belt AJ been the peoples champ for a number of years now and would hold the Ring belt when he beat their #3, Parker, after #2, Deyonce, turned down $100 mil to fight for Gummy Bears, the devalued worth of his title.
Fury gave up his lineal claim when he couldn't rematch the former claimant, Wlad who AJ knocked out.
Simples save few of you boys can't figure elementary arithmetic much less a fantasy lineal title.
Only in boxing folks!
Joshua has been great for boxing. We have millions of new fans thanks to him. But it also means a lot of his fans are very casual in nature, new to the sport, and have no idea what the lineal title is or why it's been considered so important for so long, especially at heavyweight.
These are people who think the IBO is a world title. If Joshua was lineal champion, they'd be talking about how important it is. Joshua's promoter prominently features the Ring Magazine belt whenever one of his fighter's hold it, even though most promoters ignore it. I guarantee you if Joshua was Ring champion Hearn would be talking every day about how it's the most important belt.
Forget IBO, forget casuals, AJ owns the WBA, WBO and IBF. All legit titles?
He also has a better list of opponents than both Fury and Wilder. So why should Fury's title mean any more?
Yes, Joshua's situation colors the view because after all....it is the lineal title's fault he got KO'ed. :lol1:
Joshua has been great for boxing. We have millions of new fans thanks to him. But it also means a lot of his fans are very casual in nature, new to the sport, and have no idea what the lineal title is or why it's been considered so important for so long, especially at heavyweight.
These are people who think the IBO is a world title. If Joshua was lineal champion, they'd be talking about how important it is. Joshua's promoter prominently features the Ring Magazine belt whenever one of his fighter's hold it, even though most promoters ignore it. I guarantee you if Joshua was Ring champion Hearn would be talking every day about how it's the most important belt.
Okay, I got you bud.
I had asked why you recognize divisional lineages under HW if you're well aware they all actually go to the HW division?
I recognise a lineage...what has that got to do with the hw division or otherwise. Are you under the impression that I don't recognise Fury's once held claim to the lineage? Of course I do.
If we are going to go off the topic of this thread and talk about my position on Tyson Fury, it is very simple. He was Lineal Champion when he beat Wlad, the timeline of events after that mean he is no longer lineal champion in my eyes and should not be in the eyes of astute, intelligent, well educated and unbiased boxing fan. Why?
Well, Fury was scheduled for a rematch against Wlad. The fight did not happen as Fury initially claimed he had hurt his ankle. He was then seen partying and getting drunk. He released photos of his injured and bruised ankle. However, from then on, things went down hill pretty fast. His comments almost immediately after the Wlad win (on ****sexuality, pedophilia and the end of the world) had already made him a pariah. His actions regarding drugs, soon to be exposed drug use and the failed drug tests in the build up to the Klitschko bout led him to be investigated by UKAD. As per their procedure, he was banned from the sport.
During this time, Fury also claimed he had retired and refused to speak on the drug testing issue. Retirement and being banned from a sport stop any one, in any sport from being a champion. If you claim the lineal championship is different and does not adhere to those rules, regulations and historic laws, then fine as the lineal championship is an imaginary, largely non-existent entity which became more pertinent in the years following Ali and the split of the heavyweight title in various stages in the late 70s and early 80s.
However, if one is to claim that Fury is still a champion after all that, then he is arguably the worst champion in the history of the division came three years after the win over Wlad against an overweight cruiserweight who was actually only a part time boxer. This is far worse than anything Dempsey or Louis accomplished. His other defences include Pianeta, Wilder, Schwarz and Wallin.
This is the worst line up of defences for a lineal champion the sport has ever seen and may ever see. All the while, there is a man named Anthony Joshua who has all but cleared out the division, holds 3 belts, has regained them and become better. His only two viable opponents he hasnt beaten are Fury and Wilder themselves...yet Wilder has seemed reluctant to face him and Fury is only in his second year of comeback and yet to fight anyone of worthy who is not Wilder.
