This was simply disturbing.
Comments Thread For: Victor Ortiz Demands Mayweather, Eyes Rios Street Fight
Collapse
-
-
I really can't see how Rios vs Ortiz hasn't been made already for whoever promotes Victor you gotta know it's pretty much over for him at this point but that's actually the one fight that fans want to see mainly for its backstory... it would do huge numbers at the gate and rating wise...
Victor just doesn't have it in him to climb back up to the top again and ever become a serious contender... he's below gatekeeper status at this point. That's the last real money you're going to make off of him. It's also not completely impossible for him to beat Rios either depending on what Victor shows up ... Gotta roll the diceComment
-
Ortiz might be the most unlikable douche in boxing. Can't believe Stallone gave this a guy a role in a major movie. Ortiz needs to shut his pretty boy mouth and stay his a$$ making movies because his heart sure as hell isnt in boxing. He cares too much about his face to be a fighter.Comment
-
Because I was a fan before all the odd behavior I was a fan before the Berto fight Im no band wagoner I thought he was really gonna be someone in boxing and now just cuz he is going all bonkers on us it don't mean imma turn my back as a fan....I still want him to do well but like I said in my first post it's getting harder and harder to defend his odd ball behavior.......in and out of the ringComment
-
Ortiz didn't take the bait lol...Last edited by MisanthropicNY; 06-10-2015, 04:52 AM.Comment
-
I watched Ortiz-Maidana last night to remind myself what could've been. Kellerman put it perfectly on the night, I thought:
"We just saw a moment in a fighter's career that could define his career. Ortiz was dropped, cut, exhausted, faced with an opponent who refused to lose, and in a moment of weakness... gave up. It's not that he didn't make a gallant effort but in boxing, to be great, more is required of you than in any other sport. More is required than is really reasonable and Ortiz just made a decision he may live to regret."Comment
-
I watched Ortiz-Maidana last night to remind myself what could've been. Kellerman put it perfectly on the night, I thought:
"We just saw a moment in a fighter's career that could define his career. Ortiz was dropped, cut, exhausted, faced with an opponent who refused to lose, and in a moment of weakness... gave up. It's not that he didn't make a gallant effort but in boxing, to be great, more is required of you than in any other sport. More is required than is really reasonable and Ortiz just made a decision he may live to regret."Comment
Comment