Reserves of will power cannot immediately lift a sprinter to run the 100 m dash a second faster, but indomitable will can immediately assist a boxer bent on an errand "thought to be impossible." Even with less than perfect technique this can be done by a boxer, whereas almost every other sport requires perfect technique to excell. No one will break sprinting or swimming records without near perfect technique, nor power lifting records or high jumping records. In the roughest sports will power can still prevail over perfect technique. A chess player with heaps of will power and an I.Q of 100 can never win a world chess title. But a man with bad technique can win a boxing title, where immediate reserves of will can and often do make the final difference.
Are modern fighters better?
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Of course I am for scientific investigations of all kinds, as long as they are legitimate, not junk science, and data and methods are available to the reader in addition to an author's prosaic musings on a subject. For there is also such a thing as scientific extrapolation. At exactly that cue, guesswork and opinion enter stage right again after a brief banishment.
Salesmen always reach a little. For me it is not obvious that modern athletes are better at mentally preparing themselves than their older counterparts, or that they are somehow more adept at pushing themselves through limits, though most other points that Epstein mentions in his info-mercial for whatever he is hawking, I happily concur with. Transcendental meditation and sports psychologists to baby them, positive thinking tapes to listen to in their sleep, fans bolstering them on Facebook--where is this advance in mentality? A guy meditates with his guru or visits his psychologist, then slaps in his earbuds again for some rap. I don't buy into that part. I like the work ethic of an old time training camp. Instead of texting all day from camp to loved ones, friends and supporters, the nearest phone might be a mile or two away down at the dusty turnoff. The fighter worked hard, slept, ate healthy, grew lonely, mean and isolated, until fight time.
I still believe drugs and technology account for most of the advances in sports record books. It is not chicken nuggets, rice krispies or sports psychologists.
Epstein makes a great point about body types, which he then tries clumsily to dress in genetic clothing. The point about short-legged swimmers was particularly poignant, I thought. Still, the argument is there that all athletes across the board have somehow benefitted from a "new" selection process. No fake categories as afterthoughts are needed to see that tall lanky men always did better than their squat counterparts in high jumping. No selection process was needed, because that is how things turned out most of the time anyway. In boxing, this process has had nil effect, other than perhaps among the heavyweights, where its results are still hotly debated.
The illustrations of Epstein's graphs seem perfectly plausible. In fact, one could easily make up the spreads he graphically illustrates, they seem so intuitively true. The hope, of course, is that he actually collected data, rather than intuiting and mentally extrapolating what he felt to certainly be the truth and what would certainly be the case if he did collect data. Not being previously familiar with him, I can only hope that he is less interested in his agenda than the truth, and does not falsify or even inflect his results with preconceived beliefs. In other words, a good scientist.Last edited by The Old LefHook; 08-18-2015, 12:33 AM.Comment
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Of course I am for scientific investigations of all kinds, as long as they are legitimate, not junk science, and data and methods are available to the reader in addition to an author's prosaic musings on a subject. For there is also such a thing as scientific extrapolation. At exactly that cue, guesswork and opinion enter stage right again after a brief banishment.
Salesmen always reach a little. For me it is not obvious that modern athletes are better at mentally preparing themselves than their older counterparts, or that they are somehow more adept at pushing themselves through limits, though most other points that Epstein mentions in his info-mercial for whatever he is hawking, I happily concur with. Transcendental meditation and sports psychologists to baby them, positive thinking tapes to listen to in their sleep, fans bolstering them on Facebook--where is this advance in mentality? A guy meditates with his guru or visits his psychologist, then slaps in his earbuds again for some rap. I don't buy into that part. I like the work ethic of an old time training camp. Instead of texting all day from camp to loved ones, friends and supporters, the nearest phone might be a mile or two away down at the dusty turnoff. The fighter worked hard, slept, ate healthy, grew lonely, mean and isolated, until fight time.
I still believe drugs and technology account for most of the advances in sports record books. It is not chicken nuggets, rice krispies or sports psychologists.
