Prime Rigo vs Inoue.
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I think the amateur style is a liability at the very elite level.Comment
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Yes it is, even if you win, you lose. Now, you get a kid like Morrell Jr, juvenile world champ, national champ in a country that breath boxing, at 18-19 yo, and if the promoter wants to invest he can make him a star, the fundamentals without the amateur burn out, made them prime for learning. We have quite a few kids that defected young, especially the ones in Dubai. Iglesias, Rodriguez, Tellez and a bunch others are going to have good careers.Last edited by garfios; 05-08-2024, 01:10 PM.Comment
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Rigondeaux was almost 29 when he started his pro career, and almost 33 when he had his biggest fight against a prime Donaire. (I won’t count Lomachenko, as Rigo was already 37 and heavily outsized.) I was at the Donaire fight; Rigo was masterful — probably as close to prime as he ever was as a professional. But everyone knows his chin was always questionable. On the other hand, he could also throw bombs. This would’ve been a great fight. Not sure who would’ve come out on top.Comment
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Yes it is, even if you win, you lose. Now, you get a kid like Morrell Jr, juvenile world champ, national champ in a country that breath boxing, at 18-19 yo, and if the promoter wants to invest he can make him a star, the fundamentals without the amateur burn out, made them prime for learning. We have quite a few kids that defected young, especially the ones in Dubai. Iglesias, Rodriguez, Tellez and a bunch others are going to have good careers.Comment
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A long amateur career is never good for a pro campaign. They’re almost two different sports. If success in amateur boxing meant pro greatness, there would be a lot more Mexican and Puerto Rican Olympic medalists. Cubans dominate practically everyone in the amateur game; Mexicans and PRs aren’t even in the same universe, because their fighters go professional much sooner. With younger Cubans cutting their teeth in the pros earlier, we’ll see a much more professional style with them.
One of my favorite things is to see how decorated amateurs look in their FIRST pro fight. First time without the headgear, with small gloves, with opponents planting their feet. Completely different.Comment
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A long amateur career is never good for a pro campaign. They’re almost two different sports. If success in amateur boxing meant pro greatness, there would be a lot more Mexican and Puerto Rican Olympic medalists. Cubans dominate practically everyone in the amateur game; Mexicans and PRs aren’t even in the same universe, because their fighters go professional much sooner. With younger Cubans cutting their teeth in the pros earlier, we’ll see a much more professional style with them.Comment
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I tell this to people all of the damn time. I compare it to fencing and sword fighting lol.
One of my favorite things is to see how decorated amateurs look in their FIRST pro fight. First time without the headgear, with small gloves, with opponents planting their feet. Completely different.Last edited by CubanGuyNYC; 05-08-2024, 03:40 PM.Comment
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