George Foreman at his awesome best was the
most powerful heavyweight champion ever. At 6’3 ˝”
and 220-225 pounds, with an 82” reach he was the
best of the “super-heavyweights.” Consider that
George Foreman, in his prime had the highest
knockout percentage in boxing history. After his
destruction of Norton, he was 40-0 with 37
knockouts, for a knockout percentage of 92.50. In
his career Foreman had 15 first round knockouts and
18 second round knockouts. That's 33 knockouts
inside of the first 2 rounds! He had 46 knockouts
that were 3 rounds or less, which is more than any
other heavyweight champion. George Foreman’s
incredible two round destruction over Joe Frazier
was the most one-sided beating ever delivered upon
an undefeated heavyweight champion.
oreman
was a man of great physical strength and can be
favorably compared to the legendary strongmen of the
past. It was said that John L. Sullivan once single
handedly lifted a derailed trolley car back onto the
tracks. Jim Jeffries once ran 9 miles to camp
carrying a deer on his shoulders ahead of his
entourage. Likewise George Foreman once trained
using a harness so he could pull a car uphill as he
did his roadwork. Strength, size and power are the
adjectives used to describe a true super
heavyweight. George Foreman was as big and as bad as
they come.
After destroying # 1 contender Ken Norton
one boxing magazine wrote, “The pre-fight strategy,
the planning, the training, the waiting…they were
all ended in less than two rounds by the punishing
fists of possibly the most powerful heavyweight
champion ever.” Indeed such was the devastation that
Foreman’s sledgehammer fists had laid on opponents
that all time greats such as Jack Dempsey and Joe
Louis both commented that Foreman was the strongest
heavyweight hitter that they had ever seen.
At his peak Foreman had a true aura of
invincibility. When he glared down opponents with
his baleful stare it was not an act of false bravado
as it was with some fighters, it was out of a belief
that no man could stand up to his crushing power.
George Foreman, in his prime, truly believed that he
was unbeatable.
Just watching George train with a heavy bag
was a terrifying experience. The rafters shook, the
floor rumbled. His trainer Dick Sadler commented,
“It’s hard to imagine anyone surviving those
punches, much less staying on his feet.”
Tex Maule, a writer for Sports
Illustrated, compared George’s punches to a
baseball pitcher’s deliveries. “He does not throw
wild swinging hooks. That is you’d say he throws
sliders not curves. The punches reach their
destination faster than a wider punch would and land
more heavily.” George was a very heavy hitter, and
he threw more correct punches than he is given
credit for and he put the full weight of his
super-heavyweight sized body into his punches. In
his title winning performance against Joe Frazier
Foreman used a hard left jab, shoved Joe’s shoulders
back to create punching room against the swarming
fighter and scored knockdowns with short right
hands, uppercuts, hooks, and a long overhand right.
Foreman was nothing short of devastating as he
bounced Frazier like a basketball off the canvas six
times.
As a fighter George brought to the ring not only
his outstanding raw power and confidence but also a
frightening arsenal of deadly punches. His uppercuts
could lift a man off their feet, his hooks were
paralyzing, his strong left jab was true, his right
hand, although not often thrown straight was a
decapitating blow thrown short or long. He used his
massive arms to block punches and could parry
punches with his rear hand. He would sometimes slap
opponent’s guards down with his hands and then slam
home massive power shots to the head and body. He
also became very good at cutting down the ring on
his opponents.
In Zaire Muhammad Ali defeated George and
shattered his aura of invincibility. The mistake
that many make when considering this fight is the
misguided belief that Ali “out-boxed” George.
Muhammad Ali did not defeat George Foreman by
keeping the fight at ring center; he did not beat
Foreman by keeping him off of him at all. George cut
the ring down on Ali and forced him to fight off the
ropes. In his autobiography The Greatest My Own
Story Ali said, “All during training I had
planned to stay off the ropes…but now I’ve got to
change my plans. Sadler and Moore have drilled
George too well. He does his job like a robot but he
does it well…I’m famous for being hard to hit in the
first rounds, but no fighter can last fifteen if he
has to take six steps to his opponents three.”
The only reason Ali won that fight in Zaire
was because Muhammad had a cast iron chin and could
absorb tremendous punishment to the body. Only Ali’s
incredible ability to take a beating and his
enormous will allowed him to survive George’s
punches that night. If Ali takes a punch a little
less than what he did he would have been finished by
his own admission. Ali said in his autobiography
that Foreman had him out on his feet but didn’t know
it.
" I hit Muhammad with the hardest
shot to the body that I ever delivered on any opponent. Anyboddy
else in the world would have crumbled"
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How many people could take a body shot the
way Ali could? He survived Zaire and Manila as well.
Foreman landed some hellacious body shots on Ali.
They were exceedingly violent. In Muhammad Ali
His Life and Times by Thomas Hauser Foreman is
quoted as saying, “I hit Muhammad with the hardest
shot to the body that I ever delivered on any
opponent. Anybody else in the world would have
crumbled. Muhammad cringed; I could see it hurt. And
then he looked at me; he had that look in his eyes,
like he was saying I’m not going to let you hurt
me.” Archie Moore also recalled, “George threw some
rather lethal punches in the direction of Ali’s
cranium.” Ali did not beat George with clever boxing
that night in Africa. He beat him with physical and
mental toughness.
ot
too many fighters who ever lived, and possibly only
Muhammad Ali, could defeat the George Foreman of
that fight. Ali could box, move, was fast on his
feet, had exceptional head movement and anticipation
but George cut the ring on him very well in Zaire.
