Taylor by wide decision
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
Meldrick Taylor Vs Kostya Tszyu Prime 4 Prime
Collapse
-
-
Originally posted by Obama View PostTaylor by KO. See Vince Phillips fight.
A fight between Taylor and Tszyu wouldn't even look remotely like that one. Philips' greatest asset was a very strong punch along with his decent, solid skills and stamina.
Anyway, prime Taylor was a madman with the speed of Ray Leonard but definitely not the power. In fact, he wasn't that strong a puncher in any sense.
I see him winning a decision in his prime. Would have been a great fight and he would have taken some big punches, but Tszyu didn't have the pressure style and late fight power needed to take Taylor out and the points he would have built up would win the fight for him.
No KO in this fight though.
Comment
-
Originally posted by poet682006 View PostI agree with that but......
You don't have to have power to be good offensively: Speed and volume do just as well.
Poet
Comment
-
Originally posted by AmericanYeti View PostAlright. I don't really have access to too much Taylor, I just can't find his fights anywhere, so I'm going off of Chavez I here. I think everyone can agree that was his best performance. In the sixth or seventh round, he was already hurting Chavez. I don't care how many punches you're throwing, you don't hurt Julio Cesar Chavez without a bit of pop.
Poet
Comment
-
Originally posted by poet682006 View PostI agree it was a magnificent performance by Taylor albeit one that contributed to his ultimate early demise as a top fighter. While I'm not saying Meldrick was a complete featherfist along the lines of Maxie Rosenbloom, he certainly wasn't known as someone who packed even average power. The thing is punches, even relatively light punches, add up if you land enough of them. That's why they talk about fighters being stopped late from an accumulation of punches. The individual punch may not hurt a Chavez, but the total effect of dozens of those shots may very well. By the 6th or 7th round Chavez had certainly eaten a lot of Taylor's punches, enough to the point where the accumulated effects had an impact.
Poet
Comment
-
Originally posted by AmericanYeti View PostListen, man. I want to like you, I really do, if only because Anchorman is my favorite comedy ever. But everything you've said can only be matched in idiocy by your next statement. Meldrick Taylor had pop, don't think otherwise. He was one of the most gifted offensive fighters in history and that doesn't happen without power. He wasn't a huge hitter, but he could definitely ****.
Anyway, Meldrick demolishes Tszyu in a one-sided boxing display. I can see him landing six, seven punch combinations on the relatively sluggish Tszyu.
Comment
-
Originally posted by AmericanYeti View PostAlright. I don't really have access to too much Taylor, I just can't find his fights anywhere, so I'm going off of Chavez I here. I think everyone can agree that was his best performance. In the sixth or seventh round, he was already hurting Chavez. I don't care how many punches you're throwing, you don't hurt Julio Cesar Chavez without a bit of pop.
Comment
-
Originally posted by CarlosG815 View PostChavez didn't look hurt to me in that fight. He was just outmatched by a more skilled fighter. If Chavez had less heart and a weaker chin he'd have given up like Roberto Duran vs SRL.
Poet
Comment
-
wow, 0 love for kostya.
I see taylor winning a decision, but lets not count tszyu out. dude had a laser right hand that could get in at any time and he fared pretty well against boxers. power to hurt kostya was important and he was a damn good stalker.
luckily for taylor in this fight, he can take a punch
Comment
Comment