James Toney rates his opposition

doug777

Rising Star
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James Toney enters his 20th year in professional boxing with Saturday’s non-televised bout against Matthew Greer on the undercard of Showtime’s Andre Ward-Shelby Pudwill offering. Who knows how far Toney will get in what has to be the last hurrah of his hall-of-fame career but he certainly has a lot to look back on, which the former three-division titleholder did recently with RingTV.com. In what will become a regular blog item featuring the most accomplished fighter’s of our generation, Toney lists the best he faced in 10 important categories.

Best fighter: Mike McCallum -- That’s an easy choice, right off the top of my head it’s the Body Snatcher. He was the best fighter I fought at middleweight, super middleweight and cruiserweight. Out of all the fighters I fought, I respect him the most because he made me think about everything I tried to do. Before McCallum I was just runnin’ in on everyone, but he made me slow down and think for the first time.

Best Boxer: McCallum -- Yup, it’s him again. It’s between McCallum and Michael Nunn, but I gotta go with McCallum because he was a master boxer who wasn’t afraid to stand his ground. Nunn was mostly fast. I admit that he outboxed me for about nine rounds, but my body shots slowed him down. I told him during the fight ‘I’m gonna catch you!’ And I did.

Best puncher: Merqui Sosa -- Sam Peter is the hardest puncher I’ve fought, but pound-for-pound it’s Sosa because he hurt me the most. I’ll never forget that fight, we fought on an ESPN show in Atlantic City on a Sunday. I went at him like I did everyone back then and that mother f_____ hit me so hard in the third round I was seeing triple for the next three rounds. He knew how to hit and he was so awkward that I couldn’t time him and he caught me high on the head.

Quickest hands: Roy Jones -- He was fast. I’ll give him that, but that’s all I’ll give him. I would have knocked him out if I wasn’t drained from losing 44 pounds in six weeks. I went in (that fight) like a fool and wasn’t properly prepared.

Quickest feet: Nunn -- He had some fast-ass feet (laughing), didn’t he? He was an escape artist for nine or 10 rounds, ‘til I caught up to him.

Best defense: McCallum: He was right there in front of me, but I had a hard time hitting him with clean punches. I basically came into my own by fighting him. I learned how to be elusive without running around the ring by fighting Mike McCallum three times.

Best chin: Tony Thornton: The punching postman from Philly! (laughs) I thought I was gonna knock him out easy. He was squared up with his chin right there for me to hit but I hit him with every punch I had and he wouldn’t budge. I hit him with my best left hook and he didn’t blink.

Best jab: McCallum: Mike’s jab was like a piston. There were other guys I fought who had good jabs, like Nunn and Jones, but they just had speed and they just flicked it. Mike popped that jab with authority. He was an old-school fighter.

Strongest: Samuel Peter: He was just a big-ass African with brute African strength.

Smartest: McCallum: Come on, who do you think it is? Who’s the one fighter I truly respect? You got it, the Body Snatcher, Mike McCallum. I fought my share of boxers who thought they were clever like Roy Jones, Michael Nunn, Montell Griffin, and Reggie Johnson, but they were all scared to really fight. McCallum boxed, he fought, he defended, and he didn’t run all over the ring. He could do all that because he was smart.
 
One of my favorite, if not my all time favorite fighter, James could do it all, one of the hardest dudes to hit cleanly who didn't spend his time "running around the ring" as he puts it. From the waist up, possibly the best defender in the game.
 
Quickest hands: Roy Jones -- He was fast. I’ll give him that, but that’s all I’ll give him. I would have knocked him out if I wasn’t drained from losing 44 pounds in six weeks. I went in (that fight) like a fool and wasn’t properly prepared.

:lol::lol::lol: he doesn't give props to Jones at all...I don't blame him :D
 
Yo not only did he win the fight by TKO, but what the surprising part about the fight is that Toney came in at 215!! :eek::eek::eek::eek:

Let's go Lights Out :dance:
 

That's my expression on it :yes:

James Toney Looks Good Stopping Matthew Greer, Says He'd Be Even Lighter If He Got A Klitschko Fight

13.09.09 - by James Slater, photos by Goossen Tutor Promotions

41-year-old James "Lights Out" Toney, weighing-in at his lowest weight for a number of years, made his nickname an appropriate one for the first time since 2003 last night, as he destroyed an over-matched Matthew Greer in just two-rounds on the same card as the Andre Ward-Shelby Pudwill bout. After having weighed-in at a poundage slightly above 217, the former middleweight, super-middleweight and cruiserweight ruler made many people believe he is once again deadly serious about his goal of becoming heavyweight champion. Obviously having trained hard for last night's fight, his 72nd, with 6 losses and 3 draws (44 by KO), Toney then wasted no time at all in making it clear who he wants next.

It's no secret that "Lights Out" has claimed the two currently reigning heavyweight champions, Wladimir and Vitali Klitschko, have been shamelessly ducking him for years, and last night the future Hall of Famer again called both giants out..

It doesn't matter that most fans scoff when Toney makes his ducking claim, the fact is the 41-year-old gets people talking and who knows, maybe he will sufficiently annoy one of the two brothers into signing for a fight with him.

Toney did say that if he were able to lure one of the Klitschkos into the ring with him he'd come in at an even lighter weight that he did last night against Greer.

"When I was heavier, I felt like I was losing my speed and my stamina," Toney said post-fight. "Even when he hit me I wasn't hurt. I'm 41-years-old now, but I'm [like] 21 really, and I'm a heavyweight who is fighting like a middleweight. If I can get one of the Klitschko sisters to fight me next, I'll come in lighter than I did for [Evander] Holyfield (back in October of 2003) - maybe 211 or 210."

Deep down, Toney must know that a fight with either the IBF and WBO champion or the reigning WBC champion is quite a long shot, and even if such a fight could be arranged it would likely be the middle of next year before it could take place at the earliest - what with both champions having their next one or two fights already worked out (Vitali to take on Chris Arreola and then maybe Kevin Johnson, and Wladimir out until next year, when he will likely face Eddie Chambers).

What's more likely for Toney is a number of further Greer-type match-ups, in which he will keep busy and hopefully remain in shape. And as for a shot against the winner of the WBA title fight between Nikolai Valuev and David Haye - forget it!
 
Shit maybe he can lure Roy back up to heavyweight for a rematch that should've happened at cruiserweight years ago. :smh: at these "p4p" guys and all their bullshit. Toney is the fucking man to me and always will be. When I was boxing I used to watch the first two fights with McCallum religiously. You wanna watch a match with damm near flawless boxing by both fighters? - watch those two matches. It's pretty to watch because aside from the defensive mastery they were both dangerous offensive fighters, neither was afraid to fight inside or to take a punch.
 
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