Banks gave him all the right advice from the opening bell. If you listen to every single time they captured his instructions in-between rounds, he was always on point. As early as round 2 he was telling Wladimir he had to be more active, had to step in with the jab, don't linger on the outside. He had a sense of urgency from early on in the fight as if he could foresee exactly what would happen if Wladimir kept doing what he was doing.
Banks was excellent in that fight, it was Wladimir who either didn't listen or was unable to carry out his instructions - probably because he's stuck in his ways as a fighter and couldn't adapt.
And I say all that after thinking Wladimir might need to get rid of Banks before the fight started, simply because of Banks losing to Mitchell and then creating a strange scenario in the team where your trainer has lost to a low-level fighter, thereby chipping away at his credibility. But Banks was very good indeed, Wladimir just doesn't listen to him, maybe he doesn't respect him but more likely he's just a bit arrogant. It looked like he wasn't listening to Vitali either.
Banks was excellent in that fight, it was Wladimir who either didn't listen or was unable to carry out his instructions - probably because he's stuck in his ways as a fighter and couldn't adapt.
And I say all that after thinking Wladimir might need to get rid of Banks before the fight started, simply because of Banks losing to Mitchell and then creating a strange scenario in the team where your trainer has lost to a low-level fighter, thereby chipping away at his credibility. But Banks was very good indeed, Wladimir just doesn't listen to him, maybe he doesn't respect him but more likely he's just a bit arrogant. It looked like he wasn't listening to Vitali either.
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