- Jul 15, 2003
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Originally posted by: Iron Woode
Rope-A-Dope > Tyson
It should also be noted that according to Joe in the HBO special documenting "The Thrilla in Manilla" fight, he was partially blind in his left eye due to a training accident in 1965. This would indicate that throughout his entire professional career, he fought with only partial sight on his left side.
I don't know, but George Foreman was a monster and considered the hardest hitter back then.Originally posted by: geno
Originally posted by: Iron Woode
Rope-A-Dope > Tyson
Parkinsons > Rope-A-Dope
But seriously, it's very hard to compare because there weren't any boxers like Tyson around with that much raw strenght like Tyson in Ali's day. In his prime, I'd question how well the Ropeadope would hold up against someone like Tyson![]()
Originally posted by: Iron Woode
I don't know, but George Foreman was a monster and considered the hardest hitter back then.Originally posted by: geno
Originally posted by: Iron Woode
Rope-A-Dope > Tyson
Parkinsons > Rope-A-Dope
But seriously, it's very hard to compare because there weren't any boxers like Tyson around with that much raw strenght like Tyson in Ali's day. In his prime, I'd question how well the Ropeadope would hold up against someone like Tyson![]()
Originally posted by: geno
Originally posted by: Iron Woode
Rope-A-Dope > Tyson
Parkinsons > Rope-A-Dope
But seriously, it's very hard to compare because there weren't any boxers like Tyson around with that much raw strenght like Tyson in Ali's day. In his prime, I'd question how well the Ropeadope would hold up against someone like Tyson![]()
Robinson was 85-0 as an amateur with 69 of those victories coming by way of knockout, 40 in the first round. He turned professional in 1940 at the age of 19 and by 1951 had a professional record of 128-1-2 with 84 knockouts.
Muhammad Ali, who repeatedly called himself "The Greatest" throughout his career, ranked Robinson as the greatest boxer of all time. Other Hall of Fame boxers such as Joe Louis and Sugar Ray Leonard said the same.
Originally posted by: Woosta
Sugar Ray Robinson > both of them.
Robinson was 85-0 as an amateur with 69 of those victories coming by way of knockout, 40 in the first round. He turned professional in 1940 at the age of 19 and by 1951 had a professional record of 128-1-2 with 84 knockouts.
Muhammad Ali, who repeatedly called himself "The Greatest" throughout his career, ranked Robinson as the greatest boxer of all time. Other Hall of Fame boxers such as Joe Louis and Sugar Ray Leonard said the same.
Originally posted by: Oceandevi
Fedor
Originally posted by: DAGTA
Depends on if Tyson went into the fight hungry...
Originally posted by: geno
Originally posted by: Iron Woode
Rope-A-Dope > Tyson
there weren't any boxers like Tyson around with that much raw strenght like Tyson in Ali's day.![]()
