amphibian, on 16 June 2017 - 09:41 AM, said:
polishgenius, on 16 June 2017 - 04:06 AM, said:
amphibian, on 16 June 2017 - 02:28 AM, said:
Have you seen Vasyl Lomachenko?
Also in September there's going to be a card featuring Roman Gonzalez' rematch with the guy who beat him, Naoya Inoue, and quite possibly Juan Francisco Estrada vs Carlos Cuadras. If that comes together that'll be card of the year by miles (and Gonzalez, at least, is definitely an extraordinary boxer).
I think the thing to remember is that boxing has only lost cachet in America. So while all that heritage and knowledge is a loss, other lineages are going to rise.
Naoya will win again.
I've seen Lomachencko. He's good, but it's really something to go back and watch boxers of the 1970s and 1980s. They're just flat out smarter and needed more skills to be competitive back then.
The rise of UK heavyweights has been terrific, but they're not terrifically skilled (yet).
British boxing was more interesting a few centuries ago. In part because it was more like MMA: takedowns were important techniques, specifically landing hard on top of your opponent. And then there was Jewish-Portuguese immigrant Daniel Mendoza: 'He developed an entirely new style of boxing, incorporating defensive strategies, such as what he called "side-stepping", moving around, ducking, blocking, and, all in all, avoiding punches. At the time, this was revolutionary, and Mendoza was able to overcome much heavier opponents as a result of this new style. Though he stood only 5 feet 7 inches (170 cm) and weighed only 160 pounds (73 kg), Mendoza was England's sixteenth Heavyweight Champion from 1792 to 1795, and is the first middleweight to ever win the Heavyweight Championship of the World. In 1789 he opened his own boxing academy and published the book The Art of Boxing[3] on modern "scientific" style boxing which every subsequent boxer learned from.' Mendoza articulated out how to avoid the clinch and being slammed to the ground by much larger men. I would much rather watch him than Mayweather....
Grappling was eventually Mendoza's downfall, when "Gentleman" John Jackson pulled his hair: " seizing Mendoza by his long hair and holding him with one hand while he pounded his head with the other. [...] Since this date boxers have worn their hair short."
https://en.wikipedia.../Daniel_Mendoza
"After this Jackson created a boxing academy for gentlemen at 13 Bond Street, London. Jackson's Saloon was popular with the nobility and gentry. Lord Byron relates in his diary that he regularly received instruction in boxing from Jackson."
https://en.wikipedia..._Jackson_(boxer)
Quote
Yeah, the lure of football (and to a lesser extent basketball) has probably been a major drain on heavyweights in the US (and superheavyweights maybe even moreso---there are some incredibly athletic superheavyweights in the NFL who might be able to make the superheavyweight division worthwhile). And the British Commonwealth countries have rugby. But what about the rest of the world? I don't think basketball's really *that* popular... and being gigantic isn't as huge an advantage in non-USo.An football. So where have all the world (super)heavyweights gone? Powerlifting, maybe?
This post has been edited by Azath Vitr (D'ivers: 16 June 2017 - 08:52 PM