This question was asked in the Daily Bread Mailbag today. Thoughts?
I saw your comment on (X) the other day about Harry Greb. I not only agree with you but I will add something you probably can’t say publicly. White fighters generally don’t get underrated. Yes I said it. Most great white fighters get overrated more than they get underrated. Ray Mancini, Vinny Pazienza and Ingemar Johannson are all in the Hall of Fame. For Black fighters, the standard has to be higher or else Meldrick Taylor, Marlon Starling and Tim Witherspoon would be in. I get that fighter’s legacies become enhanced after their careers. But this Greb fascination has taken a life of it’s own and it seems agenda driven. No fighter’s legacy has been more enhanced posthumously than Greb’s. What’s the difference in him and Sam Langford? I don’t see much separation in their resumes and we can at least see footage of Langford. In the 1920's boxing under the modern rules had only been around about 30+ years. So if Greb were the GOAT, they had less to measure him against during those times. While being highly regarded, most as you said put Benny Leonard ahead of him. So after his career, when they had a chance to properly analyze him, I didn’t read any mentions of him being the GOAT from the 1940-2000. Now recently I hear a strong claim that he’s the best fighter ever, by people who have never seen him. You asked a great question. How is it that the people who saw him, didn’t say he was the GOAT, yet the people who didn’t see him say he was? By the time the 1940s came around, Henry Armstrong was thought of as the GOAT. By the time the 1960s came around Sugar Ray Robinson had taken the mantle. And so on. They were highly praised by the people in their day who actually saw them. And they were black. Now they expect us to believe that the mostly white media, over praised Robinson and Armstrong but under praised Greb. All the while the same press overrated Jack Dempsey. I’m sorry, I can’t believe that. And I don’t want to put words in your mouth but I feel like sometimes your hands are tied behind your back.
Bread’s Response: Your words are your words. And mine or mine. I can respect your opinion without agreeing with it 100 per cent.
OK … I want to be fair to Harry Greb about race. Because he didn’t draw the color line. He fought Tiger Flowers three times, if my count is correct. And not only was Flowers a talented foe, he was a southpaw, which was tough to deal with in the 1920s because there weren’t many around. So Greb gets full props from me for that.
He also gets full props from me for his resume. I didn’t see him fight but I saw Mickey Walker and Gene Tunney fight. And the fact that he beat them says a lot. Greb is certainly an ATG fighter and one of the best middleweights and light heavyweights ever. Yes, light heavyweight. His résum?at light heavyweight is absolutely insane also.
But I still don’t get the crusade to make him the GOAT by modern historians who haven’t seen him. Although I have seen cases where a fighter’s legacy grew, and to be fair, the fighter was a black fighter: Ezzard Charles’ legacy grew over the past 20 years. As a kid, I heard everyone say that Archie Moore was the best light heavyweight ever. But with further research, I saw that Charles was 3-0 vs Moore, including one brutal stoppage over a prime Moore. Charles also outperformed Moore vs common opponents.
So while Moore had greater longevity, Charles proved to be the better fighter and was recognized as such. So I have seen that movie before where a fighter’s legacy grew long after his career. But with Greb, I feel like this came out of nowhere. And I agree with you, if Greb’s legacy grew, why didn’t Sam Langford’s to the same extent.
Langford beat Stanley Ketchel who was thought to be the GOAT at middleweight in the early part of the century. He also beat a prime Joe Gans who was another fighter many thought to be the GOAT at that point in time and was one of the greatest lightweight champions ever. Langford was very inexperienced when he handled Gans. And he got a draw in his lone shot at a title vs Barbados Joe Walcott. In which all reports read that Langford toyed with him.
But here is the kicker. Langford also KO’d Tiger Flowers in two rounds. The same man who took Greb’s crown and beat him two out of three. This is not including the success he had vs much bigger fighters like Harry Wills and Jack Johnson. So like you, I find it peculiar that Greb’s legacy grew with forensic analytics but Langford’s didn’t to the same extent, and they fought in the same era. I don’t know what to attribute this to, but I will say it’s strange.
I also know the media can be very clever with whatever agenda they are trying to push, and you have to look deeper than the surface level. For example, Joe Louis's reign was called the Bum of the Month tour. Yet there is no specific mention of a duck or miss that he has. Even more, Louis fought 10 Hall of Famers. And he has 49 fights vs opponents who were ranked in the top 10 by Ring ****zine at some point in their career – and won 46. I'm sure the media members who called it the Bum of the Month tour knew these things, yet they still insulted the longest reign in heavyweight history.
All in all, I wish I had a chance to see Harry Greb. I can only imagine how good he really was. And this is in no way me trying to discredit his great career. I'm just free thinking as to why this has come about so long after his career and death.
