Great Fights, Salido the favorite over donaire after he knocks this kid out, great to see what garcia is made of.
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Comments Thread For: Salido Eyes Garcia, But Wants Nonito Donaire Showdown
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Nonito is the truth, Salido is the boogey man - real talk, Mickey Garcia is very good, he can pull off the upset, he impresses me with his dominance every performance, but Salido is a chin checker, very determined, very strong Boogey man type fighter, Nonito will KO Salido, not only does he get hit alot, he gets hit cleanly alot...and if you've noticed with Nonito's last 3 fights, his opponents are afraid to open up and engage or commit, that is all that needs to be said about Nonito, his last fight was against the so called best in his division, and as soon as dude opened up it was over..Arce doesn't have a chance in HELL
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Originally posted by PinoyNation View PostIf only Rigo would fight his way to the top and earn it too.
Salido started his career at the tender age of fifteen. (With possibly no amateur experience at all.) "Siri" lost a lot of early bouts (which is why many people underrate him). He's a real blue-collar champ. Orlando had to claw his way to the top.
Rigo, on the other hand, couldn't be more different. He's literally a living amateur legend. Like it or not, great amateurs have always had a leg up on their fellow pro rookies. They're simply more proven than your typical newbie professional.
There's simply no reason why Donaire can't fight Guille now. "Earning" a shot is really a weak demand. "El Chacal" won an interim WBA belt in his seventh pro fight and the "full" version in only his ninth. Rigondeaux is "Ring" magazine's #1 contender. If Nonito doesn't want to give Rigo an opportunity, that's his choice; but let's not pretend the reason is because Guillermo has to "earn" anything.
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Originally posted by CubanGuyNYC View PostI understand your sentiment, but you're comparing apples to oranges.
Salido started his career at the tender age of fifteen. (With possibly no amateur experience at all.) "Siri" lost a lot of early bouts (which is why many people underrate him). He's a real blue-collar champ. Orlando had to claw his way to the top.
Rigo, on the other hand, couldn't be more different. He's literally a living amateur legend. Like it or not, great amateurs have always had a leg up on their fellow pro rookies. They're simply more proven than your typical newbie professional.
There's simply no reason why Donaire can't fight Guille now. "Earning" a shot is really a weak demand. "El Chacal" won an interim WBA belt in his seventh pro fight and the "full" version in only his ninth. Rigondeaux is "Ring" magazine's #1 contender. If Nonito doesn't want to give Rigo an opportunity, that's his choice; but let's not pretend the reason is because Guillermo has to "earn" anything.
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