Epstein makes a great point about body types, which he then tries clumsily to dress in genetic clothing. The point about short-legged swimmers was particularly poignant, I thought. Still, the argument is there that all athletes across the board have somehow benefitted from a "new" selection process. No fake categories as afterthoughts are needed to see that tall lanky men always did better than their squat counterparts in high jumping. No selection process was needed, because that is how things turned out most of the time anyway. In boxing, this process has had nil effect, other than perhaps among the heavyweights, where its results are still hotly debated.
The illustrations of Epstein's graphs seem perfectly plausible. In fact, one could easily make up the spreads he graphically illustrates, they seem so intuitively true. The hope, of course, is that he actually collected data, rather than intuiting and mentally extrapolating what he felt to certainly be the truth and what would certainly be the case if he did collect data. Not being previously familiar with him, I can only hope that he is less interested in his agenda than the truth, and does not falsify or even inflect his results with preconceived beliefs. In other words, a good scientist.Comment
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To me it's like guys today who insist Mayweather is the best p4p fighter ever and the best WW and LW ever and all that garbage. They can't use resume to back it up, if resume is the ceiteria he ain't top 50 let alone #1. It comes down to this... "oh I have seen most of his fights and he looks great so I reckon he beats everybody ever... easy) and that;s all they have to their argument, pretty thin eh.
The way I see it, in the 1920's, 30's & 40's, the only other American sport that was a significant talent drain was baseball, and it was segregated. By contrast, there were several black champions already in boxing, wealthy idols of world renown. The funneling of all black talent into either the guaranteed pauperism of black baseball leagues or professional boxing, is in itself an argument for the superiority of boxing during that 30 (actually 27) year span, and must have been a no brainer for a colored man with the highest ambitions in sport. You want to talk genetics? Boxing had a near lock on black genetics in the 20's, 30's & 40's. I am not politically correct, and sometimes the obvious is the obvious anyway. The best black athletes of all sizes and shapes could compete on the world stage in boxing and nowhere else. Yes, I think it made a difference. It is one of the components I can point to in my argument for that era of boxer being superior, but not the only one or the one I consider most significant.
Even today, the most highly skilled fighters use small variations on the classic stance. I feel the superiority of the classic stance as opposed to fighting squared up is amply explained in the Burley video. More modern fighters per capita fight squared up than in the sample era. Rather, I feel data collection would bear this out. Many subtleties of the stance have nearly disappeared from the art. Feinting would be a premeir example, power jabbing another. In-fighting is a different lost art.Comment
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Surely that is counter-balanced by the increased influence of amateur boxing? If you are a talented young fighter, in the US and many other places, then you are going to be kept very busy training and fighting during your younger years in the amateur system.Comment
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joebum..........."At the moment I am somewhat blinkered to the Welterweight division, so my comments were made with that weight class in mind, which currently I believe had greater depth to it than at any other time"
problem here is that the two best (Floyd & Manny are no where on a top ten welter list. So how is the current list the best.
Compared to Robinsons era;
Fritz Zivic
Marty Servo
Sammy Angott
Ralph Zanelli
Henry Armstrong
Jackie Wilson
Kid Gavilan
Charlie Fusari
don't try to compare Floyds opponents to these men;
Robert Guererro
M. Madiana
Canelo ( a kid of 23?)
an old Manny
then all the "name" guys far out from their prime.
While Mayweather was in a "forced" retirement Robinson was challenging and beating the Middleweight Champ who NO Middleweights wanted to fight!
Today the great fighters are Rigo & Chocolatito and its not about their records to date its about their Methods & Techniques on display!
Hell the 70s and 80s are superior to this era at welter too!
Ray.
For example, across the board, can boxers post-1959, who flourished whilst weighing 138-pounds against opponents 140-pounds be fairly compared to boxers, pre-1959, weighing the same 138-pounds against 147-pounds opponents?Comment
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