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The Top 25 Flyweights of All-Time – 11 to 25

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  • The Top 25 Flyweights of All-Time – 11 to 25

    By Cliff Rold - For any new boxing fan, the time is not long before a fellow fan points out a magic number which grows more mythologized with time: eight. As in boxing’s original eight weight classes. The number represents in the mind of many a time when the sport was compressed into fields which couldn’t help but be talented, couldn’t help but draw crowds, because there were so few places on the scale to go. They were divisions marked by single champions ever challenged by a depth of contenders today’s seventeen weight classes rarely know.

    Reflection and research reveals this was not always the case, but it was true often enough to bestow a mystique on boxing’s ‘original eight weight classes’ which carries through to the modern day. As good as they can be, as great as some of their competitors have been and still are, weight classes prefixed by a “Jr.” designation will always be seen some as bastard spawn which took something away from the game no matter what they added. [details]

  • #2
    Obviously the top 5 will include Canto and probably at #1 maybe the greatest flyweight ever Jimmy Wilde.

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    • #3
      Originally posted by lparm View Post
      Obviously the top 5 will include Canto and probably at #1 maybe the greatest flyweight ever Jimmy Wilde.
      The number ones are rarely the hard guesses in these classes...the rest of the lists are far more fun.

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      • #4
        Nah... I believe Harada deserves a little bit higher slot. He was a legendary fighter in this country, and he is now a legendary TV commentator He is, to many JP boxing fans, is an equivalent of Mexico'S JCC.

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        • #5
          Originally posted by cool-jupiter View Post
          Nah... I believe Harada deserves a little bit higher slot. He was a legendary fighter in this country, and he is now a legendary TV commentator He is, to many JP boxing fans, is an equivalent of Mexico'S JCC.
          This isn't a P4P list; it's strictly Fly. Wait for the bad assery of the top ten,

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          • #6
            You are very right. Only in terms of flyweight, Harada should be where you put him. Even though, the flyweight assessment hasn't been finished yet, I cannot wait for the Top 20 Bantamweights enumeration.

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            • #7
              Originally posted by cool-jupiter View Post
              You are very right. Only in terms of flyweight, Harada should be where you put him. Even though, the flyweight assessment hasn't been finished yet, I cannot wait for the Top 20 Bantamweights enumeration.
              Top 25!

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              • #8
                id say jimmy wylde at the top

                pancho villa i think deserves a spot in the higher ranks

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                • #9
                  There shouldn't be any weight classes below 118 IMO....I mean even thats crazy but I can see a few youngsters starting out that small.....I could care so less about anything below 118 but thats just me.....It actually really takes a great matchup for me to watch anything less than 126.....but again thats just me.

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                  • #10
                    Originally posted by RAESAAD View Post
                    There shouldn't be any weight classes below 118 IMO....I mean even thats crazy but I can see a few youngsters starting out that small.....I could care so less about anything below 118 but thats just me.....It actually really takes a great matchup for me to watch anything less than 126.....but again thats just me.
                    Thousands of fans in the seats and millions of viewers on TV in Asia and the Latin world are just fine with these classes.

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