i think it is more impressive to be the best in one division and clean it out. most of the guys who move up alot of divisions do to much ducking and dodging.
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what is better dominating one division or winning belts in many??
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what i dont like about getting titles in many divisions is that the quality of competition may not be up to par. each division could have a weak champion ready for the taking. when you dominate a division, you basically clean out everyone worth a damn in there. unless of course, you are in a weak division.
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Originally posted by 2501 View Postwhat i dont like about getting titles in many divisions is that the quality of competition may not be up to par. each division could have a weak champion ready for the taking. when you dominate a division, you basically clean out everyone worth a damn in there. unless of course, you are in a weak division.
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Originally posted by 2501 View Postwhat i dont like about getting titles in many divisions is that the quality of competition may not be up to par. each division could have a weak champion ready for the taking. when you dominate a division, you basically clean out everyone worth a damn in there. unless of course, you are in a weak division.
a.) beats an excellent fighter to capture that title.
or
b.) shows some consistency in that division and beats other legitimate contenders/champions.
this is why i think erik morales' 3 division championship run was impressive. he virtually cleaned out one division (122), beat excellent fighters in the next division (126), and did the same in his last weight division (130) and even unified two of the belts.
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Originally posted by oldgringo View Postyeah...moving up several classes and winning titles is only really impressive to me when the fighter either:
a.) beats an excellent fighter to capture that title.
or
b.) shows some consistency in that division and beats other legitimate contenders/champions.
this is why i think erik morales' 3 division championship run was impressive. he virtually cleaned out one division (122), beat excellent fighters in the next division (126), and did the same in his last weight division (130) and even unified two of the belts.
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Going up IMO.
Pacquiao vs. Calzaghe is a good example.
Pacquiao winning The Ring title at 130 when he started at 108 is better than just dominating 168.
I guess it does dependon the situation though. Duran dominating 135 is pretty badass, but the universally recognized best fighters ever were mostly guys who moved up.
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