Kevin Levrone Nasser El Sonbaty
62 Professional contests entered 53 Professional contests entered
20 Professional contests won 6 Professional contests won
win/loss ratio 32% win/loss ratio of just 11%
year turned pro 1992 year turned pro 1990
first pro win 1992 first pro win 1995
Number of times Kevin beat Nasser 25 Number of times Nasser beat Kevin 10
Number of runner-up places 18 Number of runner-up places 11
Number of third places 12 Number of third places 13
lowest contest placing 8th lowest contest placing did not place in 1992 ( 15th )
last contest placing 3rd last contest placing 14th
Kevin is in a whole other league compared to Nasser , he won his first pro contest as soon as he turned pro , Nasser took 5 years to win his first show. Kevin place second in his first Olympia showing , Nasser's first O he placed 7th and it took him 7 years to place second in an Olympia .
Not only is Kevin a much more competitive and dominating bodybuilder throughout his career but when directly faced to Nasser he beat him much more than Nasser ever beat him in fact well over double 25 vs 10
Kevin is leaps & bounds better than Nasser like I said before it's not even open for discussion who is considered the greater bodybuilder between the two
*Yawn* ND still trying to suggest that the question of who is a better bodybuilder can simply be answered by quantitative factors alone, while ignoring the major qualitative factor that Levrone only beat Nasser when he was not at his best. Your "stats" focus on years when Nasser was still growing (his first five years as a pro) as well as his last few years where he was not even competing seriously anymore.
Using your purely statisitcal method Levrone probably has more wins against Ronnie Coleman than vice versa, so obviously stats alone do not answer the question.
Ronnie Coleman can continue competing until he's 50 or 60 and as his placings drop, would that make him a poorer bodybuilder than if he just chooses to retire now? Of course not.
Similarly, the fact that Nasser continued to compete for several years past his prime does not make him a worse bodybuilder than if he retired after 99 or 2000, yet ND's "statistics" incorrectly suggest this does make him a worse bodybuider.
During his best Nasser got top 3 in 29 of 31 consecutive shows over 4 years (with only two 4th places). He also beat Levrone 11 tinmes during this period (including the 96 Olympia). There's a reason why at the 98 O Flex mag believed it to be a competition between Nasser and Wheeler (Levrone and Ray weren't even considered top contednders).