Originally posted by champion4ever
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Comments Thread For: Tyson Fury vs. Deontay Wilder: Arbitration Judge Orders Third Fight
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Originally posted by IRONCHINHAGLER View PostFury has been told to fight Wilder by sept OR he will be in “breach of contract”...which will result in a monetary judgment for Wilder in the future. Expect Fury to fight AJ anyway ...dont think he cares or is going to b controlled by an arbitrators ruling.
And who in their right mind thinks the Saudis still pay 155 for a non-undisputed fight?
But you keep riding.
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Originally posted by PBR Streetgang View PostI don't particularly like any of the three HWs involved (I typically root against all of them whomever they are fighting), but I do find it both humorous and sad that fans care more about an arbitration ruling than a potential unified HW champion. That's not to say I like the sycophants in the other camps any better; if the shoe was on the other foot they would probably be doing the same.
Some people (fortunately) still believe your word counts for something. In this case, it wasn't just words...it was a contract.
Surprise!BodyBagz likes this.
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Originally posted by FLY TY View Post
ETA: and Eddie Hearn is the biggest idiot on the planet. He's cost AJ and himself a lot of money. Who, on God's earth tries to put together a fight against somebody in court for owing another guy a fight?
Think about the last 6 or 7 years. When would you rely on him not having some problem that wouldn't derail the fight?
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Wilder should be smart for once in his life and accept a step aside offer. He can always fight winner of Fury/AJ for a very lucrative match. If Wilder does fight Fury and by chance pulls a win out of his ass, I suspect he will continue his games and refuse to fight AJ by pricing himself out. Result: no undisputed champion.
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Originally posted by Toffee View Post
Maybe. But is there ever a good time to make a fight with Fury?
Think about the last 6 or 7 years. When would you rely on him not having some problem that wouldn't derail the fight?
Seems pretty idiotic in that instance, of any other, to try to put together a fight with him.
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Originally posted by GhostofDempsey View PostWilder should be smart for once in his life and accept a step aside offer. He can always fight winner of Fury/AJ for a very lucrative match. If Wilder does fight Fury and by chance pulls a win out of his ass, I suspect he will continue his games and refuse to fight AJ by pricing himself out. Result: no undisputed champion.
So how does it make Wilder smart to take step-aside? He beats Fury, AJ still has to go through him for undisputed. Or is your argument that its smart for Wilder should let two brits fight for undisputed?Oldskoolg likes this.
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Originally posted by FLY TY View Post
Maybe you don't. But I think he'll care about money disappearing from his bank account
And who in their right mind thinks the Saudis still pay 155 for a non-undisputed fight?
But you keep riding.
That all said, there are some quotes out there from Arum suggesting he will stick with the arbitration decision, but we'll see.
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Originally posted by Monty Fisto View Post
You may be right that the money will swing his decision -- and absolutely right that if the AJ/Fury fight isn't for all the titles it will diminish the economics of it -- but at the same time the court absolutely has no power to force Fury to fight Wilder. It can say you have to fight by then or we'll award monetary damages, but that's it. With the Rahman/Lewis case, the judge imposed an 18-month injunction on Rahman fighting a HW bout unless he fulfilled his contractual obligation to Lewis. He'd have been stripped, he had little commerical appeal outside of having the belt and it was therefore a no brainer. There are obviously similarities in certain respects with Fury, though some notable differences also. It's not a no-brainer that Fury will have to fight Wilder in the same way as it was for Rahman against Lewis, just because the commerical appeal of the AJ fight probably outweighs the Wilder rematch even without the WBC belt being on the line.
That all said, there are some quotes out there from Arum suggesting he will stick with the arbitration decision, but we'll see.
It seems the only people surprised or upset by any of this are either from the UK, or domestic Wilder haters.
(Not calling you either one)
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Originally posted by FLY TY View Post
Wrong. Wilder could've done the same. He gave Fury the rematch instead...which is why people are happy about an arbitration ruling, if you don't get it.
Some people (fortunately) still believe your word counts for something. In this case, it wasn't just words...it was a contract.
Surprise!
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