Im by no means a fan of MMA, too much rolling around on the floor for my liking, but when you see the brutalness of some of the fights they have, it makes you think, what is going on when you see fighters like Ortiz ******* it in? i mean, he was hardly getting a beat down, also, look at Judah against Clottey, Mofo quit like a dog cause he did not think he had the balls to stay with Clottey, where is his pride to go out on his shield?
Money makes boxers go soft i would say. Too much to do with the money nowadays. Nice cars, tecnology, places to go and see, and too much to occupy the mind. The internet probably distracts boxers and they want to read on forums what is being said about them. Too many distractions.
Boxers delaying fights as part of a business strategy isn't anything new, it happened in Sugar Ray Leonard's day and it happened in Ali's day. Tyson - Holyfield didn't happen in the early nineties because the money wasn't right. Of course the difference is, those fighters were the absolute biggest thing in boxing at the time.
I don't necessarily have a problem so long as the big fights happen whilst they are relevant. What I do have a problem with is boxers like Amir Khan, Andre Berto and many more holding out for paydays when they've done very little to earn them.
Have these fighters and the others like them done anything extraordinary to stand them apart from the many other champions in the sport? I don't think so. They may well be capable of becoming the best, but neither has had any kind of longevity in order consistently face elite competition to prove they are the best.
Allowing young fighters to believe they are 'owed' something extra only sets them up for a fall later. Amir Khan had a warning against Prescott, it seemed to straighten him out for a while, though lately he doesn't seem to have remembered that lesson.
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