Vitali Klitschko vs. Rocky Marciano
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Yeah and your answer was a cop out, I never made any such claim, I think there has been special fighters in every year that would be special or competitive any other era, in fact I probably wouldn't favor anyone against the 'modern' Whitaker at lightweight (I think I'd put even money with Duran). Having said that, I definately think the talent pool of today is smaller and some techniques are almost extinct, barely anyone has skills on the inside, people called friggin' Hatton a top infighter, I also see that feinting is rarely used as well. Its clear you've come to talk **** again without backing any of it up, unless you will tell me your reasons for believing fighters of today are better...Comment
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OK - that was a bit snarky, but if Hagler is modern and "good" than how can Carlos Monzon (who I forgot in my earlier post) Nino Benvenuti and Emile Griffith not be "modern" fighters?
I can see you saying that it's much harder to judge earlier fighters. We have less film, usually only one camera, much lower resolution, sometimes (as in the 1920s) it's hand-cranked and jerky. So. When do we start "old-timers."
I would say the line is in the 1920s. Boxing became legal. We had decisions - not "newspaper" accounts. We got away from the fight-until-KOed 45 round fights; the neutral-corner rule began to be required and enforced; the "illegal" tactics began going away.Comment
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Yeah and your answer was a cop out, I never made any such claim, I think there has been special fighters in every year that would be special or competitive any other era, in fact I probably wouldn't favor anyone against the 'modern' Whitaker at lightweight (I think I'd put even money with Duran). Having said that, I definately think the talent pool of today is smaller and some techniques are almost extinct, barely anyone has skills on the inside, people called friggin' Hatton a top infighter, I also see that feinting is rarely used as well. Its clear you've come to talk **** again without backing any of it up, unless you will tell me your reasons for believing fighters of today are better...
When I watch old fighters who are classified as the best ever I am pretty unimpressed usually.Comment
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In one sense we can't PROVE anything. I think Muhammad Ali is better than Eddie Chambers but perhaps humanity has evolved so much over the years that even an also-ran of today is better than the greats of yesterday.
OK - that was a bit snarky, but if Hagler is modern and "good" than how can Carlos Monzon (who I forgot in my earlier post) Nino Benvenuti and Emile Griffith not be "modern" fighters?
I can see you saying that it's much harder to judge earlier fighters. We have less film, usually only one camera, much lower resolution, sometimes (as in the 1920s) it's hand-cranked and jerky. So. When do we start "old-timers."
I would say the line is in the 1920s. Boxing became legal. We had decisions - not "newspaper" accounts. We got away from the fight-until-KOed 45 round fights; the neutral-corner rule began to be required and enforced; the "illegal" tactics began going away.Comment
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