If there was a Mount Rushmore for popular fighters in the 21st century, Ryan Garcia would have the audacity to take one of the four spots.
The 27-year-old is a polarizing figure — movie idol looks, millions of social media followers and a career that has been nothing tiny of a rollercoaster. However, on February 21, “King Ry” is scheduled to challenge Mario Barrios for the WBC welterweight title, which Garcia announced on social media.
Garcia’s career may take airy years to rank among the greatest players of all time, but… covers.com asked the Californian for his personal Mount Rushmore box.
“This is my boxing Mount Rushmore: Floyd Mayweather. Sugar Ray Leonard. Muhammad Ali. Henry Armstrong.”
Mayweather became eminent for defeating Garcia’s current promoter, Oscar De La Hoya, in a generational superfight 18 years ago. “Money” amassed astronomical wealth and won world titles in five weight categories.
Leonard may not be the greatest Sugar of all time, but he could easily be considered the best boxer of the 1980s. Mayweather was a defensive genius; Leonard was equally talented defensively and offensively. Legacy-defining victories over Wilfred Benítez, Roberto Durán, Thomas Hearns and Marvin Hagler earned him a place in the pantheon of boxing greats.
Muhammad Ali would be a lock for most Mount Rushmore fans. “The Greatest” combined blazing hand speed with footwork more suited to a middleweight than a heavyweight. His performances in The Rumble in the Jungle and The Thrilla in Manila – defeating George Foreman and Joe Frazier, respectively – are highlights of his career, alongside victories over Sonny Liston, Ken Norton, Leon Spinks and more.
Go back further and you’ll find Henry Armstrong, a 5’7″ terror whose career ended with 101 knockouts in 180 fights. In 15 years, he won three world titles simultaneously, although there were only eight divisions. With nineteen welterweight title defenses in just two years, the fierce “Homicide Hank” gained both notoriety and acclaim.
Armstrong also won featherweight and lightweight titles on both sides of his welterweight reign in the 1930s – a true phenomenon by any standard.