Is Paul Williams the Most Feared Fighter in Boxing?

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  • Don Johnson
    U.S.M.C
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    • Mar 2007
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    #21
    Originally posted by CottoOverrated1
    thats true. shane mosley can not beat BOXERS that are TALLER than he is. 0-4 against forrest and wright. thats true. paul williams would punish mosley.
    He cannot beat boxers that utilize a jab. He's beaten taller fighters. He came up from 135 to fight DLH, and I believe he was at 154 when he fought forrest and wright. He's lucky he even got a couple rounds on them.

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    • Bonafide
      The General
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      #22
      Originally posted by CottoOverrated1
      thats true. shane mosley can not beat BOXERS that are TALLER than he is. 0-4 against forrest and wright. thats true. paul williams would punish mosley.
      Yup. As good as Shane Mosley is right now at this point in his career or any other...he will always lose to taller , lanky fighters who throw lots of punches.

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      • Gareth Ivanovic
        Bale, Bale, Bale
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        #23
        Williams presents a problem for anyone in the WW division, just because of his size and the volume of punches he throws. I dont know if any of the top guys in the division would want to face Williams at this point and I don't blame them. He'll probably have to get the mandatory position to fight them.

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        • CottoOverrated1
          Undisputed Champion
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          #24
          Originally posted by IncuFan
          Williams presents a problem for anyone in the WW division, just because of his size and the volume of punches he throws. I dont know if any of the top guys in the division would want to face Williams at this point and I don't blame them. He'll probably have to get the mandatory position to fight them.

          yuhuy but now that he is a title holder than mandatory stuff is thrown out the window. one of ther other 3 champs will want to unify his title with theirs. only thing that sucks is that williams' wbo title doesnt hold as much clout as the wbc and wba titles or even the ibf title(eventhough the ibf is a paper championship cuz contron didnt beat the champ to get the belt)

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          • niceguy45
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            #25
            pac-man is IMO

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            • aljon
              Banned
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              #26
              I don't know about the most feared one but he is one of the most feared WWs out there, nobody is really prepared 100% for someone that southpaw style, size and skill to back it up.. I really can't see anybody beating him except for Cotto and that's only because of his brutal body hits, I think he would give Shane and Floyd hell..
              This guy really makes you work and how can you not give him rounds when he throws that many punches.

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              • MetalVomit
                I love *****, Amigo.
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                #27
                why the **** would he be? he beat Margarito, yes, but he didnt brutalize him/KO him. He's a great talent, I like watching him fight, but this thread is pure spam.

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                • pbftxrs316
                  Ellerbe's bum cleaner
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                  #28
                  he'll give floyd competition but will lose to him. floyd is too fast for him. he'd beat cotto and mosley but mosley would give him some competition. cotto is strong but he's had problems with southpaws, even corley stunned cotto. paul williams would use his reach to keep cotto at bay and would not stop punching him.

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                  • !! Anorak
                    • Apr 2026
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                    #29
                    The binder, or resin, is the actual film forming component of paint. It imparts adhesion, binds the pigments together, and strongly influences such properties as gloss potential, exterior durability, flexibility, and toughness.

                    Binders include synthetic or natural resins such as acrylics, polyurethanes, polyesters, melamine resins, epoxy, or oils.

                    Binders can be categorized according to drying, or curing, mechanism. The four most common are simple solvent evaporation, oxidative crosslinking, catalyzed polymerization, and coalescence.

                    Note that drying and curing are two different processes. Drying generally refers to evaporation of vehicle, whereas curing refers to polymerization of the binder. Depending on chemistry and composition, any particular paint may undergo either, or both processes. Thus, there are paints that dry only, those that dry then cure, and those that do not depend on drying for curing.

                    Paints that dry by simple solvent evaporation contain a solid binder dissolved in a solvent; this forms a solid film when the solvent evaporates, and the film can re-dissolve in the solvent again. Classic nitrocellulose lacquers fall into this category, as do non-grain raising stains composed of dyes dissolved in solvent.

                    Paints that cure by oxidative crosslinking are generally single package coatings that when applied, the exposure to oxygen in the air starts a process that crosslinks and polymerizes the binder component. Classic alkyd enamels would fall into this category.

                    Paints that cure by catalyzed polymerization are generally two package coatings that polymerize by way of a chemical reaction initiated by mixing resin and hardener, and which cure by forming a hard plastic structure. Depending on composition they may need to dry first, by evaporation of solvent. Classic two package epoxies or polyurethanes would fall into this category.

                    Latex paints cure by a process called coalescence where first the water, and then the trace, or coalescing, solvent, evaporate and draw together and soften the latex binder particles together and fuse them together into irreversibly bound networked structures, so that the paint will not redissolve in the solvent/water that originally carried it.

                    Recent environmental requirements restrict the use of Volatile Organic Compounds (VOCs), and alternative means of curing have been developed, particularly for industrial purposes. In UV curing paints, the solvent is evaporated first, and hardening is then initiated by ultraviolet light.
                    The binder, or resin, is the actual film forming component of paint. It imparts adhesion, binds the pigments together, and strongly influences such properties as gloss potential, exterior durability, flexibility, and toughness.

                    Binders include synthetic or natural resins such as acrylics, polyurethanes, polyesters, melamine resins, epoxy, or oils.

                    Binders can be categorized according to drying, or curing, mechanism. The four most common are simple solvent evaporation, oxidative crosslinking, catalyzed polymerization, and coalescence.

                    Note that drying and curing are two different processes. Drying generally refers to evaporation of vehicle, whereas curing refers to polymerization of the binder. Depending on chemistry and composition, any particular paint may undergo either, or both processes. Thus, there are paints that dry only, those that dry then cure, and those that do not depend on drying for curing.

                    Paints that dry by simple solvent evaporation contain a solid binder dissolved in a solvent; this forms a solid film when the solvent evaporates, and the film can re-dissolve in the solvent again. Classic nitrocellulose lacquers fall into this category, as do non-grain raising stains composed of dyes dissolved in solvent.

                    Paints that cure by oxidative crosslinking are generally single package coatings that when applied, the exposure to oxygen in the air starts a process that crosslinks and polymerizes the binder component. Classic alkyd enamels would fall into this category.

                    Paints that cure by catalyzed polymerization are generally two package coatings that polymerize by way of a chemical reaction initiated by mixing resin and hardener, and which cure by forming a hard plastic structure. Depending on composition they may need to dry first, by evaporation of solvent. Classic two package epoxies or polyurethanes would fall into this category.

                    Latex paints cure by a process called coalescence where first the water, and then the trace, or coalescing, solvent, evaporate and draw together and soften the latex binder particles together and fuse them together into irreversibly bound networked structures, so that the paint will not redissolve in the solvent/water that originally carried it.

                    Recent environmental requirements restrict the use of Volatile Organic Compounds (VOCs), and alternative means of curing have been developed, particularly for industrial purposes. In UV curing paints, the solvent is evaporated first, and hardening is then initiated by ultraviolet light.

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                    • BROOKLYN CESAR
                      Undisputed Champion
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                      #30
                      I think this most feared fighter **** is a joke!!! Everyone thinks that if floyd wont fight someone that he is the most feared fighter in the world!!! Margarito wasnt the most feared and williams isnt either!!!

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