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Anyone else agree SRR is overrated?

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  • #61
    Not really surprising that the SRR haters seem to have overlooked *****'s post.

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    • #62
      Originally posted by CCobra View Post
      Not surprising that the SRR haters seem to have overlooked *****'s post.
      No ****, huh? If Slimey and company want to make a believer out of me refute *****'s post. Right now that is the gold standard.

      Comment


      • #63
        Originally posted by JAB5239 View Post
        No ****, huh? If Slimey and company want to make a believer out of me refute *****'s post. Right now that is the gold standard.
        Which they cannot do. I've been reading some pretty ridiculous stuff about Robinson recently. One guy on another forum said that Robinson would be a B-level contender if he was fighting today.

        Comment


        • #64
          Refute his post? Basicely you want me to claim Gay Robinson was actually a bum and not an ATG?
          What you nuthugging fools seem to fail to realise is that my main problem is that Gay is rated #1, I never said he wasn't an ATG. And most of all, that Gay is rated #1 BLINDLY by the majority of people is what makes Gay overrated.

          Originally posted by Obama View Post
          So you want to know why Sugar Ray was the greatest...


          Undefeated Amateur Featherweight Golden Gloves Champion

          That's 22 Middleweight wins with 5 losses, but 1 was at LHW.

          So lets do some math here, 46 + 26 = 72. Robinson essentially had 72 Middleweight fights before you could officially label him as washed up (when he finally lost his MW title for the last time). Of those 72 fights, he won 65, lost 5, and drew twice. One loss came in a fight where he was outweighed by 16 lbs, and three came after he returned from retirement. Randy Turpin's win over Robinson is perhaps the only really meaningful one. Yet when Turpin beat Robinson, Ray had already previously had 132 professional bouts. Everyone who beat Robinson, aside from Tiger Jones (who caught Robinson nearly just out of retirement), was a great fighter. The names on his resume speak for themselves, the man truly was the greatest.


          Robinson's Unquantified-but-Detailed Complete Career Resume:

