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Tyson Fury beats greats like Holyfield & Foreman ?

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    Tyson Fury beats greats like Holyfield & Foreman ?

    I can see him beating these 2 by UD because lack of head movement what do yall think ? The

    #2
    Tyson Fury barely got by Otto Walin.

    Comment


      #3
      Holy-Fury would've been awesome. Similar to the Bowe fights. Could have gone either way on any given night. Holy struggled with the bigger heavyweights as he had a size disadvantage. But he made it work. Probably my all-time favorite due to his heart.

      Foreman KO's Fury prime for prime. Foreman was an animal.
      WillieWild114 WillieWild114 likes this.

      Comment


        #4
        Originally posted by WillieWild114 View Post
        I can see him beating these 2 by UD because lack of head movement what do yall think ? The
        Ah, the relative merit of athletes from different eras. Always a subject best left to the historians; rather than to fighters, news writers, trainers, announcers, bloggers, promoters and fans.

        Otto Wallin, Steve Cunningham, John McDermott, even the hopeless MMA champ Francis Ngannou were all "off nights" for Tyson Fury; and while fans look for any chance to be critical, historians know that you can't tell too awful much from those lapses in concentration.
        Foreman had a couple of those too, and Holyfield had a bunch of them.

        What sets Fury apart is that he has NEVER lost. At least, not yet.

        I feel that the 1972-76 version of George Foreman would land enough on a prime Fury to stop him. In his era, the 6'4" destroyer seldom came across decent fighters who were taller, but his battles against taller folks like Jack O'Halloran, Gerry Cooney, Mike Jameson, Dave Jaco, Ollie Wilson and Bob Hazleton demonstrated his love for reaching taller guys like Fury with pinpoint shots that would close the show.
        Fury is x10 better than any of them, of course; but it only takes one big one to knock today's champ onto ***** street, and Foreman would finish the job.

        Holyfield, as accomplished and dog determined as he was, I see getting outpointed. What worked against Bowe for the real deal would not be as effective against Fury.

        He is a champion who's reputation is largely based on an unprecedented ability to box (when he's serious and motivated), at 6'9", and his thrilling trilogy with Wilder and comprehensive outboxing of Klitschko.

        He is fast running out of time to ever be a champion whose resume is packed full of great opponents, but the aforementioned accolades that DO make him special also make him quite hard to beat. For anyone.

        Over the years that I've been attending the fights, writing, consulting, managing and becoming pretty in the know, I rank em' thusly:

        50 years of Heavyweights. 1974 - 2024

        (Note: Those highlighted are Active Today)

        1. Larry Holmes
        2. Lennox Lewis
        3. Muhammad Ali
        4. Mike Tyson
        5. George Foreman
        6. Wladimir Klitschko
        7. Tyson Fury
        8. Ken Norton
        9. Joe Frazier
        6. Evander Holyfield
        7. Oleksandr Usyk
        8. Anthony Joshua
        9. Deontay Wilder
        10.Ron Lyle
        11.Vitali Klitschko
        12.Rid**** Bowe
        13. Gerry Cooney
        14. Earnie Shavers
        15.Jimmy Young
        16.Ike Ibeabuchi
        17.Tim Witherspoon
        18.Gerrie Coetzee
        19.Andrew Golota
        20.Michael Dokes
        21.Joseph Parker
        22.David Tua
        23.Alexander Povetkin
        24.Mike Weaver
        25.Frank Bruno
        26.Tommy Morrison
        27.Andy Ruiz Jr.
        28.Zeili Zhang
        29.Joe Bugner
        30.Donovan Razor Ruddock
        31.Trevor Berbick
        32.Tony Tucker
        33.Chris Byrd
        34.Ray Mercer
        35.Pinklon Thomas
        36.Oliver McCall
        37.Luis Ortiz
        38.Michael Spinks
        39.Shannon Briggs
        40.James Buster Douglas
        41.Hassim Rahman
        42.Michael Moorer
        43.Tony Tubbs
        44.James Bonecusher Smith
        45.Filip Hrgovic
        46.Carl The Truth Williams
        47.Dillian Whyte
        48.Joe Joyce
        49.Oscar Bonavena
        50.David Haye
        buge buge billeau2 billeau2 like this.

        Comment


          #5
          **** no, Real Deal ****s Fury up all day. Y'all been exaggerating Fury's ability to move since he taught Wlad the point of learning how to pivot.

          Just because Wlad was able to reign for a long time over overweight, short, old, and/or undersized HWs whose boxing acumen was so low he never needed to learn more than very basic ins and outs to beat them does not mean what Wlad did during his era translates well to any other era.

          The only other times in boxing history the HW division was so crippled was the 30s.

          Has Tyson shown us a talent Wlad didn't show us or did Tyson peak in terms of displaying abilities during the Wlad fight?

          Since his Wlad fight he's displayed his movement and added to hit his ability to lay his **** on his opponent's head until they tire. Well buds, Wlad too was a master of laying his **** on heads. He's shown he does have KO power. Wlad's displayed a little more TBH.