The claim that Wlder v Fury should have had any other significance than being for the WBC strap is bogus. The fact that Fury should even get that shot above a fighter like Dillian WHyte is an absolute fraud. It was used initially as a marketing tool because everyone knows teh WBC strap has been badly relegated during Wilder's time and the ifght had to be promoted with some sort of prestige.
To make matters worse, Fury is supposedly the number one ranked hw according to The Ring and Wilder at two. On what basis is Fury ranked number one when he barely got past Schwarz and has not held a world class win in 5 plus years? On what boxing basis is Wilder number two and above AJ, who has a better resume which even Wilder's hardest of hard core fan would not disagree.
The idea of lineal champion is being used in this instance as nothing more than marketing tool and most casuals eat it up (it still does not make the fight a smash hit and AJ is still by far the biggest star in the sport) and those who are fans of Wilder, blinded by their hate, maybe based on nationality, ethnicity, I don't know what because it is not boxing, eat it up also.
You can do with that what you want, but until Fury backs up his words and fights AJ or Wilder looks to unify with AJ, neither of them is the real heavyweight champion. YOu are free to give them titles of lineal, WBC or whatever else.
That is my opinion on the idea of Fury being a champion. Heck, call him lineal champion if you like but he has a worse set of defences than Shannon Briggs.
I have edited and removed most of your post. I am answering your first and most pertinent question.
The rest of your post is filled with a lot of confusion and misunderstanding about historical situations which you can start a thread of your own about.
You'd be hard pressed to find an expert with higher credentials actually, and be able to speak to them. I am the man for ancient research amongst the IBRO.
And yes, you can say in vague terms they do the same thing, but, you said Dambe is not boxing because it allows more than punches, yes?
Find me an ancient sport limited to just punches, name me just one, let me prove to you the sport that is JUST punches came in the 1880s.
That picture of men punching each other in the face does not allude to rules, would you like me to teach them to you?
Not even the lineage I outlined is limited to just punches. It is not the line of who just punches, it is the line of who trained who for what and why until we got to this sport of just punches.
Like I say, find me a sport that is as limited as you claim:
Name it and I will show you proof it is not what you think and does not fit your own criteria for what is boxing. Nothing but current boxing does actually. And how we got to current boxing? The path I laid out that has nothing to do with ancient egyptian sport or festivals.
LPRR isn't even limited down to just punching and it was the last boxing before boxing. No one claims the bare knuckle boxers were not boxers because they did more than just punch and evade punches, but, Dambe is not boxing, not because it is a totally disconnected sport, but because kicking is not illegal? No bud, it's not boxing because despite being primarily a fist fight and having a glove they have nothing to do with the sport that evolved into boxing today just like those ancient Mesos and Africans had nothing to do with today's boxing.
nah... punching another man in the face, while ensuring that he does not punch you in the face... likely goes back to the dawn of time
according to the experts anyway
Yeah, pretty much from the get go there are claimants. Best I can figure historians designate lineal honors on one of the many claimants of a period after the fact.
The first succession crisis revolve around Figg himself. No one was bothered with Figg electing champions and that was more respected than beating the champion.
James 'The First' Figg - 1725
Robert 'The Pugilist' Whittaker - 1725
Nathaniel Peartree - 1726
John Gritton - 1727
Tom 'The Claimant' Pipes - 1730
Bill Gretting - 1730
Tom 'The Claimant' Pipes - 1730
Bill Gretting - 1732
Tom 'The Claimant' Pipes - 1733
George 'The Barber' Taylor - 1734
Jack 'The Father of Boxing' Broughton - 1736
Jack 'The Norfolk Butcher' Slack - 1750
So when Figg retired from the sport entirely there was a bit of a succession crisis because there was no absolute authority on who the champ is anymore. That's why Tom Pipes is called the Claimant. He claimed it on the grounds that he beat the man who beat the man going back to Figg's original choice. Gretting challenged this on the grounds he was Figg's best student. Or maybe I have their roles reversed it's not an important detail. Point is they fought over it and that's what really solidified who was champion.
