Originally posted by ShoulderRoll
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Duran turned pro at 16, and was obviously learning on the job, so to speak. No doubt a busy early schedule was instrumental in developing him as a fighter.
Now take someone like Usyk. He turned pro exactly 9 years ago, at the age of 26 - and has so far had all of 20 pro bouts!
In the first 9 years of his career, Duran fought 60 times. The question is: would Usyk have benefitted from an extra 40 stay busy/stay sharp matches against non-threatening opponents, in between the serious fights? Would he today have been a better boxer? I sincerely doubt that!
After a very long, busy amateur career, with 350 fights (many at the highest level), Usyk has probably long since reached the stage, where his body needs long pauses to recuberate - rather than staying in shape all the time. Clearly a "Duran-schedule" would not have worked for him. The same goes for other long-time amateurs like Lomachenko and Rigondeaux.
But, generally speaking, I of course agree, that a technical sport like boxing requires a lot of repetition. A LOT! So most young boxers (without a long, gruelling amateur career) starting out in the pro game, would likely benefit from quite a few "learning fights" - before getting down to serious business.
But again, it's a very individual thing.
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