Of those listed, I would have to say Louis-Schmeling, though Liston-Patterson (I assume you mean the first fight) is probably the most under-appreciated.
A very good one from around the same time is Johansson-Machen, when you consider that Johansson wasn't considered (& IMO, really wasn't, period) at such a high level as to do what he did to a gifted & smart technician like Machen (who lasted the distance with the aforementioned Liston). That was an outstanding showing from the future Champion, to beat a very respected & formidable contender so rapidly & decisively.
Of those listed, I would have to say Louis-Schmeling, though Liston-Patterson (I assume you mean the first fight) is probably the most under-appreciated.
A very good one from around the same time is Johansson-Machen, when you consider that Johansson wasn't considered (& IMO, really wasn't, period) at such a high level as to do what he did to a gifted & smart technician like Machen (who lasted the distance with the aforementioned Liston). That was an outstanding showing from the future Champion, to beat a very respected & formidable contender so rapidly & decisively.
I agree. Machen never knew what hit him. It's quite a disturbing KO to watch. Ingo was otherwise a fairly average fighter but he did have a brilliant right hand. Angelo Dundee said Ingo threw his right the way a trainer wished his fighter would throw it. Machen fought Sonny Liston and Cleveland Williams in their prime and also a young Joe Frazier, and none of them got to him the way he did. A year later he surprised Floyd Patterson with the same punch.
All great KO's but the winner stands alone, Louis-Schmeling 2. The way Joe came back from his first loss with was a dominant stoppage, to KO Max the way he did, it's just historical beauty.
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