Let's look at CBZ a sec:
James Figg the First Champion 1719 1730 retired
Tom Pipes the Claimant 1730 1734
George Taylor the Barber 1734 1736
Jack Broughton the Father of Boxing 1736 1750
Jack Slack the Norfolk Butcher 1750 1760
Notice the complete jump from Figg to Pipes? That's because CBZ is being simple with you. Figg is the authority in that time and still considered the best man if he would box but he did not box from 1725-1730 and instead he staged events with his chosen man against another of his pupils.
I list the best men of the era to highlight the succession or evolution championship honors while CBZ kind of covers it up and pretends like Figg was a fighting champion.
Pipes claims, Bill claims, at this time, when both men claim to be champion, before they actually fight, who is lineal? It is nice today to sit back and say it was vacant but back then it was a two choice matter, there could be no vacant. You can't have a vacant best man. Either Pipes was better or Gretting was, and you chose a side. So in the effect, yes, two champions at once.
Okay, Pipes settles the matter right? No, Figg dies, unrelated, just know that now it's not just he's retired from being the official authority but now he's dead so even his opinion is gone. This leaves room for a succession crisis again.
Gretting and Pipes did not fight one another exclusively for the title and Gretting himself would drop to Taylor while coming off a victory over Pipes. Man who beat the man then falls under Taylor says Taylor. Pipes says nope because Pipes' title wasn't on the line for that fight. Pipes chooses to fight Broughton, Jack wins, Taylor gives no ****s and continues to call himself champion and sell championship fights from his own venue. This is a first, all fights prior happened at Figg's.
Jack and Taylor have a bit of a promo war then the deal is struck, first of its kind, and the two claimants settle it in the ring. Broughton wins.
Every single name I mentioned so far is a Figg student.
Jack Slack is the first man to simply fight the champion, beat him, and be called champion for his trouble. Everyone else has a little bit of a story to go with their champion status.
Okay but that's all pretty because it all ends in one man every time so while we can say for a while there were two or more who were seen as rival champions it's pretty clear when they became the lineal champion.
Yes, but it sets the stage for guys like Jem Ward. early mid 1800s late 20s early 30s:
Jem bought his way into the title and fixed fights with a fella named Byrne to make himself look good. Then a new challenger rose up the ranks and so Jem, knowing he's a bit of a fraud and that this kid came to fight not get paid, retired. Did his thing where he picks two to fight for his title. Of course the young bruiser Ward was avoiding would win. Jem would unretire and strip the young James Burke of his honors, and continue to not fight.
Ward used Englishness as an excuse until it was well known James was from London.
Ward used money as a reason until Burke worked enough and saved enough to buy a fight. Ward took the money but never fought.
Ward brought in his good friend Simon Byrne, Burke fought him for the vacancy, and unfortunately killed the man. Ward used that as an excuse to unretire and keep his title from Burke.
In the end, Jem Ward was never stripped nor did he fight Burke but Jame Deaf un Burke is considered a lineal by CBZ/TBRB and such.
Because after the death of Byrne Burke was harassed from his nation to America and in America he'd find waiting for him Sam O'Rourke, the Irish champion. Burke beats Sam and is considered a champion ever since. Also, first HW title fight in the US.
Now, when you look at CBZ for dates it'll look like Jem just retired and Burke just fought for a vacant title against the irish champ, which would be normal protocol for that period. It was usually the English champ's pupil against the Irish champ. That's not at all what actually happened and Jem Ward's retirement doesn't actually take place until William Thompson beat Burke in 1839.
Upon the retirement of Bendigo Burke was matched with Nick Ward, Jem's brother, who won by way of his gang forcing the ref to DQ Burke.
So yes, there are two lineals at once during some periods that could have really used authority.
The Ward gang basically held the title hostage from 1831-1839 and so many, many, many fans were split which is why CBZ's listed dates kind of argue with their dates on the guys-in-question's records.
