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your 10 Greatest Heavyweight Fights of All Time

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  • #11
    Originally posted by sonnyboyx2 View Post
    GJC... dont know if you have seen the Brewster v Liakhovich fight or not but if you haven`t then you missed a fantastic fight my friend... it is certainly one of the best ive seen and was so brutal that it finished both fighters as neither was ever the same again... here is short highlights of the fight tho i would recommend you watch the Full Fight:

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IyJyeH72AZ4
    Thankyou for the link I will make a point to watch it.

    Comment


    • #12
      in no particular order not my first choice picks but i'm trying not to name any that have already been put down

      marciano v walcott
      patterson v chuvalo (FOTY 1965)
      ali v spinks I
      foreman v moorer
      v klitschko v c sanders
      tua v Ibeabuchi
      tyson v holyfield I
      mercer v witherspoon
      holyfield v moorer

      and of course

      Comment


      • #13
        10. Lewis vs Klitschko - Definitely a solid number 10 pick. This is a textbook example of how the course of a fight can change with just one punch. This all started as a seemingly inevitable changing of the guard. Then suddenly it became a race against the clock for Klitschko to try (and fail) to put Lennox away before the doctor decided that the gnarly cut above his eye was too high a risk to allow him to continue. That really put me on the edge of my seat the first time I watched that.

        9. Fury vs Wilder 3 - I’ve seen some people call this a sloppy fight with the knockdowns being the only reason this match is talked about. While the knockdowns are fantastic, they’re also accompanied by plenty of other memorable shots and lots of heart and determination by both competitors. This is one of those fights I consider proof for why you shouldn’t immediately write off or dismiss any matchup, cause it might just surprise you. Maybe it’s that surpassing of expectations or I’m still coming down off the high this fight gave me, but I believe this will go down as a classic. However, only time will tell.

        8. Holmes vs Norton - I was originally not going to include this, but after rewatching the highlights, I realized how moronic that would’ve been. Given how much these two were influenced by Ali and Frazier respectively, this fight was almost like Ali vs Frazier 3.5. However, it’s probably thanks to the distinctions between Holmes and Norton’s styles and their mentors’ styles that this fight felt fresh and entirely new. Given how much of a captivating back and forth contest this was, it feels disappointing that this never spun off into a trilogy of its own. Just imagine what a second or third fight would’ve been like if they were both still bringing their A game.

        7. Louis vs Conn - I will admit that the amount of Joe Louis fights I’ve seen is pretty limited. But even if I watched every one of them, I somehow doubt any of them are going to surpass this one. There is no shortage of power punches in this fight, I can tell you that much. Honestly, the amount of punishment both guys dished out and absorbed was quite the spectacle. I wonder if their second fight is even half as good?

        6. Ali vs Liston - This one really needs no introduction. Ali dominating a world-class champion with his slickness and swift physicality on its own was enough to make this a memorable fight. But then we get to see him prove his tenacity and ring iq when he temporarily suffered blindness for one round. Not every great fight has to have numerous knockdowns or off the charts punch output. Sometimes, all it takes to make an enduring classic is seeing a legend at his peak, helped by a sprinkling of extra drama of course.

        5. Tua vs Ibeabuchi - It’s a shame that this fight’s record for most punches thrown in a heavyweight match has been surpassed by Kownacki vs Areola. I haven’t seen KvA yet, but I doubt it’s more entertaining than Tua vs Ibeabuchi. Thing is, I’ve only really seen this fight in its entirety once, but its relentless pace has made such an impression on me that I still feel comfortable putting it this high on my list. This fight is a major example out of many on how much of wild ride the 90s heavyweight era was. Personally, I think Tua should’ve been given the decision, at least from what I could remember.

        4. Holmes vs Mercer - Whilst Foreman vs Moorer has more historical significance, Holmes vs Mercer is still my favorite example of an old legend beating a younger, dangerous warrior. Larry had never been more charismatic and likable than he was that night as the underdog. He truly seemed to channel Ali during that fight what with his taunting of Mercer from the corner and calling out the commentators. And the way the initially pro-Mercer crowd eventually begins cheering for Holmes upon being so inspired by his performance was like something you’d see in a movie!

        3. Ali vs Frazier 3 - Yet another fight that need not even be described, it’s so iconic. I honestly do believe Ali when he supposedly described this fight as the closest thing to hell; it was apparently hot enough that day to feel like a trip through the underworld’s seven circles. And they fought a war in those conditions! Between Frazier’s swollen face by the end of the fight and Ali collapsing from exhaustion after Frazier’s team quit in the corner, you have to wonder how these guys put themselves through so much punishment.

