Precisely the reason why fights don't get made at the proper time. Also, fans want it that way, "He ain't ready yet doe. Still too young to get near the smell of the smoke doe." Meaning, if he takes the fight and loses, his boxing career is over. There's no second, third, fourth chances.
Why is losing once so horrible in the sport of boxing?
Collapse
-
Thats BS, I don't see anybody running with the Greatest theme, and his resume is one of the best in boxing history so you are wrong on so many levels its obvious you don't open your eyes to the majority and focus on a few.Comment
-
Funny how half the mofos in this thread contribute to the problem. The example? Daniel Dubois. Anyone with eyes can see that the guy has what it takes to make it to the top, but ever since his L to Joyce, he's been written off completely.
ACL tear? Sure...fine.Comment
-
0's are extremely hard to maintain.
Because of this, ''purists'' want to discredit 0's.
Most 0's are laughable if you take into consideration the opponents.Comment
-
Comment
-
Its one thing that they dont fight other top ranked boxers, whats hilarious is they are even afriad to fight big punchers even if they are gatekeepers or journeymen Thats how much balls these cowards lack they are that scared of taking a chance losing to a puncher that is why they are always fighting light punching guysComment
-
It shouldn't be a big deal, and it isn't that big a deal to me.
But it's slightly justifiable when you consider that a lot of these boxers are being carefully matched. ie they lose to someone who was specifically selected for them with most conditions in their favour. If Manchester United got to choose their opponents a few times a year at their own ground, you'd expect them to win.
As for losing big fights, I always think it just makes the rematch bigger. There should be more, for example, unification fights.
And for mandatories, well that's just sport. You can win and you can lose. Mandatories are the only bit of boxing business that resembles a sport.Comment
Comment