Just to simplify things, I look at 3 main things
"Skills" = how boxer looks in the ring. This includes innate things like speed & power (could call it "Skills and talent"), as well as developed skills like proper footwork & throwing punches
"Resume" - basically, who you have fought. I weigh fights against other good fighters mostly. If you have 20 defenses against weak opposition, it doesn't impress me
Significant fights "Across divisions" - if you be successful across division it just shows that you are very good
1. Chocolatito - #1 skills & #1 resume, across 4 divisions. Clear #1
2a. Kovalev - bc I thought he beat Ward. Great skills and resume. Only drawback is only 1 division w/ meaningful wins
2b. Ward - Competitive against Kovalev. excellent skills and excellent resume, now across 2 divisions, although he really stalled his career
4. GGG - excellent skills (#1 potential), meh resume. It will improve if he beats Jacobs. I admit that this ranking is based on "faith" in his skills, as his resume is solid, but not spectacular, and only 1 division
5. Bud - excellent skills, only a few good names, 2 divisions
6. Loma - #1 skills, but resume is thin for now. And that loss counts. I think he's a much better pro fighter now, wouldn't lose, but I cant just explain it away without more fights from him.
7. Rigo #excellent skills (hard to beat, but bores me to death tho, he fights so safety first). Only one good name on resume, 1 division
8. Inouye - excellent skills, #1 potential, thin resume but impressive he's done it across 2 divisions as hes so young,
9. Pac. - yes, he's past his prime. But he's still outclassing good fighters like Bradley & Vargas. Across many divisions
10. LSC/Nietes/Estrada/Canelo/Yamanaka - really, once you get to around #10, does it really matter. Any of these dudes can be there. All except Yamanaka across divisions. Yamanaka is a name I see a lot, if his best opponent is Moreno (in one close fight & one more dominant), I question him on a p4p list, but I admit I haven't seen many of his fights.
If Garcia wins this weekend he'll shoot up to around 7 or so. Not sure I'd say the same about Thurman, maybe he'd get in that mix at #10.
"Skills" = how boxer looks in the ring. This includes innate things like speed & power (could call it "Skills and talent"), as well as developed skills like proper footwork & throwing punches
"Resume" - basically, who you have fought. I weigh fights against other good fighters mostly. If you have 20 defenses against weak opposition, it doesn't impress me
Significant fights "Across divisions" - if you be successful across division it just shows that you are very good
1. Chocolatito - #1 skills & #1 resume, across 4 divisions. Clear #1
2a. Kovalev - bc I thought he beat Ward. Great skills and resume. Only drawback is only 1 division w/ meaningful wins
2b. Ward - Competitive against Kovalev. excellent skills and excellent resume, now across 2 divisions, although he really stalled his career
4. GGG - excellent skills (#1 potential), meh resume. It will improve if he beats Jacobs. I admit that this ranking is based on "faith" in his skills, as his resume is solid, but not spectacular, and only 1 division
5. Bud - excellent skills, only a few good names, 2 divisions
6. Loma - #1 skills, but resume is thin for now. And that loss counts. I think he's a much better pro fighter now, wouldn't lose, but I cant just explain it away without more fights from him.
7. Rigo #excellent skills (hard to beat, but bores me to death tho, he fights so safety first). Only one good name on resume, 1 division
8. Inouye - excellent skills, #1 potential, thin resume but impressive he's done it across 2 divisions as hes so young,
9. Pac. - yes, he's past his prime. But he's still outclassing good fighters like Bradley & Vargas. Across many divisions
10. LSC/Nietes/Estrada/Canelo/Yamanaka - really, once you get to around #10, does it really matter. Any of these dudes can be there. All except Yamanaka across divisions. Yamanaka is a name I see a lot, if his best opponent is Moreno (in one close fight & one more dominant), I question him on a p4p list, but I admit I haven't seen many of his fights.
If Garcia wins this weekend he'll shoot up to around 7 or so. Not sure I'd say the same about Thurman, maybe he'd get in that mix at #10.
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