Ali did not outbox Foreman. He outsmarted him yes,
but mostly he toughed it out where most heavyweights
would have wilted. Few men besides Ali could take
the shots that he did. Few who slugged it out with a
prime Foreman would have hopes to survive. After
losing to Ali, George, who had thought himself
unbeatable, began to doubt himself and changed his
style.
George was devastated by his loss to Ali,
after taking time off he changed trainers hiring Gil
Clancy and began to fight at a more measured pace.
Although George had some success even at an old age
fighting in a more controlled manner, the comeback
version was never as good as the original seek and
destroy version.
In his first comeback fight George Foreman
took the most dangerous opponent he could find.
After 15 months of ring inactivity he took on Ron
Lyle who just 10 months previous had knocked out
highly regarded heavyweight hitter Earnie Shavers.
Lyle had come off the deck to defeat Shavers in a
match between two of the divisions all time biggest
hitters. Lyle was himself a super-heavyweight who
stood 6’3 ˝” had an 80 inch reach and weighed 220
pounds of solid muscle. He could jab, hook off the
jab and had a very powerful right hand. Foreman was
now trying to pace himself and began to fight at a
more relaxed pace. The result was that George was
not quite as aggressive as he had been in his
earlier fights. The first two rounds were tentative
as George attempted to hold back and there was
frequent jabbing by both men. Foreman proved his
heart and chin in this fight when it exploded into a
wild brawl reminiscent of Jack Dempsey and Luis
Firpo some 50 years previous with both men hitting
the deck. Foreman demonstrated that he could win a
war of attrition and come out on top by knocking
Lyle out in a see saw battle that ended in a
knockout victory for Foreman in the fifth round.
Even a rusty and hesitant Foreman was nearly
impossible to beat in a brawl.
Those who believe that any “clever boxer”
type could beat George often give the Jimmy Young
fight as an example. Foreman showed up for this
fight in San Juan the day before the fight and
didn’t give himself time to get acclimated to the
heat. He paced himself, fighting in his newfound
measured style and did not throw a significant punch
for the first 5 rounds. This was all wrong for him.
The Foreman of Zaire would have tracked down Young,
forced him to the ropes, went to the body with power
and belted him out inside of a few short rounds. The
1973-74 Foreman, the one who cut the ring and really
went after his man was the best Foreman. The George
who lost to Young never really went after him. The
Foreman who fought at a measured pace just was not
the real Foreman.
fter
losing the decision to Jimmy Young the former
heavyweight champion became an ordained minister.
Ten years later George needed money to support his
youth center so he launched a comeback that was
scoffed at by critics. George proved the nay Sayers
wrong as he worked his way into title contention.
His knockout of Gerry Cooney was an awesome display
of both tremendous punching power and deadly
accuracy. At age 42 he gave an undefeated Evander
Holyfield an outstanding fight, stunning him and
driving him to the ropes in the third round.
Fighting at a slower pace and lacking the meanness
and killer instinct of the young George, Foreman
failed to go after him and ended up losing a
decision. George proved the quality of his chin in
this fight taking 25 unanswered punches in round
nine from the champion without falter. One could not
help but think that the Zaire Foreman would have
beaten Holyfield.
George shocked the boxing world in 1995
when, at the age of 45, he regained the heavyweight
championship by defeating an unbeaten 25 year old
champion with a sensational ten round come from
behind knockout of Michael Moorer. The victory must
be considered one of the greatest comeback stories
in the history of sports. Twenty years after having
lost to Muhammad Ali, Foreman vindicated himself by
regaining the linear heavyweight championship. The
fight remains as a testimony to the extraordinary
power that surged through the veins of George
Foreman.
Foreman was a physical freak of nature in
terms of sheer power and just because one could box
cleverly doesn’t means that they would survive. In
order to beat the prime George one is going to have
to take some very, very hard punches along the way.
George had the size, reach, power, chin and killer
instinct to be a threat to any heavyweight who ever
lived. The post Ali versions of Foreman who fought
at a controlled pace would have all lost to Larry
Holmes, but the Zaire version would have beaten him.
Larry would not have been able to “rope-a-dope”
Foreman the way Ali did. Although Holmes had an
outstanding chin he did not absorb punishment at
quite the same level as Ali. He did not have the
ability to lean away from punches the way Ali did,
nor would there be those loose ropes to aid him in
pulling back and away from George’s punches. Foreman
at his peak beats Larry Holmes. Cus D’Amato once
said “no swarming heavyweight who ever lived would
defeat George Foreman.” George beats any of the
great swarmers including Dempsey, Marciano, and
Tyson (see Frazier fights). It would take a supreme
world-class chin and the ability to absorb bone
crunching body shots as well as clever defense to
survive George Foreman at his best. Lennox Lewis,
who was twice knocked out in early rounds by lesser
fighters, would fall in two rounds to Big George.
Few fighters of history could make the requirement
against the most powerful of the big men. George
Foreman at his awesome best is the king of the
super-heavyweights.
Cox's Corner rates George Foreman among the
five greatest heavyweights of all time.