I counted on Saturday. Even in a fight where he was warned and penalised he still managed to land - I kid you not - exactly ONE HUNDRED flush clinches. Seriously, I was counting.
What would happen if he was NEVER able to do it? I'm not saying it WOULD make a difference. After all, it's not as if, after he was told he couldn't do it any longer, he looked like a deer in the headlights with a split cheek and shipping flush punches off a non-puncher.
Sure, the Kliteratti will point to round 12, where he did fine work. But it's a key part of his arsenal. Let's face it, you saw Clinchski more often than you saw his right hand on Saturday night.
The Kliteratti are so blinkered with this stuff that they claim Japan won World War II, as, "when the US bombed Hiroshima, Japan was ahead on points." Even Wlad's wife, the indestructible cheerleader, gets roped into it, looking at the ref this weekend and wondering why her husband was having a point taken away for what she's been led to believe is a standard boxing practise.
A world without undue Clinchski... what would happen?
What would happen if he was NEVER able to do it? I'm not saying it WOULD make a difference. After all, it's not as if, after he was told he couldn't do it any longer, he looked like a deer in the headlights with a split cheek and shipping flush punches off a non-puncher.
Sure, the Kliteratti will point to round 12, where he did fine work. But it's a key part of his arsenal. Let's face it, you saw Clinchski more often than you saw his right hand on Saturday night.
The Kliteratti are so blinkered with this stuff that they claim Japan won World War II, as, "when the US bombed Hiroshima, Japan was ahead on points." Even Wlad's wife, the indestructible cheerleader, gets roped into it, looking at the ref this weekend and wondering why her husband was having a point taken away for what she's been led to believe is a standard boxing practise.
A world without undue Clinchski... what would happen?
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