Comments Thread For: The Top 25 Heavyweights of All-Time – Top Ten
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Holyfield lost about four or five times in his 30's, if I'm not mistaken. The record books have one loss against Lewis but we all know it's two. Lewis was only a few years younger but he won comprehensively. Over twelve rounds Lennox Lewis landed TWICE as many punches and somehow the fight got called a draw. To most people outside of America, that fight pretty much proved who the better heavyweight was.Comment
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Holyfield lost about four or five times in his 30's, if I'm not mistaken. The record books have one loss against Lewis but we all know it's two. Lewis was only a few years younger but he won comprehensively. Over twelve rounds Lennox Lewis landed TWICE as many punches and somehow the fight got called a draw. To most people outside of America, that fight pretty much proved who the better heavyweight was.Comment
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The second fight was definitely closer. But I remember Lewis outlanding him for the most part and still looking the stronger.
I had Lewis winning the first fight by 6-7 clear rounds. Something like that.
And for the second fight I had Lewis winning by 3-4 rounds.
And Holyfield's headbutts drove me crazy.Comment
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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. [Click Here To Read More]Comment
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So 188-198 lbs Dempsey does what 250 Vitali couldn`t do, while being a lesser puncher?Very objective here
You talk as if Dempsey was undefeated and undefeatable... God damn! Firpo knocked Dempsey down twice...
It is not about disrespect to the Champion (cause i actually respect Dempsey a lot) - it is simply logical... When two ****ers step into the ring, the one with longer arms, bigger punch, better chin, and bigger weight usually ends victorious...
Dempsey has a totally different style : huge power in both hands, even Bert Sugar believes he had a better left hook than Frazier. So yes, I'm being objective. The come forward styles of both Dempsey and Arreola would have played in Dempsey's favor. I say Dempsey by ko in 1 or 2 rounds. If you read the other replies, you'll realize you're the only one who thinks Arreola would have beaten Dempsey. Not a good sign...Last edited by Tiozzo; 03-19-2010, 03:11 PM.Comment
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