Following on from the thread about great boxers with a large number of defeats on their record - precisely when did the sport of boxing become obsessed with fighters with ZERO losses?
Time and time again these days I hear young fight fans going into ****** over some fighter or another with an unbeaten record and yet half a century ago fighters at the very top of the tree were no strangers to defeat. Indeed, many seemed to think only in defeat could a fighter discover his weaknesses and put them right.
So how did we get from then to now? Was it a gradual change? Did some fighter in particular emphasise the importance of being undefeated? Or was it simply down to the multiplication of belts?
Why is a defeat so damaging to a fighter's credibility these days when back then you had people like George Chuvalo seemingly getting beat every other week and still remaining in the top-10 for years?
Time and time again these days I hear young fight fans going into ****** over some fighter or another with an unbeaten record and yet half a century ago fighters at the very top of the tree were no strangers to defeat. Indeed, many seemed to think only in defeat could a fighter discover his weaknesses and put them right.
So how did we get from then to now? Was it a gradual change? Did some fighter in particular emphasise the importance of being undefeated? Or was it simply down to the multiplication of belts?
Why is a defeat so damaging to a fighter's credibility these days when back then you had people like George Chuvalo seemingly getting beat every other week and still remaining in the top-10 for years?
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