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Comments Thread For: Dmitriy Salita believes Subriel Matias-Gabriel Valenzuela card stole the show

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  • Comments Thread For: Dmitriy Salita believes Subriel Matias-Gabriel Valenzuela card stole the show

    On the same evening as the Gervonta Davis-Lamont Roach Jnr pay-per-view, Matias stopped Gabriel Gollaz Valenzuela in a main event in Puerto Rico while Xolisani Ndongeni upset Nestor Bravo on the undercard.
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  • #2
    Matias needs to work with boxer types. He can beat people that just walk into the meat grinder.

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    • #3
      While I do enjoy Subriel's style, there's no way he can continue that long term. His insane motor will eventually slow down in time and he gets caught with SO many punches it's going to scramble his brains. He reminds me of a more active Jake Lammota.

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      • #4
        Originally posted by BigJmcgirt23 View Post
        While I do enjoy Subriel's style, there's no way he can continue that long term. His insane motor will eventually slow down in time and he gets caught with SO many punches it's going to scramble his brains. He reminds me of a more active Jake Lammota.
        Honestly, at 32, he's already running on borrowed time with that style. It's grueling. The dude is the definition of take 1 to land 2-3. He walks into your fire power, takes your shots (with sloppy defense) and lands his own. Eventually his own punches seem to always overpower his opponents based on all his wins going by KO. Yet he shows he's very vulnerable to fighters who stick to boxing. I'm actually shocked the way most fighters face him when there are like 2 scenarios that come out every time. You either box him and win, or you go toe to toe with him and lose. When I saw that Mexican dude fight him the way he was, I'm like, nope, you're another one on his KO list.

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        • #5
          Originally posted by ELPacman View Post

          Honestly, at 32, he's already running on borrowed time with that style. It's grueling. The dude is the definition of take 1 to land 2-3. He walks into your fire power, takes your shots (with sloppy defense) and lands his own. Eventually his own punches seem to always overpower his opponents based on all his wins going by KO. Yet he shows he's very vulnerable to fighters who stick to boxing. I'm actually shocked the way most fighters face him when there are like 2 scenarios that come out every time. You either box him and win, or you go toe to toe with him and lose. When I saw that Mexican dude fight him the way he was, I'm like, nope, you're another one on his KO list.
          Unless you've got good movement and stamina Matias shrinks the ring to where you have to fight to keep him off of you and into the meat grinder you go.

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