His fist didn't even go over his head to land that.
Don't nitpick, my point was made, and it was by far more accurate than the complete BS statement I was correcting.
Digging up old reps to try & split hairs seems a little needy, are U really that butthurt by the reality of it?
I was just being a stickler is all. In hindsight I could have worded it in a less condescending way.
When he beats AJ, you'll just add "He beat Joshua, but AJ got stopped by a fat Ruiz, so how good was AJ actually?"
Nope. Joshua has proved himself against the best available. Unified titles. Defended titles. Taken a shock defeat and avenged it.
If Fury fights, and beats, Joshua he'll be the best in the world.
I know people like to make out that his performance vs Kiltschko was some sort of Mayweather type masterclass. But was it really? All I saw was Kiltschko backing Fury up all night, and Fury just edging the rounds with a riddler type performance.
I definitely wouldn't diminish the achievement, but completely agree with your post.
Beating Klitschko in Germany was a massive achievement. Turning it into a dominant win through repeated storytelling was another massive achievement.
Fury is great at selling himself. And fair play to him, that's absolutely part of the fight game.
But break down his resume and it's nowhere near what is now being portrayed.
Wasn’t strictly legal, that’s for sure but I can’t think of a single ref that would have made the call. 5 minutes wasn’t going to help Cunningham so the ref would have had to wait for Steve to come around enough to declare him the winner by concussion.
The American audience don't realise that Fury hasn't looked good in most of his fights. He's sold as an entertaining fighter. That's not how anyone following his career saw him.
Arguably his best 'eye test' performances were against Hammer and Chisora (2) and they were complete physical mismatches. Neither were exciting fights. Fury won both by being too big, too long.
The Klitschko fight has big question marks for me. It's remembered by Fury as a dominant win and that seems to have become the story now. But it was a close fight with a couple of (largely ineffective) punches deciding rounds. Klitschko deserved the rematch he never got. History could have been very different if Klitschko had got the chance to avenge that defeat.
Then there's Wilder. A good draw and a good win. Good on the resume, but how good is or was Wilder?
I like Fury as a fighter, and he could be great, but he's still got a lot to prove in my opinion.
When he beats AJ, you'll just add "He beat Joshua, but AJ got stopped by a fat Ruiz, so how good was AJ actually?"
It was a great KO and once again showed at inside fighting at HW is severely lacking and that is where a lot of his upside comes from. Is he James Toney in there, not at all....but it's simply the ability to change the look on the fly. Switch the entire look and start to come forward behind a high guard; he can come in and change levels too and is fluid inside , not to mention ambidextrous.
Any Fury fan worth his salt wanted Fury to fight Wilder 2 like he fought Cunningham after he was knocked down; how he fought Wallin after he was cut.....maybe not the entire gameplan, but at least some part had to incorporate coming inside. There should have been no reason why Wilder got to hang around at all if he fought like that - the first fight was a major disappointment in that he was nearly stopped and stayed at the end of Wilder's shots.
I understand why people can look at it at the Cunningham fight at face value and think it wasn't a good performance...but to me, I see a guy who can switch the entire game and take the fight inside; that's a whole other dimension. Also, being able to gauge his handspeed against Cunningham who had among the faster hands at HW should have been a key takeaway too.
I'm a big Fury fan but I'll be honest and say the hype has gotten somewhat out of control - he is only meeting expectation, not surpassing it yet! He should have always beaten Wilder...so there is more to prove - he just has to go on a good run of a couple fight as the MAN and the hype will be in line.
https://i.imgur.com/mBveaAJ.gif
I hope you don't put your foot in your mouth every time you post here but I don't see anybody bouncing off ropes or an off balance knockdown.
I see a straight right planting him straight on his azz, and the only reason Fury got up is because he was fighting a bloated cruiserweight, crafty matchmaking in efforts to look legit in his first US bout that almost backfired.
In what universe is that a straight right hand? Looping over hand right obviously.
The American audience don't realise that Fury hasn't looked good in most of his fights. He's sold as an entertaining fighter. That's not how anyone following his career saw him.
Arguably his best 'eye test' performances were against Hammer and Chisora (2) and they were complete physical mismatches. Neither were exciting fights. Fury won both by being too big, too long.