          I don't think Wlad was that good compared to other eras therefor I do not think Tyson is very good given he's just a little better than Wlad.


          He could beat up the 30s champions. Maybe the 1900s Corbett and ****. Corbie might **** him up though.

          No consideration, just hands down for sure would do well, only now and the 30s.


          That's me saying not just Evander, don't even need a Holy level HW champ to demolish everything Tyson, or Wlad, have ever shown us. Spinks would beat them both pretty easy.

          Everything people have to say as to why their great is based on their time or strictly the world of fantasy. Like how you guys exaggerate that fat ****'s movement like he's ever done more than bow at the waist, pivot, and backpedal.

          Comment


            #6
            Originally posted by Willow The Wisp View Post

            Ah, the relative merit of athletes from different eras. Always a subject best left to the historians; rather than to fighters, news writers, trainers, announcers, bloggers, promoters and fans.

            Otto Wallin, Steve Cunningham, John McDermott, even the hopeless MMA champ Francis Ngannou were all "off nights" for Tyson Fury; and while fans look for any chance to be critical, historians know that you can't tell too awful much from those lapses in concentration.
            Foreman had a couple of those too, and Holyfield had a bunch of them.

            What sets Fury apart is that he has NEVER lost. At least, not yet.

            I feel that the 1972-76 version of George Foreman would land enough on a prime Fury to stop him. In his era, the 6'4" destroyer seldom came across decent fighters who were taller, but his battles against taller folks like Jack O'Halloran, Gerry Cooney, Mike Jameson, Dave Jaco, Ollie Wilson and Bob Hazleton demonstrated his love for reaching taller guys like Fury with pinpoint shots that would close the show.
            Fury is x10 better than any of them, of course; but it only takes one big one to knock today's champ onto ***** street, and Foreman would finish the job.

            Holyfield, as accomplished and dog determined as he was, I see getting outpointed. What worked against Bowe for the real deal would not be as effective against Fury.

            He is a champion who's reputation is largely based on an unprecedented ability to box (when he's serious and motivated), at 6'9", and his thrilling trilogy with Wilder and comprehensive outboxing of Klitschko.

            He is fast running out of time to ever be a champion whose resume is packed full of great opponents, but the aforementioned accolades that DO make him special also make him quite hard to beat. For anyone.

            Over the years that I've been attending the fights, writing, consulting, managing and becoming pretty in the know, I rank em' thusly:

            50 years of Heavyweights. 1974 - 2024

            (Note: Those highlighted are Active Today)

            1. Larry Holmes
            2. Lennox Lewis
            3. Muhammad Ali
            4. Mike Tyson
            5. George Foreman
            6. Wladimir Klitschko
            7. Tyson Fury
            8. Ken Norton
            9. Joe Frazier
            6. Evander Holyfield
            7. Oleksandr Usyk
            8. Anthony Joshua
            9. Deontay Wilder
            10.Ron Lyle
            11.Vitali Klitschko
            12.Rid**** Bowe
            13. Gerry Cooney
            14. Earnie Shavers
            15.Jimmy Young
            16.Ike Ibeabuchi
            17.Tim Witherspoon
            18.Gerrie Coetzee
            19.Andrew Golota
            20.Michael Dokes
            21.Joseph Parker
            22.David Tua
            23.Alexander Povetkin
            24.Mike Weaver
            25.Frank Bruno
            26.Tommy Morrison
            27.Andy Ruiz Jr.
            28.Zeili Zhang
            29.Joe Bugner
            30.Donovan Razor Ruddock
            31.Trevor Berbick
            32.Tony Tucker
            33.Chris Byrd
            34.Ray Mercer
            35.Pinklon Thomas
            36.Oliver McCall
            37.Luis Ortiz
            38.Michael Spinks
            39.Shannon Briggs
            40.James Buster Douglas
            41.Hassim Rahman
            42.Michael Moorer
            43.Tony Tubbs
            44.James Bonecusher Smith
            45.Filip Hrgovic
            46.Carl The Truth Williams
            47.Dillian Whyte
            48.Joe Joyce
            49.Oscar Bonavena
            50.David Haye
            I just sent you a PM as I think this post really expresses a lot of relevant ideas as well as a critically thought out prognostication!

            you spoke so well on the finer points of the topic:

            Fury is exceptionally talented when motivated: He has shown the ability to fight expert fights using totally different styles, he has shown will power, guile, and the effects of boxing in a professional environment since being a youth. Truly, the plodding amatuer style that is so limiting does not affect the Gypsy King. He is more like Pitbull Cruz (a favorite of mine) who fights with that professional sheen of bravado, than these guys who revert to jab, plod, plod, wind up, rinse repeat.

            At his best he has shown resolve to hang with a puncher, though Foreman pressures a lot more than Wilder (or for that matter Klitsko)... and the ability to use his natural gifts against sound technical fighters like Cunningham. On this last accord Holyfield was a lot more talented and experienced than Cunningham of course.

