Is Roberto Duran the best lightweight of all time?
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Second thoughts and changing minds
I think it is very easy to change ones mind in trying to pick the top ten and then ranking them on to ten. The various comments clearly indicates, it is near impossible to get
the same ten picked. The comments about rethinking after watching Wolgast and Nelson hit the nail on the head. When it gets to picking, in some cases it becomes a popularity contest and therefore the older champions are likely at a big disadvantage, but they shouldn't be if
we are to make a fair and objective selection. For many, DURAN is the one to beat for top spot, but he would have his hands of stone full if punching it out with the likes of Wolgast and Nelson. And, even a LEW JENKINS, if he brought his fighting heart and body into the ring would be deadly for any lightweight. Then, CANZONERI, I once watched a video of him fighting and he dancing side-to-side would of made it difficult for the best of them.Comment
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I think it is very easy to change ones mind in trying to pick the top ten and then ranking them on to ten. The various comments clearly indicates, it is near impossible to get
the same ten picked. The comments about rethinking after watching Wolgast and Nelson hit the nail on the head. When it gets to picking, in some cases it becomes a popularity contest and therefore the older champions are likely at a big disadvantage, but they shouldn't be if
we are to make a fair and objective selection. For many, DURAN is the one to beat for top spot, but he would have his hands of stone full if punching it out with the likes of Wolgast and Nelson. And, even a LEW JENKINS, if he brought his fighting heart and body into the ring would be deadly for any lightweight. Then, CANZONERI, I once watched a video of him fighting and he dancing side-to-side would of made it difficult for the best of them.Comment
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Is Roberto Duran the best lightweight of all time?
The last word... (?)- I would relocate the "is" in the thread title (above) and place it after "Duran"
- Replace the "best" with "greatest"
- Replace the "?' with an "!"
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hmmm. Well. I'll say it like this. Great can be chopped up plenty of ways. Of course the over-all greatness of Duran is not to be questioned. But the day Burke met Bowen. I feel they showed what greatness means on that day. I do not believe Duran, or any other fighter, would have made it from sun to sun. ....I don't believe either Andy or Jack would make it out of the first four rounds with Roberto but that doesn't change the point. To me endurance is the greatest quality, and the most endurant would be the greatest. It's a personal great. Excellent mention of **** your face Jenkins. Power's my second favourite quality.....I pseudonymed him **** your face......that kind of says it all. My point is Duran is probably the best for h2h challenges, but not always the best in specifics.Comment
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Roberto duran
it is thought that he was the best lightweight of all time, but he is recognized as an all time great P4P fighter due to the many titles that he won. I fought one of his lightweight tile
contenders twice in Golden Gloves action in 1968 so watched the fight between DURAN and LAMPKIN a couple of times. Back in the mid-Seventies, I thought Ray was winning except his hands were dropping what appeared to be heat exhaustion. Pacific Northwest dudes would not be used to fighting in the hot Panama sun in a 15-round or 12/round fight.
Recently, had a chance to view a video of the last couple of rounds, and once again it looked close even in the later rounds, but there it was LAMPKIN dropping his arms and was open for heavy contact and sure enough it happened with one round to go. Duran connected and the rest is history.
Based on this fight, I would like to think that DURAN is the greatest lightweight champion but based on this one fight, Duran did not show the stuff of the greates. He got lucky withthe heat and Ray's dropping arms. Any excellent top lightweight could have taken advantage of that situation.
Also, his victory over KEN BUCHANAN to win the title is clouded with the low-blow controversy. So that does not make Duran the greatest lightweights based on his fouling ability because boxers like LEW JENKINS, if they were at their top form, could give Roberto a real lesson in low blows, thumbing, choking and a few head buts. Would Roberto have the right stuff to keep cool or would be blow-it or quit???Last edited by zelley; 10-13-2011, 02:46 AM.Comment
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