When Tito was an amateur he wasn't thought of as any kind of power puncher. Which is strange. Tito's destructiveness comes from his technique and also it has to do with the commitment to throwing punches, setting himself to get all the leverage he can when throwing bombs. He rarely KO's or KD's an oponent with one shot but the amazing accuracy he has and where he naturally judges and adjusts distance when he's got a guy hurt gets him a lot of stoppages. He gets the most out of the power he's got.
Julian Jackson just had insane natural power like Tommy Hearns, so he's defintley a bigger puncher IMO. It looked like he damn near killed Herol Graham with one shot.
Nasseem Hamed should be up there with P4P power punchers as well, no doubt about that.
PBF should take the money and be thankfull, he ain't a PPV fighter (yet). No one other than hardcore boxing fans would go out of their
way to see him and this is an opportunity to get big off the name of another fighter that he should beat fairly easy (relative to say Tyszu). But judging by his level of competition recently it looks like he'll be the next Roy Jones rather than Tito/DLH in his career
moves.
Shame if that's the case cause he's a helluva fighter and I don't want to have to hate him like I hate Roy LOL.
This fight reminded me of another prospect who was out on his feet, legs turned to jelly. Then he rallied back and like the Cotto fight, it was stopped way too early. He was trying to impress some french promoters, to get a contract. They sent him home without a deal, and everyone must have thought that's it an overrated prospect. He was Puerto Rican too, his name Was Felix Trinidad, the fight was with Alberto Cortes in Paris. :cool: