lennox lewis the greatest heavyweight of all time.

Collapse
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts
  • -Lowkey-
    Winter is coming
    Platinum Champion - 1,000-5,000 posts
    • Dec 2008
    • 3161
    • 340
    • 506
    • 10,428

    #91
    Originally posted by Major
    you just can't comprehend that Vitali is better ...you need to take a long look in the mirror
    he's better yet lost to a past prime version of lewis that hadnt fought for over a year? can you explane....

    Comment

    • Cassius Liston
      Banned
      Platinum Champion - 1,000-5,000 posts
      • Jul 2009
      • 1234
      • 90
      • 38
      • 1,901

      #92
      Originally posted by LightsOutLewis
      he's better yet lost to a past prime version of lewis that hadnt fought for over a year? can you explane....
      you call me an idiot yet you can't spell explain.....see its ******ed to be pedantic.........i can't argue with you if you actually thought he lost...yes the ref may have pulled Vitali out...but it was one of the most controversial heavyweight fights for a reason...why don't you go an watch the fight you imbecile

      Comment

      • sonnyboyx2
        Undisputed Champion
        Super Champion - 5,000-10,000 posts
        • Jun 2009
        • 5812
        • 185
        • 181
        • 14,549

        #93
        Originally posted by LionheartLewis
        how can you excpect to be taken seriously and have vitali above lewis lol?


        a washed up lewis knocked a prime vitali out in six so you obviously have an agenda here.
        i cannot ever recall Lewis knocking out Vitali in 6rds

        Comment

        • CarlosG815
          Undisputed Champion
          Platinum Champion - 1,000-5,000 posts
          • Jan 2010
          • 3683
          • 240
          • 192
          • 10,304

          #94
          I didn't miss General Zod at all.

          Comment

          • turdleburgle
            Banned
            • Jul 2010
            • 297
            • 49
            • 15
            • 447

            #95
            Originally posted by Major
            you just can't comprehend that Vitali is better ...you need to take a long look in the mirror



            you really are an idiot aint you?


            how can vitali be better than lewis? other than the fact lewis had a much greater career he also stopped a peak vitali inside the distance when he was old and washed up.


            washed up lewis>>>>>>>>>>>> prime vitali



            imagine what a prime lewis would have done to him


            thats how much better lewis is.

            Comment

            • turdleburgle
              Banned
              • Jul 2010
              • 297
              • 49
              • 15
              • 447

              #96
              Originally posted by sonnyboyx2
              i cannot ever recall Lewis knocking out Vitali in 6rds



              yeah it took place like seven years ago when lennox hadnt fought in a year was fat and near 40 when he knocked out a prime focused vitali klitschko.



              your kidding yourself mate

              Comment

              • Vadrigar.
                Undisputed Champion
                Super Champion - 5,000-10,000 posts
                • May 2010
                • 8134
                • 517
                • 415
                • 20,350

                #97
                Originally posted by CarlosG815
                I didn't miss General Zod at all.

                Yeah I knew it was him

                Comment

                • CarlosG815
                  Undisputed Champion
                  Platinum Champion - 1,000-5,000 posts
                  • Jan 2010
                  • 3683
                  • 240
                  • 192
                  • 10,304

                  #98
                  Originally posted by LionheartLewis
                  you really are an idiot aint you?


                  how can vitali be better than lewis? other than the fact lewis had a much greater career he also stopped a peak vitali inside the distance when he was old and washed up.


                  washed up lewis>>>>>>>>>>>> prime vitali



                  imagine what a prime lewis would have done to him


                  thats how much better lewis is.

                  Lennox Lewis is the most phony champ in the history of the heavyweight division. Everything about his career is de****able and he should not be mentioned in the same breath as "greatest heavyweight of all time."

                  Comment

                  • turdleburgle
                    Banned
                    • Jul 2010
                    • 297
                    • 49
                    • 15
                    • 447

                    #99
                    Originally posted by CarlosG815
                    Lennox Lewis is the most phony champ in the history of the heavyweight division. Everything about his career is de****able and he should not be mentioned in the same breath as "greatest heavyweight of all time."




                    words of a tyson fan who still cant get over lewis destroying their hero after he had ducked lewis for so long.









                    even those who dont think lewis was the greatest know that he is greater than tyson.

                    Comment

                    • -Lowkey-
                      Winter is coming
                      Platinum Champion - 1,000-5,000 posts
                      • Dec 2008
                      • 3161
                      • 340
                      • 506
                      • 10,428

                      #100
                      Originally posted by CarlosG815
                      Lennox Lewis is the most phony champ in the history of the heavyweight division. Everything about his career is de****able and he should not be mentioned in the same breath as "greatest heavyweight of all time."
                      How Good Was/Is Mike Tyson?

                      By Frank Scoblete
                      30 January 2000

                      Now that Mike Tyson's career is almost over, it might be of interest to take a cold hard look at just how good he was at his best to get some idea of where he stands in the rankings of the great heavyweight champions.

