There's no actual boxing analysis in there, just shock value comments from a guy who loves the sound of his own voice.
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
Comments Thread For: Froch: Deontay Wilder Knocks Anthony Joshua Spark Out in One Round
Collapse
-
Originally posted by thack View PostCarl has been there and done it , speaks his mind and may well be right .I'm hoping Joshua doesn't continue to disappoint and does a job on Wallin , who's good but doesn't do anything great.I see Wilder doing a job on my man Parker , so then hopefully this pair will finally find the balls to face each other and we'll find out whose been right and wrong!
Note: This is how Anthony Joshua is held to a higher standard than most other Heavyweights, as a Champion 'And even as a contender, who is apparently? Petrified to fight any other top Heavyweights. Wallin is a fighter for many years who hardcore Fury fans have specifically called for Anthony Joshua to fight.
Now that the fight is happening, they have all switched up on Wallin.
For me? If Joshua beats Wallin over the distance and wins 90-95% of the rounds 'Like he does most of the time in the majority of his fights, that is a top level performance'.
If Joshua stops Wallin, or from what I can see? Has never been decked in the professional ranks or stopped 'That is a really impressive win'.
The likely-hood is that Joshua may beat Wallin, is similar fashion to how he beat Franklin, Helenius i.e Out boxing his opponent, not really being under threat and winning 95% of the rounds.
Deontay Wilder in comparison, Wilder is ether doing a job on Parker or going to struggle 'Like he does in most of his fights, it is most of the time always a struggle until he forces a knock-out'.
I personally don't think there is a big demand there for the Wilder vs Joshua fight, as a match up it is complete overrated 'It is overrated stylistically and even in terms of passion between the fighters' But it will most likely happen if, enough movers and makers want to see it in action etc.
Comment
-
Originally posted by dan-b View PostThere's no actual boxing analysis in there, just shock value comments from a guy who loves the sound of his own voice.
Goddamn sloppy, I know. I just can't be ****ed to get slick these days. It's sad really... that's a heh joke that could be a lol joke with just the tiniest effort.dan-b likes this.
- Likes 1
Comment
-
Originally posted by Spray_resistant View Post
Whyte was never in the mix, he's a domestic level fighter no one is running from him.
"Joshua offered me more but I took the Fury fight" Wilder said at a time when beating Joshua would have meant him becoming unified champion
Comment
-
Given the Fury fights and the Ruiz fight, i’d say it takes a heck of a lot more to KO Wilder than it takes for Joshua.
Speaking of Wilder’s technique, wild punches, and just crude way of fighting…this actually would help him vs AJ. Wilder throws more punches and is more aggressive. AJ ain’t hitting Wilder without something coming back at him. If AJ ever gets into a firefight with Wilder, it will be a repeat of the first Ruiz fight. And I do think AJ will eventually get ****** into a firefight with Wilder.
Comment
-
Originally posted by greeneye99 View Post
Please tell us all the Champions that Deontay Wilder has beated in the past
I'll wait.....
Wilder has beaten NO "Great Champions" who were at or anywhere near their prime.
Not genuinely great ones, at their best. Not even one.
But then, neither has Joshua.
Nor has Wladimir Klitschko
Or Vitali Klitschko
Or Lennox Lewis
As with many greats, greatness is acheived by a sizable ledger of wins over very good, or "Near Great" fighters. Every name on this post have some of those.
You could make a case for Mike Tyson, Evander Holyfield, and Rid**** Bowe, largely leveraged againt each other (as career overlap timing will dictate), and certainly, you can make that case for Tyson Fury.
For Wilder, we can say that he at least Drew with a Prime, Great champion.
Can't say that much for Joshua. Defrocked, degraded, discharged, demoted, disemployed and diposed 39 year, 248 day old, oft KOd and fully retired Wlad?????
Great heavyweight, but he was hardly prime.
Comment
-
Originally posted by greeneye99 View Post
One Champion?
Stiverne?
Lololololol
Klitschko Povetkin Pulev are much better fighters than Bermane Stiverne
Soo I guess Wilder resume is better than Anthony Joshua?
Huh
Please note my response to PRINCEKOOl when he posted ""Wilder has more to prove in his up and coming fight than Joshua"
- Although I believe that Wilder is going to get a major kayo against Joshua, I do agree that he has more to prove. With the exception of Fury, who had Wilder's number, Joshua has fought the better fighters.Last edited by OldTerry; 12-05-2023, 01:43 PM.greeneye99 likes this.
- Likes 1
Comment
-
Originally posted by OldTerry View Post
What I would like to see is Fury Beat Usyk and then Widler beat Joshua. I would hope there would not be rematch clauses so we could then have a Usyk Wilder fight as well as a Joshua Fury Fight.
A few tough assignments comming up on the 23rd card, but hopefully the right people win to get us to what you're envisioning.
After that, let's see who has the balls to fight Zhilei Zhang in China in front of a billion viewers.
And see if Ngannou is for real, or just a mirage laid down by crafty Tyson Fury.
Let's see if Anderson, Hrgovic, Bakole, Makhmudov, Sanchez, Wardley, Yoka, Moore, Barriere, Jalolov, Pero, Clarke and Ljungquist have what it takes to start occupying the top slots to usher in the next era of heavyweights as we begin to move towards mid century.
Comment
-
Originally posted by Willow The Wisp View Post
Well that's misdirection of the question, sir.
Wilder has beaten NO "Great Champions" who were at or anywhere near their prime.
Not genuinely great ones, at their best. Not even one.
But then, neither has Joshua.
Nor has Wladimir Klitschko
Or Vitali Klitschko
Or Lennox Lewis
As with many greats, greatness is acheived by a sizable ledger of wins over very good, or "Near Great" fighters. Every name on this post have some of those.
You could make a case for Mike Tyson, Evander Holyfield, and Rid**** Bowe, largely leveraged againt each other (as career overlap timing will dictate), and certainly, you can make that case for Tyson Fury.
For Wilder, we can say that he at least Drew with a Prime, Great champion.
Can't say that much for Joshua. Defrocked, degraded, discharged, demoted, disemployed and diposed 39 year, 248 day old, oft KOd and fully retired Wlad?????
Great heavyweight, but he was hardly prime.
Comment
Comment