          *Info below uses Ring Annual Ratings
          *Hall of Famers in bold

          Pete Lello (#3 LW – 1940)
          Sammy Angott (#1 LW – 1940, LW Champ – 1941, #2 LW – 1943, #8 WW – 1945)
          Maxie Shapiro (#8 LW – 1942)
          Marty Servo [Undefeated] (WW Champ – 1946)
          Fritzie Zivic (WW Champ – 1940, #3 WW – 1941, #8 WW 1942)
          Maxie Berger (JWW Champ – 1939, #6 WW – 1940)
          Norman Rubio (#10 WW – 1941)
          Reuben Shank (#8 MW – 1943)
          Tony Motisi (#9 WW – 1942)
          Jake LaMotta (#6 MW – 1942, #1 MW – 1943, #2 MW – 1944, #3 MW – 1945, #1 MW – 1946)
          (#5 MW – 1947, #3 MW – 1948, MW Champ – 1949 & 1950)
          Izzy Janazzo (#2 WW – 1940, #8 WW – 1941 & 1943)
          Vic Dellicurti (#10 MW – 1944)
          Al Nettlow (couple close fights with Bob Montgomery, beat Maxie Berger)
          California Jackie Wilson (#2 WW – 1941, #3 WW – 1942)
          Ralph Zannelli (#5 WW – 1943, #4 WW – 1947)
          Henry Armstrong (WW Champ – 1938 & 1939, #1 WW – 1940, #2 WW – 1942, #1 WW – 1944)
          Sheik Rangel (#10 WW – 1942)
          George Martin (beat Ralph Zannelli, Garvey Young, V. Vines, Pedro Montanez, Battling Battalino, Andy Callahan)
          Tommy Bell (#1 WW – 1946, #2 WW – 1947)
          George Costner (#5 WW – 1947, #2 WW – 1949)
          Jimmy McDaniels (#4 WW – 1944)
          O'Neill Bell (just beat George Costner, Jackie Wilson, and Fritzie Zivic back to back to back)
          Joe Curcio (beat Fritzie Zivic, Cecil Hudson, and Johnny Green)
          Vinnie Vines (beat Sam Baroudi and Jackie Alzek)
          Ossie Harris (beat Tommy Bell, Reuben Shank, and Fritzie Zivic)
          Cecil Hudson (beat Tommy Bell, Fritzie Zivic, Freddie Dixon, Ossie Harris, & Sheik Rangel)
          Artie Levine (beat Jimmy Doyle, Marvin Bryant, Vic Dellicurti, Herbie Kronowitz, & Joe Agosta)
          Georgie Abrams (#5 MW – 1946)
          Jimmy Doyle (#2 WW – 1945, #7 WW – 1946)
          Billy Nixon (beat Johnny Green, Buster Tyler, & Johnny Hutchinson)
          Chuck Taylor (beat Frankie Abrams, Tony Pellone, and Honeychile Johnson)
          Henry Brimm (beat Vic Dellicurti, Holman Williams, Joey DeJohn, Arte Towne, & Tony Elizondo)
          Bernard Docusen (#3 WW – 1948 & 1949)
          Kid Gavilan (#1 WW – 1948, 1949, 1950, & 1951, WW Champ – 1952 & 1953)
          Bobby Lee (beat Livio Minelli, Billy Nixon, Nava Esparza, Dorsey Lay, Honeychile Johnson, Chico Varona, & Gene Burton)
          Don Lee (beat Jimmy McDaniels, Vince Foster, Sheik Rangel, Joe Danos, Howard Bleyhl, Billy Tierney)
          Earl Turner (beat Sheik Rangel, Fred Apostoli, Cecil Hudson, Cocoa Kid, Don Lee, Jackie Wilson, George Costner, George Duke, etc)
          Steve Belloise (#2 MW – 1948, #5 MW – 1949)
          Al Mobley (beat Fritzie Zivic, Georgie Benton, Honeychile Johnson, George Martin, Sylvester Perkins, Otis Graham, & Bert Linam)
          Aaron Wade (#7 MW – 1945)
          Ray Barnes (#7 MW – 1950)
          Robert Villemain (#3 MW – 1949, #8 MW – 1950, #9 MW – 1951)
          Charley Fusari (#3 WW – 1950, #8 WW – 1951)
          Jose Basora (#4 MW – 1943 & 1944)
          Joe Rindone (beat Ralph Zannelli, Paul Pender, Bob Murphy, Pierre Langlois, Joe Blackwood, Charley Zivic, & Henry Lee)
          Bobo Olson (#3 MW – 1952, MW Champ – 1953 & 1954, #1 MW – 1955)
          Bobby Dykes (#2 WW – 1952, #5 MW – 1953)
          Jean Stock (beat Randy Turpin, Bobby Dawson, Omar Kouidri, Cyrille Delannoit, Robert Charron, Edouard Tenet)
          Luc van Dam (beat Jean Stock, Cyrille Delannoit, Jacques Royer Crecy, Albert Finch, Bep van Klaveren, & Felix Wouters)
          Hans Stretz (beat Randy Turpin, Jacques Royer Crecy, Al Mobley, Peter Mueller, Rudi Pepper)
          (Carl Schmidt, Heinz Sanger, Alex Buxton, Johnny Sullivan, Franco Festucci)