Jem Ward the Black Diamond 1827 1832
James Burke the Deaf 'Un 1833 1839
William Thompson Bendigo 1839 1840
Isn't at all the truth. The truth is from 1831-1839 Jem Ward and Deaf Burke were both considered champions by most. You could not strip Ward his title without him losing but you could not deny he ducked Burke and so did not take on all challengers where as Burke would fight anyone, anywhere, to prove he was the best. Periods where Ward was officially retired were periods when Burke was the champion. Anytime Ward came back Ward was the champion. Ward never handed over his physical title to Burke, only when Bendigo won did Ward hand over the title. Considering Bendigo beat Burke for it, Ward kind of validated Burke there at the end.
So, for your example, I'd say the first lineal strips all other lineals after him when he returns, and, that act is the sole form of stripping lineal as ever known. A previous lineal champion reactivating his career is the only way to strip a lineal champion by traditional means.
But, let's pretend A and B clear house at the same damn time, both claim championship, they do not fight, who is champion? I'd say both men get the honor of best. Or like the k2 era.....to call Wlad lineal because of the 1 and 2 ranking nonsense is just nonsense, there are no ranks in lineal. Wlad and Vitali co-champed an era and that's the GD truth.
Let's look at less confrontational or argumentative history for co-champions.
First up we have the Tom-Tom fight of 1808. I'll do it quick; Tom Molineaux from the US fights Tom Cribb from England. The English crowd cheats for Cribb, Cribb was KO'd but the crowd rushed the ring and did not allow a count, also the beat Moly a bit. Cribb wins but the English Fancy feels bad about Moly getting screwed over by gang violence and crown him champion as well. Both men would receive belts. Cribb got his first as it was made before the fight and Moly got his after. They were both seen as the champions.
And again with Tom Sayers and John C. Heenan. Once again US-UK fight, the US fighter, John, was starting to take over the match, the English crowd, like with Cribb-Moly before, intervened and stopped the fight, both John and Tom walk away with championships of the world. Tom came in with one so John got a duplicate of Sayers' belt.
Heenan got screwed over later by King....same as with Cribb again. John actually KO'd Tom King but the English did not allow a count and so King was revived and allowed to continue until John gave up.
Yeah, I'd go to bat for co-champion. It's just the truth. The five years Figg chose guys to fight for him Figg was only the authority of the champion, not the fighter, that was Bob, Nat, John and so on until Broughton vs Taylor.
1808-10, Tom Cribb - Tom Molineaux
1831-39, James Burke - Jem Ward
1860-63, Tom Sayers - John C. Heenan
You know how when you are used to an issue, it does not seem so important? In many martial arts lineages disputes automatically arise when the founder passes. Its par for the course, usually resulting in a new branch of the art in question. In Japanese arts, the most strictly regulated, there are even descriptions of how the art is passed, transmitted. Most of these are for the oldest arts, where Menkyo Kudan refers to direct transmission from the lineage holder to the next in line. This was traditionally used on a battle field, among other places, when a mortally wounded Samurai would orally pass the art to a successor.
One point I was trying to make to others was that the way the art is transmitted is not related to how effectively transmitted the art primae facea is... so an oral transmission can be an effective means of transmission as much as any other method...and these are very regulated historically viable transmissions that are all documented in the scrolls of these schools.
Effective to many is related to many factors which to my mind do not factor into transmitting a title or an art. What is important is that there is some record of these transmissions. Otherwise it is heresay and little else.
What I so appreciate about your research is that you create a historical basis for title transmissions. i must confess that I am still undecided about how much an issue of abuse figures into the effectiveness of a title held. I just know from comparative situations what really makes a difference validating a title.
I also confess that what I find so ingenious about the lineal is that it is self validating. When you recite the order of champions that held it, that is all the verification one needs. It makes it so much more simple than looking at scrolls, and trying to authenticate them. And OH!! how these scrolls are abused! Collectors buy them and own the art despite never having learned the art. Ridiculous. In Japanese arts when the line of transmission is broken in any generation it is kind of like the minute you drive a new car off the lot and it loses most of its value.
