Comments Thread For: Fury: Wilder Has Not Moved On From The Loss, But I Won't Underestimate Him

Collapse
Collapse
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts
  • BIGPOPPAPUMP
    Franchise Champion
    Franchise Champion - 20,000+ posts
    • Sep 2003
    • 46539
    • 2,259
    • 334
    • 5,493,285

    #1

    Comments Thread For: Fury: Wilder Has Not Moved On From The Loss, But I Won't Underestimate Him

    WBC heavyweight champion Tyson Fury is not underestimating the danger involved in the upcoming trilogy fight with Deontay Wilder. The third encounter takes place on July 24th at the T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas.
    [Click Here To Read More]
  • Jack Rivers
    Supreme Being
    Silver Champion - 100-500 posts
    • Mar 2018
    • 363
    • 44
    • 4
    • 11,055

    #2
    Long live the King.
    Attached Files

    Comment

    • zod66
      Interim Champion
      Gold Champion - 500-1,000 posts
      • Jan 2018
      • 788
      • 148
      • 12
      • 7,068

      #3
      Boooooooomb squuuuaaaaaaaaaad

      Comment

      • BodyBagz
        The Stuff Of Nightmares
        Franchise Champion - 20,000+ posts
        • Apr 2020
        • 29780
        • 6,043
        • 6,437
        • 108,454

        #4
        Stop crying. No one forced you to sign that rematch clause

        Comment

        • Oldskoolg
          Racist trolls get blocked
          Unified Champion - 10,00-20,000 posts
          • Jan 2019
          • 12160
          • 5,396
          • 9,795
          • 82,563

          #5
          Even Fury’s rhetoric is getting more serious and far less “jesteric” as had it been in the past. He is taking wilder very seriously as well he should. Rather than being the clown Prince of boxing, fury is trying to really hammer home the “you know I beat you badly in the 2nd fight”…..in the Army we called sort of tactic Psychological Operations Warfare….

          Comment

          • thack
            Undisputed Champion
            Unified Champion - 10,00-20,000 posts
            • Dec 2007
            • 12866
            • 2,931
            • 1,340
            • 53,931

            #6
            Tyson has this spot on. Anyone who would underestimate Wilder would be the biggest fool in boxing and even Tyson who won comfortably last time out knows one lapse in concentration and it's 'lights out'.

            Comment

            • Bronx23
              Undisputed Champion
              Platinum Champion - 1,000-5,000 posts
              • Sep 2016
              • 2152
              • 610
              • 197
              • 31,668

              #7
              Welp everyone who was banking on Fury to come into this fight too ****y and unprepared, sucks for you.

              Here’s the reality: Fury knows how to beat DW. He made a great case for a W in the 1st fight and he spent 99% of that fight going backwards. Wilder is dangerous on the front foot & needs space to wind up and land that right hand bomb. Fury figured out how to completely take away Wilders right hand.

              Wilder is the one who has an uphill battle. He can’t outbox Fury. Period. He can put Fury’s lights out but that’s easier said than done. He nailed Fury flush at least 3x in the early rounds of the rematch and Fury took them well. I think mostly because of the extra weight & better conditioning.

              While I do see improvement in Wilders pad work and jab, it doesn’t appear that he has improved his footwork, he still looks stiff in his movements & maybe it’s just me but he also appears to look a little smaller this go round.

              Comment

              • lion33lit
                Undisputed Champion
                Platinum Champion - 1,000-5,000 posts
                • Jan 2018
                • 2114
                • 195
                • 103
                • 40,404

                #8
                So Fury plans to use again his desperate leaning grabbing and clinching tactics? He knows now that it’ll be impossible to use his PEDs and/or maybe even his compromised gloves; so he believes he’ll be in the clear to use an unacceptable boxing strategy by ‘verbalizing’ it to give it some type of credence, authority & permission?!?

                Using the convenient cheating strategy by constantly throwing his huge body around on the smaller man - would be considered brash MMA like tactics that have no place in boxing, because It’s not boxing.

                This guy will push his luck at all costs, but he’s gonna be surprised when Wilder ‘cheats back’ this time, and that’ll be in order to keep the boxing match at a respectable boxing match distance.

                Wilder won’t mind the point deductions given on both sides, because it’ll keep the desperate touchy feely Fury at bay….hopefully it doesn’t end in an understandable disqualification.

                The ref will be forced to work the night by constantly breaking up the two, which is what he’s supposed to do….. The last referee ******, and a bogus KRONK desperation strategy was born out of Fury’s pregnancy.

                Comment

                • Tecnoworld
                  Undisputed Champion
                  Platinum Champion - 1,000-5,000 posts
                  • May 2018
                  • 1764
                  • 279
                  • 625
                  • 21,338

                  #9
                  My idea is that this bout will be much different from the other 2. I see wilder much more angry this time and I don't know how this can be. If he blindly attacks Fury and connects it can be good for him but if he misses Fury will counter and ko him even faster than match#2. In both cases it could be a very short match...

                  Comment

                  • Jack_sh*t
                    Undisputed Champion
                    Platinum Champion - 1,000-5,000 posts
                    • Feb 2017
                    • 1153
                    • 711
                    • 969
                    • 62,609

                    #10
                    Originally posted by Tecnoworld
                    My idea is that this bout will be much different from the other 2. I see wilder much more angry this time and I don't know how this can be. If he blindly attacks Fury and connects it can be good for him but if he misses Fury will counter and ko him even faster than match#2. In both cases it could be a very short match...
                    Anger is counter-productive in a boxing ring, at least if you're facing anyone competent... If anger gets the better of you then your lack of discipline will leave you wide open to counters.

                    Comment

                    Working...
                    TOP