Heavy Waists Continues To Plague Heavyweights

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  • JakeNDaBox
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    #1

    Heavy Waists Continues To Plague Heavyweights

    By Jake Donovan - If this is what they look like on fight night, how grossly out of shape were they before entering training camp?

    This seems to be the question on the mind of many a boxing fan when watching what qualifies as a top heavyweight in action today. It can be a four-round newcomer or an established veteran toting alphabet hardware. The common thread among boxing’s big boys is the expanding waist lines that seem to accompany them into the ring, no matter the stakes.

    The latest example will be on display tonight, during the main event on ESPN2’s Friday Night Fights. Perhaps by night’s end, Eddie Chambers and Samuel Peter give fans something positive to talk about in the way of memorable heavyweight action.

    But until the final or even the opening bell, the storyline is the battle of the bulge.

    Thursday’s weigh-in, which Goossen-Tutor Promotions (who handles Chambers) proudly touted all week was open to the public, saw Peter step on the scale at a career fattest 265 lb. Chambers wasn’t in any better shape, with his announced weight of 223 lb qualifying for the second heaviest tally of his eight-plus year career.

    The fight has been sold as one with major heavyweight implications. Yet this is the conditioning both fighters choose to exhibit in what could essentially become a loser-leaves-town match for the one whose arm isn’t raised by night’s end. [details]
  • hookoutofhell
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    #2
    im suprised with fast eddie i thought if he came in at 215 or lower it would be perfect for him and he would keep his speed, but he seems to have slackened off in training camp. as for peters the guy has awesome power and is very strong if only e had a work ethic then he could make something out of himself.

    the HW's who stay in shape and turn up in shape: haye, vlad, povetkin, vitali, even holyfield to a certain extent are the ones who are getting the big fights.

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    • paul750
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      #3
      Yeah, that's the thing: if most of the heavyweights were in very good condition and focused, the division would be a lot better. It's not like the division is very poor solely because of the lack of skill. If the fighters were in great shape and put on good shows that's all that would be needed to make the division more appealing. These men should be well conditioned fighting machines, but most of them are not. It's a bit like trying to get a car to go as fast as possible: to do so you need to get rid of everything that isn't needed; strip it down. They have no excuse as they're full time professionals.

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      • vercingetorix3
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        #4
        All these heavy weights continue to look like a disgrace. Chris Nipple comes to mind; he has ane exciting style and can punch, but that gelatinous blob of a fighter looks absolutely awful. Can he even survive into the later rounds?

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        • vitali1999
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          #5
          The 80's

          The heavywieghts today are no worse than the heavywieghts of the 80's. The only 2 good heavies in the eights were Holms and Tyson, today its the brothers. When boxing fans tell me that the 80's had better fighters than today, i say no but the 70's & 90's did. Berbick, Williams, Smith, Tucker Douglas, Dokes, Bay and countless other's were no better than the heavies of today. Just that in the eights you had 2 dominant champions and today you have the same. Its the 80's all over again, except today the 2 dominant heavywieghts are ruleing at the same time, were the 80's had Tyson and Holmes passing the torch.

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          • paul750
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            #6
            Most of the heavyweights of the 80's were in good shape though. That makes a difference in itself.

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            • TheGreatA
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              #7
              Originally posted by paul750
              Most of the heavyweights of the 80's were in good shape though. That makes a difference in itself.
              Most were ruined by drug abuse though.

              I think a lot of people would be excited about a prospect like Michael Dokes these days.



              Last edited by BIGPOPPAPUMP; 03-27-2009, 10:17 AM.

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              • MANGLER
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                #8
                I lmao when I saw the thread about Peter bein 265 yesterday. That's ****in foul.

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                • ejk22
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                  #9
                  Nice to see that fat bastard Peter take his career more seriously since his ass whipping at the hands of Vitali Klitschko. 265 pounds? What a joke.

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                  • Benny Leonard
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                    #10
                    At least the Klitschko brothers come in shape and unlike many in the past that did as well (for fight time), the Klitschkos seem to stay in shape year round.


                    Toney didn't do so bad for a guy that hadn't shown a six-pack since ???

                    Old Man Foreman and Holmes didn't do so bad either. Skills is still important as well.

                    We just have fighters that are fat with no skills.
                    Last edited by Benny Leonard; 03-27-2009, 08:40 AM.

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