          Holley Mims (#8 MW – 1953, #3 MW – 1954, #6 MW – 1955)
          Cyrille Delannoit (#5 MW – 1948)
          Randy Turpin (#1 MW – 1951 & 1952, MW Champ – 1951)
          Rocky Graziano (#3 MW – 1946, MW Champ – 1947, #10 MW – 1948 & 1951)
          Garth Panter (beat Pierre Langlois, Walter Cartier, and Earl Turner)
          Rocky Castellani (#1 MW – 1953, #2 MW – 1954, #5 MW – 1955)
          Gene Fullmer (#1 MW – 1956, MW Champ – 1957, #2 MW – 1957 & 1958, #1 MW – 1959, 1960, 1961, & 1962)
          Carmen Basilio (WW Champ – 1955 & 1956, MW Champ – 1957, #1 MW – 1958)
          Denny Moyer (#9 MW – 1961, #6 MW – 1962, JMW Champ – 1963, #9 MW – 1968, #2 MW – 1969)
          Ralph Dupas (#2 WW – 1961, #3 WW – 1962, #4 WW – 1963, JMW Champ – 1963)
          Yoland Leveque (beat Bennie Briscoe, Jacques Marty, Art Hernandez, & Bo Hogberg)
          (I had to cut a part out of this terrible post because it was too long to post)
          See this is what I already explained earlier. It is all mostly based on stats. These same nuthuggers will tell you that today's fighters with their unbeaten perfect records mean nothing. Mostly based on stats, and if you look at the quality of opposition you can find other ATG's who were greater than GAY Robinson.

          Comment


          • #65
            Originally posted by Slimey Limey View Post
            Refute his post? Basicely you want me to claim Gay Robinson was actually a bum and not an ATG?
            What you nuthugging fools seem to fail to realise is that my main problem is that Gay is rated #1, I never said he wasn't an ATG. And most of all, that Gay is rated #1 BLINDLY by the majority of people is what makes Gay overrated.



            (I had to cut a part out of this terrible post because it was too long to post)
            See this is what I already explained earlier. It is all mostly based on stats. These same nuthuggers will tell you that today's fighters with their unbeaten perfect records mean nothing. Mostly based on stats, and if you look at the quality of opposition you can find other ATG's who were greater than GAY Robinson.
            ok i'll ask again and give you the chance to be constructive for a change, where do you rank SRR all time? 5th, 10th, 50th?
            And give us your top 5?
            I await your answer with baited breath, we both know you will not answer the question though.
            Going by previous form I'm expecting something along the lines of "I wouldn't give you the satisfaction......"

            Comment


            • #66
              In regards to dunce's post,I suggest that he find a hobby in future.I find it difficult to give him credit considering he copy and pasted most of this crap from other sites.


              Dunce relies heavily on what the internet boxing historians say and he has admitted as much in the past.



              We excuse Robinson for avoiding all these elite black fighters because they may have been a little bigger than him.Robinson's record indicates that he had no trouble fighting middleweights.Many of these elite blacks were alot smaller than Jake Lamotta was.

              Comment


              • #67
                compared too who?

                in terms of skills and accomplishments,he is definitly the greatest,and that will never change

                Comment


                • #68
                  Are his accomplishments? No. I believe he beat more hall of famers and world champions than anyone else in the history of boxing.

                  Are his skills? Somewhat. Some fans tend to think that, because he's cited as the greatest fighters of all-time, he would've beaten anyone in his weight class(es).

                  Sure, he would have a great chance against all of them but that doesn't mean he was invincible. Take for example Roy Jones. I think Jones at middleweight could've beaten Robinson at middleweight.

                  In the end, though, you're not only ranked by your skills but your accomplishments, as well. With that said, I think Robinson is the greatest fighter of all-time.

                  Comment


                  • #69
                    Originally posted by Slimey Limey View Post
                    Refute his post? Basicely you want me to claim Gay Robinson was actually a bum and not an ATG?
                    What you nuthugging fools seem to fail to realise is that my main problem is that Gay is rated #1, I never said he wasn't an ATG. And most of all, that Gay is rated #1 BLINDLY by the majority of people is what makes Gay overrated.



                    (I had to cut a part out of this terrible post because it was too long to post)
                    See this is what I already explained earlier. It is all mostly based on stats. These same nuthuggers will tell you that today's fighters with their unbeaten perfect records mean nothing. Mostly based on stats, and if you look at the quality of opposition you can find other ATG's who were greater than GAY Robinson.
                    Like who? I'm not trying to be a prick but I'm actually very interested in who you would have above Robinson based on opposition and who they beat?

