Comments Thread For: Ex-Green Bay Star Levens: 'Football is Easier, Way Easier'

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  • BIGPOPPAPUMP
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    #1

    Comments Thread For: Ex-Green Bay Star Levens: 'Football is Easier, Way Easier'

    By Lyle Fitzsimmons - Here’s a little advice for the wannabe world-class athletes out there.

    If your choices are down to a career in boxing or a career in football, make it easy on yourself.

    Take football.

    “In my opinion, football is easier. Way easier. And it’s not even close,” said former NFL running back Dorsey Levens – a veteran of 144 games, an All-Pro selection and a world championship win over an 11-season gridiron career between 1994 and 2004.

    “I’ve only tried it in the ring a few times and I knew right away that it was not a good place for me.”

    The 40-year-old Levens, a product of Georgia Tech, established himself as a go-to member of Brett Favre’s Green Bay backfield through 2001, including a defeat of the New England Patriots in Super Bowl XXXI at the Superdome in New Orleans in January 1997.

    He gained a career-best 1,435 rushing yards as the Packers returned for a Super Bowl loss against Denver a year later, then scored a personal high of nine touchdowns in 14 games – sixth-best in the league – in a 1,034-yard season behind Favre in 1999.

    He played for the Philadelphia Eagles, New York Giants and the Eagles again over his final three seasons, finally walking away for good in 2004 after coming to grips with the idea he’d lost a step.

    He officially retired as a member of the Packers in 2006.

    “I’d lost something. No question,” Levens said. “There’s a difference between just hearing it from other people and knowing it yourself. I realized it and was able to tell myself, ‘OK, you’ve had a good run but your time is up. It’s time for the next venture.’”

    Among his pursuits since quitting have been the typical (NFL game analyst), the atypical (stage/movie actor) and the unpredictable (wide-eyed boxing gym rookie).

    The latter prolonged a love of the sport that began when he followed Sugar Ray Leonard and Mike Tyson as a teen-ager, then participated in and hosted frequent pay-per-view parties with other NFL players in the ’90s.

    “Living in Atlanta and having so many current and former players around, that was always one of our biggest things,” he said. “We always looked forward to the next fight coming up, because it would mean someone was going to have a party and we’d all get together.

    “There’s nothing out there right now that really intrigues me, but I just wish Manny Pacquiao and Floyd Mayweather Jr. would hurry up and get it on already.” [Click Here To Read More]
  • Vasyl’s dad
    He said no rematch
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    #2
    An article wasn't even necessary. Anyone with a brain knows this.

    5 seconds of game play with 40 seconds of rest in between vs,

    3 minutes of fighting and 1 minute rest periods with no halftime.

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    • supRa
      supercharged
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      #3
      well no ****...boxing isnt a team sport!!

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      • Dirt
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        #4
        ****** article........

        .....not because i think boxing is harder than football.


        i mean, it's all relative. if you've been doing one sport your entire life, and then switched to something different, of course it'll be harder.

        i bet if a boxer tried to get into the nfl after his career was over he'd say it's alot harder than boxing.


        common sense people.

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        • Siggy
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          #5
          Originally posted by Dirt
          .....not because i think boxing is harder than football.


          i mean, it's all relative. if you've been doing one sport your entire life, and then switched to something different, of course it'll be harder.

          i bet if a boxer tried to get into the nfl after his career was over he'd say it's alot harder than boxing.


          common sense people.
          nah, boxing is harder.
          -studies show that boxing is the most physically demanding sport to train for.
          -there are no teammates
          -you cant just play a side of the ball or play a position. you are everything. football is MUCH more specialized
          -considering the high risk and low reward in even starting the sport, that adds to the difficulty of even staying in the sport.

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          • antrob
            Undisputed Champion
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            #6
            Originally posted by Johnny Chingas
            An article wasn't even necessary. Anyone with a brain knows this.

            5 seconds of game play with 40 seconds of rest in between vs,

            3 minutes of fighting and 1 minute rest periods with no halftime.
            Totally agree.....I was very disappointed to clink on the link and find out it was a Lyle Fitszimmons article.

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            • the mesiah
              I'M GOD GIFTED!
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              #7
              The training itself in boxing is so much harder and tedious than football.when it was football season it seemed like a recess play period compared to the boxing business type training.

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              • Dirt
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                #8
                Originally posted by Siggy
                nah, boxing is harder.
                -studies show that boxing is the most physically demanding sport to train for.
                -there are no teammates
                -you cant just play a side of the ball or play a position. you are everything. football is MUCH more specialized
                -considering the high risk and low reward in even starting the sport, that adds to the difficulty of even staying in the sport.
                i know boxing is more physically demanding. but what im saying is, if you take a boxer and take him out of his element, he'll think that sport is harder, no question.

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                • Gorilla Dogs
                  G Doggy Dog
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                  #9
                  Originally posted by supRa
                  well no ****...boxing isnt a team sport!!
                  You couldnt be more WRONG



                  Trainers for your boxing, diet, fitness, sparring partners


                  boxing is more of a team sport than you all think

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                  • JakeNDaBox
                    The Jake of All Trades
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                    #10
                    Originally posted by Gorilla Dogs
                    You couldnt be more WRONG



                    Trainers for your boxing, diet, fitness, sparring partners


                    boxing is more of a team sport than you all think
                    It's almost too obvious to point out... but by saying it's not a team sport, clearly it means that once the bell rings, what you do affects you and only you.

                    A missed block affects your teammate(s), as does an error in LF with runners on base, a bad shot that leads to a fast break the other way... yeah, the individual him(her)self looks bad for the moment, but it affects the team as a whole.

                    Boxers have teams, sure. But the team can't help them once the bell rings. Again, the obvious difference, but apparently it needed to be said.

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