Okay, I got you bud.
I had asked why you recognize divisional lineages under HW if you're well aware they all actually go to the HW division? HW splintered but it was not formal for years and so you've competing divisions for a time, I assumed you're aware. So I fathered the question by asking who you side with, or, how you decide where the start of a lineage that isn't HW is. I use LW as an example.
I understand the confusion, what I'm speaking to has little to do with the point you made, but, the vehicle you used to deliver that point made me curious of your opinions...it is an honest curiosity, I'm not leading into to an argument.
Marciano is still the lineal champion, as is Fury, as are Tunney, and Lennox. Marciano would have the ability to strip all those who came after him. If he, or Fury, cannot then why did Jim Corbett do just that?
Jim Corbett retired unbeaten. There were no bodies at the time and boxing was ruled by "champions prerogative". Which in this case means it was Corbett's job to list the guys who would fight for his title. He chose his pupil Steve O'Donnell and fan favorite Peter Maher. Maher KO's O'Donnell, Corbett gives a farewell speech and hands over his title to Maher. Maher then gets KO'd by Fitzsimmons who loses by DQ to Tom Sharkey. Corbett returns to boxing, reclaimed his title without fighting anyone, and makes a fight with Fitzs, Fitzs KO's him, Fitzs is champion. Maher and Sharkey are not now considered having ever been lineal champions despite being awarded the title after winning a fight.
CP would come again upon the retirement of Jeffries. He chose Root and Hart. Hart is still considered a champion. It isn't because Corbett chose Maher, it's because Corbett returned and claimed his title.
CP would also be used from James Figg's era through to Jeffries with the most notable abuser of it being Jem Ward who retired and reclaimed his title, stripping those who won it after him, no less than five times.
It was how the retirement of a lineal was dealt with prior to bodies.
I am curious, after this explanation, why it is you believe a lineal can be stripped for drugs or banned from the sport? Those are sanctioning body actions that have nothing to do and were never done prior to sanctioning bodies. What does lineal have to do with bodies? It's meant to be the title without body influence is it not? Forcing a champion to fight for his title upon his return rather than simply awarding it back to him upon his announcement for a return is a body action not a lineal action.
Looking to lineal traditions there is grounds for champions returning after retirement, stripping any who gained their title while they were away, and regaining recognition of their title without fighting, but, there is absolutely no lineal champion prior to sanctioning bodies who had ever been told they are not champion because they retired once. ever.
I'm not saying a champion should be able to retire and regain their title just by saying they want to work again. I'm saying that is the way it has been and adding body elements to the lineal just falsely grandizes the title while stripping the bodies of some of their few good traits.
As much as I ever did. It's not a body belt but it's better than Ring and TBRB nonsense. It's my favorite nonofficial and will be regardless of who has it.
Dude:
Your killin' me in a good way. Awesome post... Totally explains the basis for so much about the title that someone like myself would have no idea about.
Jem Mace is a perfect example of abuse regarding retirement clauses. Also the champion's perogative, very interesting.
So can we assume that there can be a situation, at least for a while, where there is more than one lineal? At least until it is resolved? or is that just not possible and does one have to designate the one?
Ill give a scenario: Fighter A is the lineal after beating the best. He retires very young, at 23. Now the first question becomes: can we now establish a new lineal INDEPENDENT of fighter A? I would assume that eventually we could?
With that assumption in mind, Fighter B becomes the best heavyweight by beating the rest, and also retires at a young Age, at the same age as fighter A.
Assuming fighter B could exist as the lineal, if they both came out of retirement with a new champ on the top, what would the status of the lineal be? You would have two formerly retired fighters, and one "best" fighter in the division.
When lineal champions abuse the honor, people rightfully get emotional. Fury sitting out so long and fighting so many lowly regarded opponents since his return has shined a bright light on the negatives of the lineal championship. So that's one reason why people are being emotional.
