Who Is the Worst Worst Managed Fighter?
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Kelvin Price was actually in Wilder's 5th year, and was probably Deontay's best opponent.In Wilder's fourth year as a pro, in addition to Hayes (a short-notice, stay-busy fight), he also fought:
Kelvin Price, undefeated with a win over Tor Hamer
Kertson Manswell, at least as useful and as good of a journeyman as Releford and Aguilera
Owen Beck, also a journeyman, well past it but at least had fought for a title in his prime -- far more accomplished than either Releford or Aguilera
And just outside that "fourth year as a pro window," Wilder fought Travis Walker, who has a record pretty much identical to Aguilera's
Previous to that he fought Damon Reed and Dominique Alexander, both journeymen who I'd put in the same class or at worst one notch below.
Compare Wilder's resume to that of David Price. Wilder has beaten better fighters.
Owen Beck is worse than shot, he's lost 9 in a row, 8 by KO. In his fight before Wilder, Beck fought Russian Sergey Rozhnov in his pro debut!Comment
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Deontay Wilder - he should have been going in with decent journeymen like Releford and Aguilera by his 4th year as a pro instead of old retired former middleweights like Marlon Hayes.
Denis Boytsov - was moved perfectly up until after the *****ko fight, since then his career has regressed
Matvey Korobov - he was headed in the right direction in his first year as a pro, but he's regressed since thenOK, Price came exactly one month to the day into Wilder's fifth year -- but it was postponed from the summer when they were first supposed to fight and Price pulled out with a sparring injury.
That equals bad management?
Only difference between Beck and Releford is that Releford had someone to line up a few stiffs after he won just twice in a span of 11 fights -- guys with 3-3 and 5-10 records (and a few 25-40 types). Doesn't make him any better than Beck, just someone saw a few future paydays if they got him a couple of wins. Let Beck fight some 3-3 and 5-10 guys and I guess all of a sudden he isn't shot.
Aguilera hasn't lost to anyone with less than 5 losses in a row since 2009. Again, Beck didn't have anyone lining up the occasional win to keep him viable.
Beck lost to a pro debut guy. Releford lost to a 2-0 guy in 2010. What's your point?
I said Beck is well past it, but he's as much of a journeyman as the guys you held up as the type Wilder should have been fighting -- same as Kertson Manswell and Damon Reed and Dominique Alexander.
My point is that Wilder hasn't fought the particular journeymen you mentioned, but he has fought journeymen of the same type.Comment
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now that you mention it its gotten me pissed of. but in a video i saw he claims that hes loyal to king because he was the first to put food on his families plate. and since he was so loyal and kin an arum were bitter enemies, there was no way he was gonna sign with arumRicardo Mayorga was! He could of made a lot money if he wasn't with Don King his whole career. Can you imagine all the good fights and pre fight entertainment we could have gotten if he was with Top Rank? So many good fights..........Mayorga/Margarito, Mayorga/Floyd, Prime Mayorga/Cotto, Mayorga/ Pacquiao, Prime Mayorga/De la Hoya, ect. ect. ect.........
It pissed me off that Mayorga spent his prime years fighting once every year and a half with Don King.Comment
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In his 4th year, Wilder was matched against people to keep his KO streak going. That's bad management, because when he finally faces someone who isn't easy to KO, he won't be ready.OK, Price came exactly one month to the day into Wilder's fifth year -- but it was postponed from the summer when they were first supposed to fight and Price pulled out with a sparring injury.
That equals bad management?
Only difference between Beck and Releford is that Releford had someone to line up a few stiffs after he won just twice in a span of 11 fights -- guys with 3-3 and 5-10 records (and a few 25-40 types). Doesn't make him any better than Beck, just someone saw a few future paydays if they got him a couple of wins. Let Beck fight some 3-3 and 5-10 guys and I guess all of a sudden he isn't shot.
Aguilera hasn't lost to anyone with less than 5 losses in a row since 2009. Again, Beck didn't have anyone lining up the occasional win to keep him viable.
Beck lost to a pro debut guy. Releford lost to a 2-0 guy in 2010. What's your point?
I said Beck is well past it, but he's as much of a journeyman as the guys you held up as the type Wilder should have been fighting -- same as Kertson Manswell and Damon Reed and Dominique Alexander.
My point is that Wilder hasn't fought the particular journeymen you mentioned, but he has fought journeymen of the same type.
Beck has lost ALL of his past 9, and been stopped in 8 of them.
Releford has lost 4 of his past 9, and been stopped in only 2.
At this point, Wilder should be going in with durable guys like Kevin Johnson and Dominick Guinn instead of the likes of Greer and old Audley.
Tyson Fury is younger, has fewer pro fights, and has less amateur experience than Wilder. Yet he's been given some good pro experience against tough journeymen like Maddalone, Firtha, Pajkic and Kevin Johnson.
David Price like Wilder has been badly managed. I was saying even before he was stopped by Thompson that Maloney didn't get him enough rounds in 2011 and 2012. And sure enough, when he finally fought someone who isn't easy to KO, he lost.Comment
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