        2. Foreman vs Lyle - Whenever I talk about hypothetical matchups between two big punchers with unreal power, I always reference this fight. Every fight I see that involves the competitors scoring back and forth knockdowns on each other repeatedly, I call it “Foreman/Lyle-esqe”. There’s damn good reason why this fight is universally considered a classic, must see. Even though there’s no title involved, both men still had something to prove; they needed to show who’s the baddest mother****er around. One of the best aspects of this besides the toe to toe action and the knockdowns was Foreman proving that he could overcome adversity when he needed to. Only the snobbiest of boxing purists won’t get any enjoyment from this slugfest, otherwise this is every fight fan’s dream come true. So much action packed into just five rounds.

        1. Bowe vs Holyfield Trilogy - A legendary rivalry. I think there are two things we should be thankful for regarding this fight: 1) Holyfield obviously having a chip on his shoulder. 2) Holyfield being the right type of opponent to motivate and bring out the best in Bowe.
        The first one is so action packed and it really deserves its glowing status and reputation. But the others are also soooo good! The second one obviously has the heated after the bell exchanges, the crazy fan man, and Holyfield becoming the fourth man to regain the heavyweight title. There’s also the added treats of Bowe using his jab more often and putting up a surprisingly good fight despite not being in shape. And the third one surpassed the other two in terms of how brutal it was; I wonder if anyone at the time expected to see Bowe getting knocked down for the first time or Holyfield getting TKO’d for the first time?
        Last edited by Flickergrab98; 02-22-2022, 04:25 PM.

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        • #14
          Originally posted by Flickergrab98 View Post

          6. Ali vs Liston - This one really needs no introduction. Ali dominating a world-class champion with his slickness and swift physicality on its own was enough to make this a memorable fight. But then we get to see him prove his tenacity and ring iq when he temporarily suffered blindness for one round. Not every great fight has to have numerous knockdowns or off the charts punch output. Sometimes, all it takes to make an enduring classic is seeing a legend at his peak, helped by a sprinkling of extra drama of course.

          4. Holmes vs Mercer - Whilst Foreman vs Moorer has more historical significance, Holmes vs Mercer is still my favorite example of an old legend beating a younger, dangerous warrior. Larry had never been more charismatic and likable than he was that night as the underdog. He truly seemed to channel Ali during that fight what with his taunting of Mercer from the corner and calling out the commentators. And the way the initially pro-Mercer crowd eventually begins cheering for Holmes upon being so inspired by his performance was like something you’d see in a movie!
          - - More like some of the sorriest fights in history. I suppose you can be excused for buying into the myth of Ali instead of the reality that the first three rounds he ran like a cat set afire with no place to go. Liston had trained on whiskey after seeing his dismal performances vs bloody Henry Cooper and Doug Jones. All the $$$ was on the early KO that he avoided, so feather for his cap, but Liston had thrown his arm out of socket lurching for KOs, so young Clay manages to climb into the fight whereupon Liston is told to quit the fight since new bets had been placed on his stoppage.

          Non-dominating Cards here, a perfect draw at the stoppage: referee: Barney Felix 57-57 | Gus Jacobson 58-56 | Bunny Lovett 56-58

          You really should watch this fight again. Mercer a thug accused of trying to throw fights muscles Lar around who has to hang on to the ropes continuously because his legs are so shot. When Mercer traps him he blitchslaps repeatedly to humiliate him. Two more unlikable fighters cannot be found and I doubt the venue was even 1/3rd full. At one point Mercer chokes him near unconscious and had the ref not pulled him off, Lar would've needed Emergency services to revive him.

          The other fights are great viewing, I'd sub Big Dummy/Golota 1/2 where Big Dummy gets his dirty bully comeuppance in the most appropriate way possible. Lotta underrated comedy in that fight!

          Comment


          • #15
            Originally posted by Joeyzagz View Post
            None of these fights went 12, but they are all spectacular...

            1. Lewis/Rahman II
            2. Lewis/Klitschko
            3. Foreman/Frazier
            4. Foreman/Norton
            5. Foreman Moorer
            6. Ali/Foreman
            7. Morrison/Ruddock
            8. Baer/Schmelling
            9. Tyson/Holmes
            10. Baer/Primo Carnera
            I like your inclusion of Baer-Carnera. that was the foulest fight I ever saw, except the Freddie Norwood- Smoke Gainer, where even the ref was on Gainer's side. 2 against one.