The other though is that Wilder is on the verge of becoming undisputed lineal champion (had he beaten Fury in 2018, there were some who would claim Fury wasn't lineal champion and they weren't the top 2 fighters to fill the vacancy). Joshua fans are feeling some type of way about Joshua having been knocked out and Wilder now potentially being the clear cut lineal champion. Drives them crazy.
That makes a lot of sense... Great post. The lineal is there when you need it and always colored by sentiment... But sentiment is not a negative IMO, it shows passion and interest. The fans should have a toolbox to express such sentiments. I mean its an easy equation to figure out lol... The man who beat the man. And even in arguments for who holds the title, they follow logically, at least they can be put in a logical order.
Yes, Joshua's situation colors the view because after all....it is the lineal title's fault he got KO'ed. :lol1:
this is utterly ridiculous, look...
to remedy a problem of inaccuracy, within boxing... FANS (not anyone with a clue, just fans) instituted a solution that is (by your own admission)... inaccurate
what the fcuk... ? :lol1:
so, instead of having 4 inaccurate opinions, you think we should have 5?
:thinking:
this is utterly ridiculous to me
in business... if you initiate a process or policy that is "inaccurate"... you get fired, and are deemed a failure
the Canelo example, and the Briggs example... should be enough of an indication of failure to end this discussion
I think ranking by lineage is utterly fkn ridiculous, and simply cannot be justified
we can agree to disagree
Agree to disagree :beerchug:
Well... One thing is for sure: The lineal inspires people lol. It almost seems an emotional issue.
When lineal champions abuse the honor, people rightfully get emotional. Fury sitting out so long and fighting so many lowly regarded opponents since his return has shined a bright light on the negatives of the lineal championship. So that's one reason why people are being emotional.
The other though is that Wilder is on the verge of becoming undisputed lineal champion (had he beaten Fury in 2018, there were some who would claim Fury wasn't lineal champion and they weren't the top 2 fighters to fill the vacancy). Joshua fans are feeling some type of way about Joshua having been knocked out and Wilder now potentially being the clear cut lineal champion. Drives them crazy.
I certainly understand that things can be abused. I don't know if this has to do with the accuracy of the actual title. :rofl:
Again I see the point but, for reasons stated and examples given, do not want to throw the baby out with the bathwater. Lineal type titles have upheld institutions that are venerable, useful and accurate. From a universal stand point they certainly have merit.
Perhaps in boxing the examples that M gives serve to remind us there have been issues with the mechanism. I would concede the point, as I did to M that yes we need authorities. My view has changed to be more sympathetic to the best of these sanctioning bodies... vis a vis, I always knew we needed them to a degree, but see their value as being greater based on M's historical research. I also have a more sober understanding of the lineal.
I would also see the lineal as primarily for the heavyweights...I do not know about Canelo and Briggs as I hope you do not think I gave them as an example of something.
this is utterly ridiculous, look...
to remedy a problem of inaccuracy, within boxing... FANS (not anyone with a clue, just fans) instituted a solution that is (by your own admission)... inaccurate
what the fcuk... ? :lol1:
so, instead of having 4 inaccurate opinions, you think we should have 5?
:thinking:
this is utterly ridiculous to me
in business... if you initiate a process or policy that is "inaccurate"... you get fired, and are deemed a failure
the Canelo example, and the Briggs example... should be enough of an indication of failure to end this discussion
I think ranking by lineage is utterly fkn ridiculous, and simply cannot be justified
we can agree to disagree
Because Anthony Joshua isn't the lineal champion, so it must be treated as worthless by the UK fanboys. Plain and simple. These are people that are pretending that the IBO is a recognized world championship. They are delusional.
Well... One thing is for sure: The lineal inspires people lol. It almost seems an emotional issue. i must admit that I am flumuxed... Why should the idea that the fans have a mechanism that is used, has been used when needed, and has even been coopted into other systems, inspire such contempt?