                    Give us a list or something man. I've seen you say there are guys better than Robinson based on who they beat and how many 'greats' they beat. Why not help us see your point of view by listing them and telling us why, and their opponents which make them better? I'd love to see it.

                    Comment


                    • #70
                      Originally posted by Obama View Post
                      So you want to know why Sugar Ray was the greatest...


                      Undefeated Amateur Featherweight Golden Gloves Champion
                      Undefeated Amateur Lightweight Golden Gloves Champion
                      Undefeated & Uncrowned Lightweight Champion
                      Undefeated Welterweight Champion
                      5 Time World Middleweight Champion
                      And Nearly the Light Heavyweight Champion


                      Amateur Career:


                      Overall, Robinson had an open record of 85-0, winning both the Featherweight and Lightweight Golden Gloves Championships in the process. 65 of the wins came by KO, 40 of which took place in the first round.


                      Lightweight Career:


                      You're probably asking yourself, “What Lightweight career?”. Although a brief one, Robinson did in fact have a substantial Lightweight career. He beat the NBA and soon to be World Lightweight Champion (Sammy Angott) after all, whilst maintaining a record of 21-0 with 18 KOs. His additional notable opponents included Pete Lello and Maxie Shapiro.


                      Welterweight Career:


                      As a Welterweight, Robinson was undefeated. Going against the likes of Fritzie Zivic, Henry Armstrong, and Kid Gavilan, this was an impressive feat. Counting Robinson's actual amount of Welterweight fights is rather tricky considering he often mixed it up with Middleweights as well. Nonetheless I have calculated that it was about 58 fights. He won them all without draws, and did so with no real controversial victories, the closest to controversy being the first fight with Kid Gavilan. It's also important to note that whilst still being a natural Welterweight, Robinson had beat Jake LaMotta 4 out of 5 times.


                      Middleweight Career:


                      Robinson's MW Record before becoming World Champion for the 1st time
                      *Includes his winning of the title
                      *Fighters in bold are notable

                      Wins:
                      Jake LaMotta (x5)
                      Vic Dellicurti (x3)
                      Lou Woods
                      Jose Basora
                      Jimmy Mandell
                      Tony Riccio
                      Freddie Flores (x2)
                      Freddie Wilson (x2)
                      Vinnie Vines
                      Artie Levine
                      Georgie Abrams
                      Eddie Finazzo
                      Ossie Harris (x2)
                      Henry Brimm (x2)
                      Don Lee (x2)
                      Earl Turner
                      Cecil Hudson (x2)
                      Steve Belloise
                      Charley Dodson
                      Aaron Wade
                      Cliff Beckett (x2)
                      Ray Barnes
                      Robert Villemain (x2)
                      Billy Brown
                      Joe Rindone
                      Bobo Olson
                      Jean Stock
                      Luc van Dam
                      Hans Stretz

                      Losses:
                      Jake LaMotta II

                      Draws:
                      Jose Basora
                      Henry Brimm

                      That's 43 Middleweight wins with only 1 loss and 2 draws upon winning the World Championship.


                      Robinson's MW Record from after winning the title for the 1st time to losing it for the last time
                      *Does not include his first winning of the title
                      *Does not include his last loss of the title
                      *Fighters in bold are notable


                      Wins:
                      Holley Mims
                      Don Ellis
                      Kid Marcel
                      Jean Wanes
                      Jan de Bruin
                      Jean Walzack
                      Gerhard Hecht (Although declared a NC, for all intensive purposes it's a win)
                      Cyrille Delannoit
                      Randy Turpin

                      Bobo Olson (x3)
                      Rocky Graziano

                      Joe Rindone
                      Johnny Lombardo
                      Ted Olla
                      Garth Panter
                      Rocky Castellani

                      Bob Provizzi
                      Gene Fullmer
                      Carmen Basilio

                      Bob Young

                      Losses:
                      Randy Turpin I
                      Joey Maxim
                      Ralph Jones
                      Gene Fullmer I
                      Carmen Basilio I


                      That's 22 Middleweight wins with 5 losses, but 1 was at LHW.

