Then again, "no mas" was at 147. Still, I can understand how some might tie that in to his whole career.
For me the greatest lightweight ever can be Duran, Benny Leonard or Joe Gans. Its subjective, so to my way of thinking they're interchangable depending on what you favor.
There is no doubt in my mind that Leonard fought the greatest lightweight comp ever and was the dominant fighter of his era.
Duran was the most overwhwelming and dominating fighter at lightweight that I have seen extensively.
Joe Gans is the wild card because I've seen very litle of him. But taking into consideration the praise that has been heaped upon him and his record as a turn of the century black man, he had to have been unbelievable. Depending on which source you believe he was 120-8-9 (85) (IBHOF) or 147-11-17 (96) (Boxrec) against the best of his era. Im sorry, but blacks were routinely robbed back then, so to amass this record he had to have been something special.
So..........whichever of these three anyone decides to put at the top of their list, I can live with it.
For me the greatest lightweight ever can be Duran, Benny Leonard or Joe Gans. Its subjective, so to my way of thinking they're interchangable depending on what you favor.
There is no doubt in my mind that Leonard fought the greatest lightweight comp ever and was the dominant fighter of his era.
Duran was the most overwhwelming and dominating fighter at lightweight that I have seen extensively.
Joe Gans is the wild card because I've seen very litle of him. But taking into consideration the praise that has been heaped upon him and his record as a turn of the century black man, he had to have been unbelievable. Depending on which source you believe he was 120-8-9 (85) (IBHOF) or 147-11-17 (96) (Boxrec) against the best of his era. Im sorry, but blacks were routinely robbed back then, so to amass this record he had to have been something special.
So..........whichever of these three anyone decides to put at the top of their list, I can live with it.
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