I saw your comment on (X) the other day about Harry Greb. I not only agree with you but I will add something you probably can’t say publicly. White fighters generally don’t get underrated. Yes I said it. Most great white fighters get overrated more than they get underrated. Ray Mancini, Vinny Pazienza and Ingemar Johannson are all in the Hall of Fame. For Black fighters, the standard has to be higher or else Meldrick Taylor, Marlon Starling and Tim Witherspoon would be in. I get that fighter’s legacies become enhanced after their careers. But this Greb fascination has taken a life of it’s own and it seems agenda driven. No fighter’s legacy has been more enhanced posthumously than Greb’s. What’s the difference in him and Sam Langford? I don’t see much separation in their resumes and we can at least see footage of Langford. In the 1920's boxing under the modern rules had only been around about 30+ years. So if Greb were the GOAT, they had less to measure him against during those times. While being highly regarded, most as you said put Benny Leonard ahead of him. So after his career, when they had a chance to properly analyze him, I didn’t read any mentions of him being the GOAT from the 1940-2000. Now recently I hear a strong claim that he’s the best fighter ever, by people who have never seen him. You asked a great question. How is it that the people who saw him, didn’t say he was the GOAT, yet the people who didn’t see him say he was? By the time the 1940s came around, Henry Armstrong was thought of as the GOAT. By the time the 1960s came around Sugar Ray Robinson had taken the mantle. And so on. They were highly praised by the people in their day who actually saw them. And they were black. Now they expect us to believe that the mostly white media, over praised Robinson and Armstrong but under praised Greb. All the while the same press overrated Jack Dempsey. I’m sorry, I can’t believe that. And I don’t want to put words in your mouth but I feel like sometimes your hands are tied behind your back.
Bread’s Response: Your words are your words. And mine or mine. I can respect your opinion without agreeing with it 100 per cent.
OK … I want to be fair to Harry Greb about race. Because he didn’t draw the color line. He fought Tiger Flowers three times, if my count is correct. And not only was Flowers a talented foe, he was a southpaw, which was tough to deal with in the 1920s because there weren’t many around. So Greb gets full props from me for that.
He also gets full props from me for his resume. I didn’t see him fight but I saw Mickey Walker and Gene Tunney fight. And the fact that he beat them says a lot. Greb is certainly an ATG fighter and one of the best middleweights and light heavyweights ever. Yes, light heavyweight. His résum?at light heavyweight is absolutely insane also.
But I still don’t get the crusade to make him the GOAT by modern historians who haven’t seen him. Although I have seen cases where a fighter’s legacy grew, and to be fair, the fighter was a black fighter: Ezzard Charles’ legacy grew over the past 20 years. As a kid, I heard everyone say that Archie Moore was the best light heavyweight ever. But with further research, I saw that Charles was 3-0 vs Moore, including one brutal stoppage over a prime Moore. Charles also outperformed Moore vs common opponents.
So while Moore had greater longevity, Charles proved to be the better fighter and was recognized as such. So I have seen that movie before where a fighter’s legacy grew long after his career. But with Greb, I feel like this came out of nowhere. And I agree with you, if Greb’s legacy grew, why didn’t Sam Langford’s to the same extent.
Langford beat Stanley Ketchel who was thought to be the GOAT at middleweight in the early part of the century. He also beat a prime Joe Gans who was another fighter many thought to be the GOAT at that point in time and was one of the greatest lightweight champions ever. Langford was very inexperienced when he handled Gans. And he got a draw in his lone shot at a title vs Barbados Joe Walcott. In which all reports read that Langford toyed with him.
But here is the kicker. Langford also KO’d Tiger Flowers in two rounds. The same man who took Greb’s crown and beat him two out of three. This is not including the success he had vs much bigger fighters like Harry Wills and Jack Johnson. So like you, I find it peculiar that Greb’s legacy grew with forensic analytics but Langford’s didn’t to the same extent, and they fought in the same era. I don’t know what to attribute this to, but I will say it’s strange.
I also know the media can be very clever with whatever agenda they are trying to push, and you have to look deeper than the surface level. For example, Joe Louis's reign was called the Bum of the Month tour. Yet there is no specific mention of a duck or miss that he has. Even more, Louis fought 10 Hall of Famers. And he has 49 fights vs opponents who were ranked in the top 10 by Ring ****zine at some point in their career – and won 46. I'm sure the media members who called it the Bum of the Month tour knew these things, yet they still insulted the longest reign in heavyweight history.
All in all, I wish I had a chance to see Harry Greb. I can only imagine how good he really was. And this is in no way me trying to discredit his great career. I'm just free thinking as to why this has come about so long after his career and death.
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