Kostya Tszyu vs Oscar De La Hoya @140
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Na i dont think he would beat Oscar either,but believe he would be more competitive than some people thinkComment
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This is a very competitive fight that goes the distance. I can see either man winning. in a trilogy it be split with it being highly debatable. After the Judah fight i dont count Tszyu out anymore. I heavily favored Zab to beat him.
ehhhh. my gut tells me Tszyu, so im going with him.Comment
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If we only ever went on who the Undisputed champ is though, there wouldn't be a single fighter today who is considered the man properly.
Tzsyu was one of only two or three fighters in all of boxing over the last decade before his retirement to be the Undisputed champion. That's saying something.Comment
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If you go by what you say regarding Tzsyu though, then Hopkins was only the true number one middleweight for a year too. It is rather simplistic but you just called Hopkins number one for a decade too did you not? Is that also simplistic? Because we could also say he wasn't.
Apart from the short period in which he lost to Phillips, the rest of the time he was the man to beat at 140 and was ranked in the top P4P lists throughout that whole time.
It wasn't official until he beat Judah, just as Hopkins' wasn't official until he beat Holmes though. Just as you said regarding Hopkins though, Tzsyu was the best fighter there, the most consistent fighter there and the only fighter to have beaten all the other champions and number one and two contenders the whole time he was champion. To most people, that equates to being the king of a division.
Most people would call Pac king of 147 now, and he hasn't gotten close to doing what Hopkins or Tzsyu did in regards to cleaning out the division.
Anyway, this is besides the point really. I think it would be a close fight. Tzsyu had trouble with things other than what Oscar would bring and I think it would be a hard close fight for both. However, Tzsyu excelled in the type of fight that Oscar would bring to him. A slow, technical game with a lot of time to reset, think and act.Last edited by BennyST; 04-02-2011, 09:59 PM.Comment
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As was Tzsyu. However, in these cases we look at who the best fighter was subjectively and go with it from there. Tzsyu was champion at 140 through basically the same time frame. He wasn't the Undisputed champ though just as Hopkins wasn't. In fact, Hopkins was only Undisputed champ for one year, however we call him the king of 160 for a decade do we not between those times you mentioned?
If you go by what you say regarding Tzsyu though, then Hopkins was only the true number one middleweight for a year too. It is rather simplistic but you just called Hopkins number one for a decade too did you not? Is that also simplistic? Because we could also say he wasn't.
Apart from the short period in which he lost to Phillips, the rest of the time he was the man to beat at 140 and was ranked in the top P4P lists throughout that whole time.
It wasn't official until he beat Judah, just as Hopkins' wasn't official until he beat Holmes though. Just as you said regarding Hopkins though, Tzsyu was the best fighter there, the most consistent fighter there and the only fighter to have beaten all the other champions and number one and two contenders the whole time he was champion. To most people, that equates to being the king of a division.
Most people would call Pac king of 147 now, and he hasn't gotten close to doing what Hopkins or Tzsyu did in regards to cleaning out the division.
Anyway, this is besides the point really. I think it would be a close fight. Tzsyu had trouble with things other than what Oscar would bring and I think it would be a hard close fight for both. However, Tzsyu excelled in the type of fight that Oscar would bring to him. A slow, technical game with a lot of time to reset, think and act.Comment
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I agree actually. I've seen some of these guys argue that Hopkins was king for a decade though. Usual double standard stuff.
If we only ever went on who the Undisputed champ is though, there wouldn't be a single fighter today who is considered the man properly.
Tzsyu was one of only two or three fighters in all of boxing over the last decade before his retirement to be the Undisputed champion. That's saying something.
Edit: infact reflecting upon it, it wouldn't really be a double standard anyway, Hopkins remained number 1 contender/champion going unbeaten the whole time, Tzsyu lost, had a pretty nice run up to Judah and became very inactive, thats why I thought it was simplistic to call him the king of the division for 10 years.Last edited by RubenSonny; 04-03-2011, 02:04 PM.Comment
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I disputed the claim of him having the record middleweight defenses before this post...no double standard from me, and for the record I think Tzsyu was a good fighter and best at 140 in that time period.
Edit: infact reflecting upon it, it wouldn't really be a double standard anyway, Hopkins remained number 1 contender/champion going unbeaten the whole time, Tzsyu lost, had a pretty nice run up to Judah and became very inactive, thats why I thought it was simplistic to call him the king of the division for 10 years.Comment
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You sure have a big mouth for somebody who "boxed" their way to a 6-10-1 professional record.Comment
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