I think I may have a sort of solution for this impasse between the two camps involving the old timers and modern fighters... I will call this the weight paradox which is: While fighters were instructed, as a goal, to come into a fight, as light as possible, in the old days, fighters today are often bulking up, and training with different ideas about how to show up to a fight in great condition.
So, here we are going back and fourth about a figher's weight and what it would be, while ignoring the fact that fighters in one group were trying to lose weight, while fighters in the other group, are not concerned with such...The paradox being, both groups are trying to come in as able bodied as one can for a fight.
So what does it take to come over this impasse and establish some consensus? Well, for starters, how about thinking in these terms: Take a blank slate...no food ideology, no steriod ideology, and no faulty notions of evolution... Now take the two groups and reverse the training goals: So for the modern heavyweights, they must try to come in as light as possible for a match, while the other historical group, can come in with weight, and should concentrate on strength training, interval training, and other such methods utilized...
Now how much would this change, change the disparity in the average weight of a heavyweight? keeping in mind, that to this day, the average size of both, a heavyweight, and a champion heavyweight, has only changed on average, about maybe 25 pounds or so? Probably less.
This is a rhetorical question above, but what if, for example, Joe Louis was trained rolling a tire, doing Plymetrics, explosive strength training... and what if Tyson was trained on road work, calistenics, the type of things joe did...
So, here we are going back and fourth about a figher's weight and what it would be, while ignoring the fact that fighters in one group were trying to lose weight, while fighters in the other group, are not concerned with such...The paradox being, both groups are trying to come in as able bodied as one can for a fight.
So what does it take to come over this impasse and establish some consensus? Well, for starters, how about thinking in these terms: Take a blank slate...no food ideology, no steriod ideology, and no faulty notions of evolution... Now take the two groups and reverse the training goals: So for the modern heavyweights, they must try to come in as light as possible for a match, while the other historical group, can come in with weight, and should concentrate on strength training, interval training, and other such methods utilized...
Now how much would this change, change the disparity in the average weight of a heavyweight? keeping in mind, that to this day, the average size of both, a heavyweight, and a champion heavyweight, has only changed on average, about maybe 25 pounds or so? Probably less.
This is a rhetorical question above, but what if, for example, Joe Louis was trained rolling a tire, doing Plymetrics, explosive strength training... and what if Tyson was trained on road work, calistenics, the type of things joe did...
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