                      So lets do some math here, 46 + 26 = 72. Robinson essentially had 72 Middleweight fights before you could officially label him as washed up (when he finally lost his MW title for the last time). Of those 72 fights, he won 65, lost 5, and drew twice. One loss came in a fight where he was outweighed by 16 lbs, and three came after he returned from retirement. Randy Turpin's win over Robinson is perhaps the only really meaningful one. Yet when Turpin beat Robinson, Ray had already previously had 132 professional bouts. Everyone who beat Robinson, aside from Tiger Jones (who caught Robinson nearly just out of retirement), was a great fighter. The names on his resume speak for themselves, the man truly was the greatest.


                      Robinson's Unquantified-but-Detailed Complete Career Resume:

                      *Info below uses Ring Annual Ratings
                      *Hall of Famers in bold

                      Pete Lello (#3 LW – 1940)
                      Sammy Angott (#1 LW – 1940, LW Champ – 1941, #2 LW – 1943, #8 WW – 1945)
                      Maxie Shapiro (#8 LW – 1942)
                      Marty Servo [Undefeated] (WW Champ – 1946)
                      Fritzie Zivic (WW Champ – 1940, #3 WW – 1941, #8 WW 1942)
                      Maxie Berger (JWW Champ – 1939, #6 WW – 1940)
                      Norman Rubio (#10 WW – 1941)
                      Reuben Shank (#8 MW – 1943)
                      Tony Motisi (#9 WW – 1942)
                      Jake LaMotta (#6 MW – 1942, #1 MW – 1943, #2 MW – 1944, #3 MW – 1945, #1 MW – 1946)
                      (#5 MW – 1947, #3 MW – 1948, MW Champ – 1949 & 1950)
                      Izzy Janazzo (#2 WW – 1940, #8 WW – 1941 & 1943)
                      Vic Dellicurti (#10 MW – 1944)
                      Al Nettlow (couple close fights with Bob Montgomery, beat Maxie Berger)
                      California Jackie Wilson (#2 WW – 1941, #3 WW – 1942)
                      Ralph Zannelli (#5 WW – 1943, #4 WW – 1947)
                      Henry Armstrong (WW Champ – 1938 & 1939, #1 WW – 1940, #2 WW – 1942, #1 WW – 1944)
                      Sheik Rangel (#10 WW – 1942)
                      George Martin (beat Ralph Zannelli, Garvey Young, V. Vines, Pedro Montanez, Battling Battalino, Andy Callahan)
                      Tommy Bell (#1 WW – 1946, #2 WW – 1947)
                      George Costner (#5 WW – 1947, #2 WW – 1949)
                      Jimmy McDaniels (#4 WW – 1944)
                      O'Neill Bell (just beat George Costner, Jackie Wilson, and Fritzie Zivic back to back to back)
                      Joe Curcio (beat Fritzie Zivic, Cecil Hudson, and Johnny Green)
                      Vinnie Vines (beat Sam Baroudi and Jackie Alzek)
                      Ossie Harris (beat Tommy Bell, Reuben Shank, and Fritzie Zivic)
                      Cecil Hudson (beat Tommy Bell, Fritzie Zivic, Freddie Dixon, Ossie Harris, & Sheik Rangel)
                      Artie Levine (beat Jimmy Doyle, Marvin Bryant, Vic Dellicurti, Herbie Kronowitz, & Joe Agosta)
                      Georgie Abrams (#5 MW – 1946)
                      Jimmy Doyle (#2 WW – 1945, #7 WW – 1946)
                      Billy Nixon (beat Johnny Green, Buster Tyler, & Johnny Hutchinson)
                      Chuck Taylor (beat Frankie Abrams, Tony Pellone, and Honeychile Johnson)
                      Henry Brimm (beat Vic Dellicurti, Holman Williams, Joey DeJohn, Arte Towne, & Tony Elizondo)
                      Bernard Docusen (#3 WW – 1948 & 1949)
                      Kid Gavilan (#1 WW – 1948, 1949, 1950, & 1951, WW Champ – 1952 & 1953)
                      Bobby Lee (beat Livio Minelli, Billy Nixon, Nava Esparza, Dorsey Lay, Honeychile Johnson, Chico Varona, & Gene Burton)
                      Don Lee (beat Jimmy McDaniels, Vince Foster, Sheik Rangel, Joe Danos, Howard Bleyhl, Billy Tierney)
                      Earl Turner (beat Sheik Rangel, Fred Apostoli, Cecil Hudson, Cocoa Kid, Don Lee, Jackie Wilson, George Costner, George Duke, etc)
                      Steve Belloise (#2 MW – 1948, #5 MW – 1949)
                      Al Mobley (beat Fritzie Zivic, Georgie Benton, Honeychile Johnson, George Martin, Sylvester Perkins, Otis Graham, & Bert Linam)
                      Aaron Wade (#7 MW – 1945)
                      Ray Barnes (#7 MW – 1950)
                      Robert Villemain (#3 MW – 1949, #8 MW – 1950, #9 MW – 1951)
                      Charley Fusari (#3 WW – 1950, #8 WW – 1951)
                      Jose Basora (#4 MW – 1943 & 1944)
                      Joe Rindone (beat Ralph Zannelli, Paul Pender, Bob Murphy, Pierre Langlois, Joe Blackwood, Charley Zivic, & Henry Lee)
                      Bobo Olson (#3 MW – 1952, MW Champ – 1953 & 1954, #1 MW – 1955)
                      Bobby Dykes (#2 WW – 1952, #5 MW – 1953)
                      Jean Stock (beat Randy Turpin, Bobby Dawson, Omar Kouidri, Cyrille Delannoit, Robert Charron, Edouard Tenet)
                      Luc van Dam (beat Jean Stock, Cyrille Delannoit, Jacques Royer Crecy, Albert Finch, Bep van Klaveren, & Felix Wouters)
                      Hans Stretz (beat Randy Turpin, Jacques Royer Crecy, Al Mobley, Peter Mueller, Rudi Pepper)
                      (Carl Schmidt, Heinz Sanger, Alex Buxton, Johnny Sullivan, Franco Festucci)

