Are you referring to Spence, with his recent announcement he wants a Canelo shot?
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
You can not build up huge fights until a fighter builds himself up first
Collapse
-
Originally posted by elgu View PostWhat I mean is that the fight is as hot as it's going to be and further marinating will cause the fight to not be as exciting as it could have been. But i guess that's Canelo's plan, wait until GGG starts to slip.Last edited by sicko; 07-04-2016, 05:26 PM.
Comment
-
Originally posted by sicko View PostNot really, the problem is that GGG is Older so it is no time to wait and let it marinate on his size but I don't think this fight is at its Peak Yet because again Casuals still not very familiar with either. The reason why most want it now is because GGG is Older.
Comment
-
I think you need an angle to get into the mainstream to be honest. If you take Floyd as an example he was out in the wilderness for a long time, he had fought lots of tough fights and fighters and was p4p for a long time before he actually broke into the mainstream. He needed the Gatti fight to bring him stardom, and remember he was the B-side in that fight even though he was top 2-3 p4p, but you knew after that fight his star power had gone up significantly, he had become a ppv fighter finally after into his THIRD weight division.
He treaded water for a while and kept it at that level until the Oscar fight, which truly turned him into a crossover star. That put him on the map for good, and his continuous ability to pull out the W and the cold war with Pacquiao brought them both lots of money.
So yes in a sense you are correct, you need those hard tests and need to do it for a while before people really get in board. But then to really elevate to a bonafide ppv fighter you need an angle or X factor, Mike Tyson had it, Oscar had it, others had to work a little harder for it, like Manny and Floyd. Canelo has it, but then the Floyd fight did help people become aware of him, he had that opportunity and platform. It does help if the star from a previous generation passes the baton to the next guy, kind of like Chavez with Oscar, and Oscar with Floyd and Manny.
Comment
-
Originally posted by sunny31 View PostI think you need an angle to get into the mainstream to be honest. If you take Floyd as an example he was out in the wilderness for a long time, he had fought lots of tough fights and fighters and was p4p for a long time before he actually broke into the mainstream. He needed the Gatti fight to bring him stardom, and remember he was the B-side in that fight even though he was top 2-3 p4p, but you knew after that fight his star power had gone up significantly, he had become a ppv fighter finally after into his THIRD weight division.
He treaded water for a while and kept it at that level until the Oscar fight, which truly turned him into a crossover star. That put him on the map for good, and his continuous ability to pull out the W and the cold war with Pacquiao brought them both lots of money.
So yes in a sense you are correct, you need those hard tests and need to do it for a while before people really get in board. But then to really elevate to a bonafide ppv fighter you need an angle or X factor, Mike Tyson had it, Oscar had it, others had to work a little harder for it, like Manny and Floyd. Canelo has it, but then the Floyd fight did help people become aware of him, he had that opportunity and platform. It does help if the star from a previous generation passes the baton to the next guy, kind of like Chavez with Oscar, and Oscar with Floyd and Manny.
Comment
-
Originally posted by larryxxx... View PostDude damn, im saying the best fighters are not fighting the other best fighters and instead was to "build it up" by fighting **** fights..how hard is that to understand??? it isnt about certain fighters but the entire damn landscape of boxing
Tbh, your great idol Mayweather was the master of the build up, surely you must realise this? Canelo, Ward and all the others who have followed suit, are just doing what he did because they know networks are still willing to pay them because apparently, they are "name" fighters.
Man, what I wouldn't give for the days of Hagler/Leonard/Hearn/Duran. Take Hearns winning his welterweight title for instance, less than a year later, he was fighting Leonard, who had already fought Duran twice and won a title at 154 in that time period.
Now we gotta have 18 month build ups for **** like Thurman/Porter (good fight to watch but hardly worth that long a build up).
Comment
-
Originally posted by BreWall View PostWhat I was saying is there's no more big fights left comparable to fighting Pac or May in the division Garcia and others are in. They have no choice but to fight each other. Fights that are not as big as boxing superbowls.
This TS must be referring to a Canelo fight. Or Cotto. No one even comes close.
Comment
-
Originally posted by elgu View PostSo you think fights should happen when the fight is big and not when the fighters are prime?
People can cry all the way about Mayweather vs Pacquiao taking so long but they made a TON OF MONEY and that event Shattered Every Record In Boxing History!
Comment
-
Originally posted by soul_survivor View PostOk, well then this is fair enough. We've finally got a coherent response from you. See what happens when you calm down?
Tbh, your great idol Mayweather was the master of the build up, surely you must realise this? Canelo, Ward and all the others who have followed suit, are just doing what he did because they know networks are still willing to pay them because apparently, they are "name" fighters.
Man, what I wouldn't give for the days of Hagler/Leonard/Hearn/Duran. Take Hearns winning his welterweight title for instance, less than a year later, he was fighting Leonard, who had already fought Duran twice and won a title at 154 in that time period.
Now we gotta have 18 month build ups for **** like Thurman/Porter (good fight to watch but hardly worth that long a build up).Last edited by 1hourRun; 07-04-2016, 05:39 PM.
Comment
Comment