            Comment


            • #16
              Originally posted by ghost deini View Post
              in no particular order not my first choice picks but i'm trying not to name any that have already been put down

              marciano v walcott
              patterson v chuvalo (FOTY 1965)
              ali v spinks I
              foreman v moorer
              v klitschko v c sanders
              tua v Ibeabuchi
              tyson v holyfield I
              mercer v witherspoon
              holyfield v moorer

              and of course<object width="480" height="385"><param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/VawHgrLvbD4&amp;hl=en_US&amp;fs=1"></param><param name="allowFullScreen" value="true"></param><param name="allowscriptaccess" value="always"></param><embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/VawHgrLvbD4&amp;hl=en_US&amp;fs=1" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" allowscriptaccess="always" allowfullscreen="true" width="480" height="385"></embed></object>
              You picked a good list....except Foreman -Moorer, which I though very unexciting, except for that last punch.

              Comment


              • #17
                Originally posted by QueensburyRules View Post

                You really should watch this fight again. Mercer a thug accused of trying to throw fights muscles Lar around who has to hang on to the ropes continuously because his legs are so shot. When Mercer traps him he blitchslaps repeatedly to humiliate him. Two more unlikable fighters cannot be found and I doubt the venue was even 1/3rd full. At one point Mercer chokes him near unconscious and had the ref not pulled him off, Lar would've needed Emergency services to revive him.
                I cannot for the life of me remember a moment where Mercer nearly chokes Holmes to death. Can you point out the round where that happens? Cause I don’t even remember seeing in the highlights recently.
                Also, who was doing the slapping, Holmes or Mercer? Cause I’m not sure what you’re referring to there either

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                • #18
                  Originally posted by Flickergrab98 View Post
                  I cannot for the life of me remember a moment where Mercer nearly chokes Holmes to death. Can you point out the round where that happens? Cause I don’t even remember seeing in the highlights recently.
                  Also, who was doing the slapping, Holmes or Mercer? Cause I’m not sure what you’re referring to there either
                  - - Mid rounds Mercer chokes Lar out with one arm. When ref finally orders him to release, Mercer swings up and out that propels Lar to ring corner where he is gagging trying to catch his breath.

                  " When Mercer traps him(Lar) he(Mercer) blitchslaps repeatedly to humiliate him(Lar)."

                  Shyte fight may be still on youtube.

                  Comment


                  • #19
                    Originally posted by Flickergrab98 View Post

                    8. Holmes vs Norton - I was originally not going to include this, but after rewatching the highlights, I realized how moronic that would’ve been. Given how much these two were influenced by Ali and Frazier respectively, this fight was almost like Ali vs Frazier 3.5. However, it’s probably thanks to the distinctions between Holmes and Norton’s styles and their mentors’ styles that this fight felt fresh and entirely new. Given how much of a captivating back and forth contest this was, it feels disappointing that this never spun off into a trilogy of its own. Just imagine what a second or third fight would’ve been like if they were both still bringing their A game.

                    7. Louis vs Conn - I will admit that the amount of Joe Louis fights I’ve seen is pretty limited. But even if I watched every one of them, I somehow doubt any of them are going to surpass this one. There is no shortage of power punches in this fight, I can tell you that much. Honestly, the amount of punishment both guys dished out and absorbed was quite the spectacle. I wonder if their second fight is even half as good?

                    6. Ali vs Liston - This one really needs no introduction. Ali dominating a world-class champion with his slickness and swift physicality on its own was enough to make this a memorable fight. But then we get to see him prove his tenacity and ring iq when he temporarily suffered blindness for one round. Not every great fight has to have numerous knockdowns or off the charts punch output. Sometimes, all it takes to make an enduring classic is seeing a legend at his peak, helped by a sprinkling of extra drama of course.
                    Looking back on this list I made, I’d probably move Ali vs. Liston down to number 8 and bump the other two up accordingly.

                    Comment


                    • #20
                      Originally posted by sonnyboyx2 View Post
                      List your 10 greatest heavyweight fights ever:

                      1/. Ali v Frazier (1)
                      2/. Holyfield v Bowe (1)
                      3/. Holmes v Norton
                      4/. Quarry v Frazier (1)
                      5/. Ali v Frazier (3)
                      6/. Holyfield v Tyson (1)
                      7/. Bowe v Golota (2)
                      8/. Brewster v Liakhovich
                      9/. Foreman v Lyle
                      10/. Tyson v Douglas
                      Dude every fight on your list was in my lifetime. So, I love the list. Became a boxing fan after Clay vs Liston 1.

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