                      Holley Mims (#8 MW – 1953, #3 MW – 1954, #6 MW – 1955)
                      Cyrille Delannoit (#5 MW – 1948)
                      Randy Turpin (#1 MW – 1951 & 1952, MW Champ – 1951)
                      Rocky Graziano (#3 MW – 1946, MW Champ – 1947, #10 MW – 1948 & 1951)
                      Garth Panter (beat Pierre Langlois, Walter Cartier, and Earl Turner)
                      Rocky Castellani (#1 MW – 1953, #2 MW – 1954, #5 MW – 1955)
                      Gene Fullmer (#1 MW – 1956, MW Champ – 1957, #2 MW – 1957 & 1958, #1 MW – 1959, 1960, 1961, & 1962)
                      Carmen Basilio (WW Champ – 1955 & 1956, MW Champ – 1957, #1 MW – 1958)
                      Denny Moyer (#9 MW – 1961, #6 MW – 1962, JMW Champ – 1963, #9 MW – 1968, #2 MW – 1969)
                      Ralph Dupas (#2 WW – 1961, #3 WW – 1962, #4 WW – 1963, JMW Champ – 1963)
                      Yoland Leveque (beat Bennie Briscoe, Jacques Marty, Art Hernandez, & Bo Hogberg)
                      This is by far the single best post I've ever seen on this site. Anyone calling Robinson overated should do their homework so they don't look ******.

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