Somehow Rico looks bigger than Fury. He’s enormous.
Agreed, he's absolutely huge - there's nothing spare on him (if there was he'd be more like 280), and he doesn't have the traditional heavyweight's build of long, long arms. Makes me think of Aleksandr Karelin, or perhaps even Valuev with the massive head and fridge chest.
Frustrating that Warrington didn't ask Okolie 'did you take the drug that the fight has been called off over?', rather than the powderpuff 'did you cheat?' - Warrington knows, and we know, that Okolie's never going to say 'yeah, I cheated', so it's the duty of an interviewer to ask actual probing questions. Mind you, given the anguished 'I spent so much time with Okolie in fight week, I can't believe he's done this' article when it all came out, I'm hardly surprised.
DDD is levels above Wardely. A rematch would end in the same manner. Unless Fabio learns to jab and not throw such wild rights.
If Fabio could literally just slip left into a low straight right he wins that fight.
Weird how Dubois can hold a shot when his bloods up
He'll walk through walls when it's shots he can see, it's shots he can't see that make him doubt himself.
Wardley far greater desire to take a shot. Far greater.
He's fine with getting hit - it's not like he's Joyce and doesn't care, but he's expecting to sometimes, whereas Dubois seems completely shocked when something goes wrong.
Walker seems to be surprised that he can be hit at his favoured range. Eggington's always had good offensive variety and Walker seems a very good style matchup for him
Nakatani definitely taking over, Inoue looking for singles and counters, but that doesn't work against a longer opponent who's punching in combination, particularly when that opponent leads off.
Developing into a strange one. Nakatani controlling the range for most of the time, but his output is way too low, should be looking for a left uppercut coming in IMO. Inoue seems to be content with in-and-out attacks a la Pacquiao, but you can't help but feel he'd have even more success staying in the pocket after getting in.