To me the very notion that the lineal is as valid as the fans want it to be, is a good thing. It gives the fans power. And why should the fact that the lineal is brought up selectively be a bad thing? Look...If Michael Spinks being the lineal and Tyson being the champ for the major alphabets is cooky, then the lineal for that point in time can be unimportant. I don't see a big deal.
On the other hand, when a mandatory is s h it which happens many times, and the lineal makes perfect sense, what is bad about evoking it? Because it has been flawed in the past?
anyhow these are rhetorical questions lol and not directed at anyone in particular.
riiiiiiight, so...
one man, punching another man... with his fists... while evading the other mans blows... back then
is totally unrelated to... one man, punching another man... with his fists... while evading the other mans blows... now
:thinking:
uh, I will go with the experts on that one
This point of contention between you two is complicated. Ultimately some cultures provided documentation of combatives/sports and others did not. Certainly Greece would have had a relationship to Egypt regarding boxing, as would the Romans. The problem comes with documents that can show what this art, this relationship produced in terms of champions, techniques, etc.
As a historian M can only use material that shows proof in the form of written works, and commentary. AGAIN martial arts has this problem in SPADES!! People constantly claim 'secret martial arts' then you ask them for proof, they cannot show a teacher, or a authenticated scroll detailing proof of a tradition.
You are both right about this lol! It is just that standards of proof used is different. Plato details how Egypt was a standard for much of Greek understanding. one day there might well be a document showing more of such regarding combatives.
" I don't know why the lineal can't exist in its own place "
it can, and does...
" why it must either be totally accurate, or not in effect "
because... something that is not accurate, is shlt...
that applies to business, politics, relationships, sport... and, life in general
accuracy is everything
and, the Canelo example was not inaccurate... it was ridiculous
same as the Briggs example, that is ridiculous
same as many others
I certainly understand that things can be abused. I don't know if this has to do with the accuracy of the actual title. :rofl:
Again I see the point but, for reasons stated and examples given, do not want to throw the baby out with the bathwater. Lineal type titles have upheld institutions that are venerable, useful and accurate. From a universal stand point they certainly have merit.
Perhaps in boxing the examples that M gives serve to remind us there have been issues with the mechanism. I would concede the point, as I did to M that yes we need authorities. My view has changed to be more sympathetic to the best of these sanctioning bodies... vis a vis, I always knew we needed them to a degree, but see their value as being greater based on M's historical research. I also have a more sober understanding of the lineal.
I would also see the lineal as primarily for the heavyweights...I do not know about Canelo and Briggs as I hope you do not think I gave them as an example of something.
Curious, if you're well aware all division come from the HW division why recognize lineages of these divisions given they can't have anything to do with a time before formalized weight divisions?
Or, to ask that a bit differently, outside of HW, when to other weight division lineages begin? The first man to claim a title at the weight in numbers or the weight in words? I mean, what's LW 135? let's just say it is anyway, is the first LW champion the first 135 or the first guy to claim lightweight champion?
As far as Marciano being the lineal champion, if he returned to boxing he would be. If Marciano's zombie ass came up out the dirt and said he's champion because no one ever beat him in the ring he'd only be doing what Corbett did only, you know, on a ridiculous time scale from beyond the grave.
You don't recognize the Maher, Fitz, Sharkey, Langford, Godfrey lineage do you? Of those guys the only HW champion or at least lineal HW champion is Fitzsimmons right?
But they won the title, they had the belt, they were called champion....until Corbet unretired and stripped them only to lose to Fitz.
So if Corbett can do it then why not Jeffries, Tunney, Marciano, Lewis, or Fury?
edit- quick note on Jeffries, I realize he didn't claim the title on his return, but, if he felt so inclined why couldn't he but Corbett could?
Ok....you seem confused. At what stage did Corbett regain the belt? I am lost as to what you are trying to say here. There are a splurge of ideas but they are all over the place, maybe type them up in a cohesive manner.
As for the HW lineage, no it does not extend for all time and lal places but itself is differntiated at times from heavyweight chamionships (in particular as the WBC/WBA and later IBF fractured the division).
That however is an ENTIRELY discussion to what my thread is, which is, the first fight was heavily marketed as WBC v Lineal Championship....whatever that means. Wilder kept talking about going for the lineal crown and those of you who supported that claim went ape **** over it. NOw that Wilder himself has labelled lineal as BS, I am asking where are all those posters now?
90% of them, red prick, american **** ass etc have avoided this thread like the plague. if you wish to speak on their behalf, maybe get them in the thread lol
HBO was no longer #1 when Kovalev resigned, which is why he had no confidence they could win the purse bid. Regardless, it still doesn't explain demanding to be made mandatory, demanding 50/50, and then when Stevenson agrees, refusing to do the fight. And then lying and saying your HBO contract prevents it, even though your HBO contract has already expired.
Fans never want to accept the truth when it's their fighter that ducked, but facts are facts. Stevenson accepted the fight. Kovalev ducked.
No it doesn't go both ways. When Stevenson switched to Showtime in hopes of fighting Bernard Hopkins, Hopkins was rated above Kovalev and considered the more dangerous fight. Hopkins had the IBF belt and was about to win the WBA belt. Kovalev still only had the less regarded WBO version.
Stevenson was a restricted free agent and had an obligation to present an offer to HBO to either match or not match. HBO let Showtime win over a measly 50k.
It's not "ducking" when HBO refuses to do the fight. It's not "ducking" to choose what's considered the tougher fight, against a bigger name, for more belts.
It is ducking to demand a fight, be given everything you asked for, and then still refuse to fight.
I ended our conversation in my prior post
Farewell
Curious, if you're well aware all division come from the HW division why recognize lineages of these divisions given they can't have anything to do with a time before formalized weight divisions?
Or, to ask that a bit differently, outside of HW, when to other weight division lineages begin? The first man to claim a title at the weight in numbers or the weight in words? I mean, what's LW 135? let's just say it is anyway, is the first LW champion the first 135 or the first guy to claim lightweight champion?
As far as Marciano being the lineal champion, if he returned to boxing he would be. If Marciano's zombie ass came up out the dirt and said he's champion because no one ever beat him in the ring he'd only be doing what Corbett did only, you know, on a ridiculous time scale from beyond the grave.
You don't recognize the Maher, Fitz, Sharkey, Langford, Godfrey lineage do you? Of those guys the only HW champion or at least lineal HW champion is Fitzsimmons right?
But they won the title, they had the belt, they were called champion....until Corbet unretired and stripped them only to lose to Fitz.
So if Corbett can do it then why not Jeffries, Tunney, Marciano, Lewis, or Fury?
edit- quick note on Jeffries, I realize he didn't claim the title on his return, but, if he felt so inclined why couldn't he but Corbett could?
I'll reply to this when I have more time. Just quoting so I dont forget
well...I take issue with this because i come from a martial arts background. People have been able to do a lot with lineages, historically and otherwise in Japan. That is why we can practice an art that existed in the 1600's, with all the intricacies that existed then.
It is also why you have rankings that are generally well respected in these arts. Of course this is not a perfect system, there are problems like rank inflation, selling scrolls to system collectors, etc. But the system works, and is only reinforced, and validated by state authorities.
Aside from that it becomes semantic because systems are created by people, so whether it is the system, or people, is kind of a moot point.
As regards boxing, I don't know why the lineal can't exist in its own place, and why it must either be totally accurate, or not in effect. It does not really hurt anything if we acknowledge its limitations and past performance that I can see.
I do recognize the points made regarding the legitimacy of the Lineal... Just do not want to throw the baby out with the bath water lol.
" I don't know why the lineal can't exist in its own place "
it can, and does...
" why it must either be totally accurate, or not in effect "
because... something that is not accurate, is shlt...
that applies to business, politics, relationships, sport... and, life in general
accuracy is everything
and, the Canelo example was not inaccurate... it was ridiculous
same as the Briggs example, that is ridiculous
same as many others
6y ago
Lineal Heavyweight title is "bull****"? | BoxingScene Community