Anyone really thinks AJ can beat wilder?
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Helenious is a robot, stiff and slow, now wilderNo. Joshua doesn't move his head or his feet. He just stands there in his guard. Wilder will take his head off. You have to move your head and your feet, step to Wilder, and catch him in between his shots. If you fight him scared the way Joshua does your head will end up in the 10th row.
with his looping unorthodox shots it will be a devastating finish
I don't want AJ to go out like that as i think he would struggle mentally retiring like that tbhComment
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They'll probably wheel AJ's corpse out there for a 3rd Ruiz fight and then a Fury retirement fight after Wilder obliterates him. Ruiz is a huge embarrassment at this point, Joshua could probably still beat him.Comment
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I think 2-3 rounds, tops
I'll be honest I don't even think fury should ever fight wilder again as I feel that fury was the most hurt in that third fight
I think wilder has improved under Malik Scott tooComment
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Naww, he's too into his own head. Over thinks in there, doesn't let stuff flow anymore.
Thinking in the ring isn't a bad thing or anything, but when you overthink, you get too much information overload. And it shows with AJ
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Would have to favour Wilder.
Unless the danger of a Wilder fight and being underdog, brings the dog back out of him.
AJ got civilised, lost his head and has his man dems to always fall back on and love him too much still.
As his prior trainers have hinted, its removed all of his fighting spirit.
60-40 Wilder.Last edited by Kris Silver; 08-12-2023, 06:40 PM.Comment
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I don't think anyone really believes the first Fury-Wilder bout was a legitimate draw, and it's not much of a feat to "at least" draw with a man who then KO'd you twice afterwards.
They share, I believe, only three common opponents, and it's not true that Wilder did better on all occasions - AJ made much easier work of Eric Molina.
Regardless, such matters aren't terribly important, as triangular logic means nothing in boxing.Comment
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When this fight was first touted - as those of you with long memories may recall - I had it at around 55-45 AJ. One thing to remember is that Wilder is, while a devastating puncher, not a great technical boxer, to say the least.
However, Wilder HAS improved, and AJ has changed his psychological make-up, so I'd probably switch this to 55-45 Wilder at this stage.
The oft-repeated remark that AJ "won't be able to stay away from Wilder's right hand for 12 rounds" is meaningless if AJ sparks Wilder first, of course.
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