            Fury has the talent, the chops to fight in that league, whether he wins, or not. The fights, I believe would be competative. Lerts consider Holyfield and his own private "tale of two cities." Exciting Evander goes in there and slugs it out with Bowe. Exciting fightb with a preordained conclusion. To win the next one Holyfield is told to box... He does and is successful. Because Holly can do that, he is coachable and though he prefers a slug out, he would know that to beat Fury necessitates boxing. This match would be a chess match. I can see Fury, at his best prevailing.

            Foreman is an interesting hypothetical because of the pressure he brings. Different kind of puncher than Wilder, and for that matter, one of his mentors, Liston. Foreman has a good chance of winning unless Fury can establish range and stop Big George from cutting the ring.
            Last edited by billeau2; 04-02-2024, 12:31 PM.
            Willow The Wisp Willow The Wisp likes this.

            Comment


              #7
              Fury is a fat, inactive, unproven oaf. If he turns up for one Usyk fight, let's see how he does and judge his historical standing afterwards.

              Comment


                #8
                Originally posted by dan-b View Post
                Fury is a fat, inactive, unproven oaf. If he turns up for one Usyk fight, let's see how he does and judge his historical standing afterwards.
                I suppose that at least some of the time, our current champ is all of those things. But in a world of 8 billion, all of whom have access to this sport; all of whom qualify as liking the idea of an extra 200 million dollars in their account; nobody has come forward after a decade of trying to topple the giant.
                The MMA world gave it a shot when they had a pure boxer as their champion; but they fell woefully short too.

                Maybe Usyk can change this narrative???? Six weeks to go!!!

                Comment


                  #9
                  Originally posted by Willow The Wisp View Post

                  Ah, the relative merit of athletes from different eras. Always a subject best left to the historians; rather than to fighters, news writers, trainers, announcers, bloggers, promoters and fans.

                  Otto Wallin, Steve Cunningham, John McDermott, even the hopeless MMA champ Francis Ngannou were all "off nights" for Tyson Fury; and while fans look for any chance to be critical, historians know that you can't tell too awful much from those lapses in concentration.
                  Foreman had a couple of those too, and Holyfield had a bunch of them.

                  What sets Fury apart is that he has NEVER lost. At least, not yet.

                  I feel that the 1972-76 version of George Foreman would land enough on a prime Fury to stop him. In his era, the 6'4" destroyer seldom came across decent fighters who were taller, but his battles against taller folks like Jack O'Halloran, Gerry Cooney, Mike Jameson, Dave Jaco, Ollie Wilson and Bob Hazleton demonstrated his love for reaching taller guys like Fury with pinpoint shots that would close the show.
                  Fury is x10 better than any of them, of course; but it only takes one big one to knock today's champ onto ***** street, and Foreman would finish the job.

                  Holyfield, as accomplished and dog determined as he was, I see getting outpointed. What worked against Bowe for the real deal would not be as effective against Fury.

                  He is a champion who's reputation is largely based on an unprecedented ability to box (when he's serious and motivated), at 6'9", and his thrilling trilogy with Wilder and comprehensive outboxing of Klitschko.

                  He is fast running out of time to ever be a champion whose resume is packed full of great opponents, but the aforementioned accolades that DO make him special also make him quite hard to beat. For anyone.

                  Over the years that I've been attending the fights, writing, consulting, managing and becoming pretty in the know, I rank em' thusly:

                  50 years of Heavyweights. 1974 - 2024

                  (Note: Those highlighted are Active Today)

                  1. Larry Holmes
                  2. Lennox Lewis
                  3. Muhammad Ali
                  4. Mike Tyson
                  5. George Foreman
                  6. Wladimir Klitschko
                  7. Tyson Fury
                  8. Ken Norton
                  9. Joe Frazier
                  6. Evander Holyfield
                  7. Oleksandr Usyk
                  8. Anthony Joshua
                  9. Deontay Wilder
                  10.Ron Lyle
                  11.Vitali Klitschko
                  12.Rid**** Bowe
                  13. Gerry Cooney
                  14. Earnie Shavers
                  15.Jimmy Young
                  16.Ike Ibeabuchi
                  17.Tim Witherspoon
                  18.Gerrie Coetzee
                  19.Andrew Golota
                  20.Michael Dokes
                  21.Joseph Parker
                  22.David Tua
                  23.Alexander Povetkin
                  24.Mike Weaver
                  25.Frank Bruno
                  26.Tommy Morrison
                  27.Andy Ruiz Jr.
                  28.Zeili Zhang
                  29.Joe Bugner
                  30.Donovan Razor Ruddock
                  31.Trevor Berbick
                  32.Tony Tucker
                  33.Chris Byrd
                  34.Ray Mercer
                  35.Pinklon Thomas
                  36.Oliver McCall
                  37.Luis Ortiz
                  38.Michael Spinks
                  39.Shannon Briggs
                  40.James Buster Douglas
                  41.Hassim Rahman
                  42.Michael Moorer
                  43.Tony Tubbs
                  44.James Bonecusher Smith
                  45.Filip Hrgovic
                  46.Carl The Truth Williams
                  47.Dillian Whyte
                  48.Joe Joyce
                  49.Oscar Bonavena
                  50.David Haye
                  FYI, you've got 2 sets of 6-9 in there

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