you dont notice how he stopped moving his head and just started coming in straight lines depending on his power?? hell he even stopped going to the body
His style didn’t change all that much, was he slightly less focused on his fundamentals? Possibly. But that isn’t the reason he fell short against elite competition. It’s not even a massive contributing factor as Tyson was always a fundamentally flawed fighter
They came when his opposition got better.
you dont notice how he stopped moving his head and just started coming in straight lines depending on his power?? hell he even stopped going to the body
Nah, his flaws were exposed once he fought elite competition. Holyfield beats any version of Tyson
His flaws came when his team changed..look how he fought early and compare them to him later
When he was using his fundamentals he looked unbeatable...to bad he lost his entire foundation
Nah, his flaws were exposed once he fought elite competition. Holyfield beats any version of Tyson
When he was using his fundamentals he looked unbeatable...to bad he lost his entire foundation
This.
It's become so fashionable to just write Mike off as overrated and a product of a bad era and matchmaking in the '80s.
Matter of fact, it's become the way that casuals act like they know what they're talking about. (See also: Ali was an overrated bum)
There was a time I thought Tyson would do what he does for as long as he wanted to. It seemed so easy and natural i didn't think he had to train for it.
I also didn't think he needed skill or peek a boo style to beat his victims. I just thought Tyson could take anything thrown at him and dish it out more than they could give. I didn't think Tyson was effected by anything thrown at him. I didn't think Tyson could be hurt.
This is why I wrote that someone under 6 ft can win the Heavyweight title if they use and train from the peek a boo style. A person with this kind of movement would kill Wilder they would be all over his ribs and make him miss his windmill punches . To bad when don't have no trainers who teach this today