Lennox Lewis' Legacy


Lewis - Klitschko
The recent history of boxing's heavyweight division has not shown the public eagerly embracing every significant champion, but rather, every other one. The people loved Muhammad Ali, particularly in the latter stage of his career when his religious & political views didn't stir up so much controversy. Even when it was clear that he was well beyond his prime and shouldn't be in the ring anymore, he still had the full support of fight fans and beyond.

His era was followed by that of Larry Holmes, who was neither a bad man nor a bad fighter. In fact, for the most part he was a real class act, and one hell of a fighter to whom nobody really stood a close second during his reign as champ. Yet the public never took to Holmes. In comparison to the adoration poured upon Ali, you could reasonably argue that Larry was disliked. The fact that he beat up an over-the-hill Ali certainly didn't help Holmes' appeal. The only fight that Holmes truly had strong support for was when he fought Gerry Cooney, and that was mostly due to how their promoters effectively employed the race card. Just about everybody was pulling heavily for one guy or the other in that fight. Yet race was not the only reason why many white fans pulled for Cooney. After all, they weren't clamoring for a white champion when Ali held the crown. And when the next people's champion came along - Mike Tyson - a white champion wasn't desperately sought for then either. It wasn't a white replacement that many people longed for when Holmes was champ, so much as they wanted a charismatic one that their hearts could effortlessly find reasons to pull for.

When Tyson took center stage in the heavyweight boxing biz, it was apparent from the start that his style and personality was nothing like that of Muhammad Ali. Yet for an entirely different set of reasons, Tyson garnered similarly fierce support and loyalty from legions of fans. His technique may have reminded people of Joe Frazier and his demeanor of Sonny Liston, but his popularity was clearly a follow-up to the Greatest of all Time. The era of Larry Holmes was quickly forgotten about, as if it had never occurred.

Once Tyson self destructed, with a little help from Buster Douglass & Evander Holyfield, Lennox Lewis became the next Big Man in Boxing [I'm skipping over Evander Holyfield, because as popular as he was, he never held the title for very long stretches of time. He was certainly a brave warrior, but simply too small to consistently vanquish all of the giants he faced. Sometimes he was a Bowe beater, other times a guy with a medically questionable heart, always the little engine that could, even when he couldn't] . Just as Tyson was the follow-up to Ali in terms of public appeal, Lewis has been the successor to Holmes. Up until his most recent fight, Lennox dominated the division with relative ease. His only weaknesses are the indifference he sometimes displays when in the ring against a clearly inferior opponent, and a suspect chin that he leaves inadequately guarded in such contests. Avenging these lapses of concentration came easily to Lennox. And more often than not he took care of business the first time around. He comports himself with class while packing a punch that resonates like a sledgehammer. Yet for a variety of reasons both simple and complex, the American boxing public has never truly warmed up to him.

The copyright of the article Lennox Lewis' Legacy in Sports Issues is owned by Roy Pickering. Permission to republish Lennox Lewis' Legacy in print or online must be granted by the author in writing.

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