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Comments Thread For: Will 2024 be for Tim Tszyu what 1997 was for his father?

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  • Comments Thread For: Will 2024 be for Tim Tszyu what 1997 was for his father?

    For so long the comparisons were kind, flattering, focused only on the positives. They centred largely on the way he stood - upright, steady, poised - and the way he threw his right hand nice and straight, just like his old man. They also touched on the difference in size, with the son slightly bigger than the father, and what it would take for the son to eventually eclipse what his father had achieved in the ring. The early signs were positive, they said, but still he had a long, long way to go. His father, after all, was not just any world champion, but one of the finest fighters of his generation. He made 13 title defenses. He made Zab Judah dance. He made a nation proud and a son feel inspired enough to want to follow in his footsteps. That is why Tim Tszyu has for years been compared to his father: how he fights, how he wins, how far he has to go to emulate him. He has been compared to him because his father, Kostya, was no ordinary fighter and, in the context of a son carrying on the family business, no ordinary father, either.
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  • #2
    Hes nothing like his father but he might be the second best son of a famous boxer ever. First is Floyd then you have maybe Tim? Idk who would be number 3.

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    • #3
      He should either be trained by Freddie Roach or Raynoso. Otherwise, he has too many defensive holes.

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      • #4
        Tim wasted too much time facing stiffs in the outback. The build up was too long and the cheap imports led to a false sense of invincibility. Some guys labor in obscurity and some guys are kept in the dark.

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