                      It is not a stretch to say that much of the fearsome Tyson persona of a decade or more ago was media hype and was little related to what he actually accomplished in the ring or against whom he accomplished it.

                      We can make a case that Tyson fought "never-wases" and "nothing-lefters" in his early career culminating with his knockout over an intimidated former light-heavyweight champion Michael Spinks, whose only real claim to fame was "winning" two controversial decisions against an aging and distracted Larry Holmes.

                      Other than the light-hitting, terrified Spinks and the out-of-shape, intimidated, comebacking, former great Larry Holmes, who did Tyson actually fight in his pre-prison days who was truly any good in absolute terms? If we measure competition based on who Ali faced, then who of all Tyson's pre-prison opponents was as good as Jerry Quarry, Oscar Bonavena, Ken Norton, Ron Lyle, Ernie Shavers, Joe Bugner, Mac Foster, Floyd Patterson, Zora Foley, Cleveland Williams, Jimmy Ellis, Bob Foster or Ernie Terrell, not to mention the awesome likes of all-time greats Sonny Liston, George Foreman or Smokin' Joe Frazier? Would you classify Bonecrusher Smith, Tony Tucker, Trevor Berbick or Frank Bruno with any those other fighters? Only if you never saw them fight!

                      The only real fight the pre-prison Tyson ever had was against the only decent heavyweight fighter he fought, a determined, well-conditioned Buster Douglas -- and Tyson was roundly beaten, battered and knocked out! That was Tyson in his prime, against a fighter who went on to "extinguish" himself by being knocked out in three rounds by Evander Holyfield.

                      If the pre-prison Tyson's boxing worth must be looked at with some skepticism, then the post-prison Tyson must be looked upon with scorn. Often in boxing, the true greatness of a fighter is not actually known when he is in his prime as he defeats opponent after opponent rather convincingly. It is only after he ages, slows down, and gets himself into wars are we aware of just how good the fighter is -- and was!

                      Certainly that was true of Ali. Before he made his comeback from an almost four-year forced layoff, there were all sorts of questions about his ability. Could he take a punch? Had he been beating up washed-up fighters? Did he have courage? Would he dog it if he were ever in a real fight? The layoff slowed Ali down, made him more vulnerable. What's more, great fighters appeared in that time, fighters better than any he had previously fought!

                      So a somewhat diminished Ali met each and every challenger -- starting with a comeback fight against highly ranked Jerry Quarry and then a second fight against vicious number-one contender Oscar Bonavena. His first career loss to Joe Frazier in his third comeback fight proved he could take a punch and that he had mountains of courage. That fight was the first of several "wars" Ali would fight in this second part of his career.

                      His next loss was to Ken Norton. Fighting 11 rounds with a broken jaw, Ali merely proved again that he was as courageous as any fighter who ever lived. His great victories against these very same fighters and his upset win over the god-like Foreman, showed what a great fighter he was -- and how much greater he had been before his layoff!

                      Not so with Tyson. His "layoff" was heralded with a return to the ring against a rank amateur, Peter McNeeley, whom Tyson "destroyed" with a wild flurry in round one. This same McNeeley was later knocked out by the bloated Butterbean in one round and has since lost just about every real fight he's had! And what of Buster Mathis, Jr., Bruce "I was knocked out by a gust of air" Seldon, Francois Botha, or Julian Francis? Are they credible opponents? Only if elephants can fly.

                      The only real fight the post-prison Tyson had of any significance was against Evander Holyfield, who was selected because he appeared to be a shot fighter, having lost two out of three to the disappointing Rid**** Bowe. Had Tyson known that Holyfield was not a shot fighter, but actually the only great heavyweight of the 1990s, I'm sure he would have selected a different fighter to beat, perhaps a third go-round with the overrated Razor Ruddock who proved himself a worthy Tyson contender by being knocked out in one round by the otherwise cautious Lennox Lewis.

                      So here we have a very simple yardstick for measuring the greatness of Mike Tyson. He fought two hard fights, one pre-prison and one post-prison -- both of which he lost (subsequently, he ate his way to a third loss and fouled himself into a no-decision). The rest of his victories, pre-prison and post-prison, were over fighters who couldn't make the "C" list during Ali's tenure. So where does that put him on the list of all-time greats?

                      It doesn't. He doesn't belong. He's not even in the top 20!

                      If you think of the very few good heavyweight fighters who have plied their trade in the late 1980s and 1990s, it is a short list: Evander Holyfield, George Foreman (oh, yes, the Big George who fought Holyfield would have rocked Iron Mike just as he did Smokin' Joe), Rid**** Bowe, and maybe Lennox Lewis and Michael Moorer. Tyson only fought one of them, and lost. The others he avoided.

                      I do not, as some writers do, lament the fact that Mike Tyson never lived up to his potential. In fact, I believe he did live up to it, fully, completely. His potential just wasn't all that great and that's what he became -- not all that great.

                      Comment

                      Working...
                      TOP