The Klitschko fight has big question marks for me. It's remembered by Fury as a dominant win and that seems to have become the story now. But it was a close fight with a couple of (largely ineffective) punches deciding rounds. Klitschko deserved the rematch he never got. History could have been very different if Klitschko had got the chance to avenge that defeat.
Then there's Wilder. A good draw and a good win. Good on the resume, but how good is or was Wilder?
I like Fury as a fighter, and he could be great, but he's still got a lot to prove in my opinion.
Wilder was stylistically a fight made for him also.
Take away his second performance vs Wilder, Fury has not really produced a performance which clearly states he is miles better than everyone else in the division.
I know people like to make out that his performance vs Kiltschko was some sort of Mayweather type masterclass. But was it really? All I saw was Kiltschko backing Fury up all night, and Fury just edging the rounds with a riddler type performance.
Tyson Fury since Wilder has been portrayed as the second coming of Mike Tyson 'No longer the riddler, he is now a destroyer'.
Fury for the first time in his career has a aura of intimidation 'And people are all abut high off it'.
Okay--
Have him fight steve cunningham again then--
I think Fury wins easily and possibly stops him again
Steve USS Cunningham has retired.
The fight vs Cunningham was fought at a high intensity 'I have not seen Fury since produce that type of intensity inside of the ring' even against Wilder, he was a low intensity fight 'Mainly due to Wilder just stumbling about the ring, yet still trying hard'.
The American audience don't realise that Fury hasn't looked good in most of his fights. He's sold as an entertaining fighter. That's not how anyone following his career saw him.
Arguably his best 'eye test' performances were against Hammer and Chisora (2) and they were complete physical mismatches. Neither were exciting fights. Fury won both by being too big, too long.
The Klitschko fight has big question marks for me. It's remembered by Fury as a dominant win and that seems to have become the story now. But it was a close fight with a couple of (largely ineffective) punches deciding rounds. Klitschko deserved the rematch he never got. History could have been very different if Klitschko had got the chance to avenge that defeat.
Then there's Wilder. A good draw and a good win. Good on the resume, but how good is or was Wilder?
I like Fury as a fighter, and he could be great, but he's still got a lot to prove in my opinion.
Probably one of my favorite Tyson Fury fights 'I don't think it was a off night at all'. Every-time Fury is involved in a tough fight people claim 'It was a off night'.
Fury was clearly in very good condition, are you trying to tell me he has been in better condition since?
Okay--
Have him fight steve cunningham again then--
I think Fury wins easily and possibly stops him again
Who was the ref for this fight? All I remember were illegal elbows, rabbit punches, excessive holding. He should have been disqualified.
- -U memory dismembered.
He had an off night and I think at one point mentioned he was doing cocaine and partyang..
Fury will smoke AJ
Probably one of my favorite Tyson Fury fights 'I don't think it was a off night at all'. Every-time Fury is involved in a tough fight people claim 'It was a off night'.
Fury was clearly in very good condition, are you trying to tell me he has been in better condition since?
Well said :banana:
when you made that dopey pac-tard thread earlier, I did not even look at your username
dude, really... ? :lol1::lol1:
bruh, the Pacquiao>Golovkin>AJ, shltheads... are the worst boxing fans on the planet
everyone knows that you losers are just shameful fanboys
1) give yourself an uppercut
2) grow up
3) learn to love the sport, not the fighter
fanboy clown
all the other posters who disagreed when you said that Manny was the second coming of Jesus... did you put them on ignore as well? LMAO
https://i.imgur.com/mBveaAJ.gif
I hope you don't put your foot in your mouth every time you post here but I don't see anybody bouncing off ropes or an off balance knockdown.
I see a straight right planting him straight on his azz, and the only reason Fury got up is because he was fighting a bloated cruiserweight, crafty matchmaking in efforts to look legit in his first US bout that almost backfired.
Well said :banana:
This fight was long time ago and it’s irrelevant and foos who keep mentioning the knockdown are
Noobs because anybody who bounces off the ropes and runs into punches can get off balance-knocked down. That is no indicator of one having glass chin or not having punch resistance.
Fury is simply the best HW at the moment.
Fury had completely taken over the fight by then before the amazing KO. Fury was 24 and nowhere near the finished article at this point. Now he is the goat.