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Comments Thread For: Saunders To GGG: You Wanted Me When I Was Fat - Fight Me Now!

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  • #51
    Originally posted by Bronx2245 View Post
    I have to be honest, if Canelo would fight Saunders or Lemieux, it would've looked like a duck! However, I think GBP would've used a Lemieux win as leverage, so K2 should use the Sauders win as leverage to move the fight to NYC!
    i agree both will try to take advantage on negotiations...

    Comment


    • #52
      Originally posted by Shontae De'marc View Post
      I wouldn't have said this a few months ago or even a couple years ago, but man BJS is gonna bring so many problems for GGG. When someone can move around and has fast hands they present problems. We saw that with Canelo and Jacobs, even though he beat them both they were close fights.

      The people who stood there to be hit were destoryed by GGG. Those with skills made him look like a tamed beast at times.

      knowledgeable observers have been saying that for a looooong time, since well-before those fights happened

      Comment


      • #53
        Originally posted by Bronx2245 View Post
        GGG doesn't have to fight a rematch w/Canelo, and he doesn't have to rematch Jacobs either, because he would be fighting a unification bout w/ Saunders for the WBO title! If he beats Saunders, he becomes the undisputed (WBC, WBA, IBF, and WBO) Middleweight Champion of the World! If i'm GGG, Saunders 1st! Let's see Canelo fight Jacobs, Charlo, or Andrade!

        Canelo has a rematch clause with Golovkin

        Comment


        • #54
          Originally posted by aboutfkntime View Post
          Canelo has a rematch clause with Golovkin
          I didn't know that! If that's the case, what's the holdup with the contracts? So Canelo could've opted out for Lemieux or Saunders, but GGG couldn't opt out on the rematch clause? Brilliant!

          Comment


          • #55
            Saunders should look for the Canelo-payday, then worry about Golovkin/Jacobs

            Comment


            • #56
              Originally posted by Bronx2245 View Post
              I didn't know that! If that's the case, what's the holdup with the contracts? So Canelo could've opted out for Lemieux or Saunders, but GGG couldn't opt out on the rematch clause? Brilliant!

              yea, Canelo had one, not Golovkin

              it is up to Canelo..... if he wants that fight it will happen

              Golovkin has to wait and see

              Pac/May did the same thing to their opponents

              suxx for Golovkin

              Comment


              • #57
                Originally posted by Bronx2245 View Post
                GGG doesn't have to fight a rematch w/Canelo, and he doesn't have to rematch Jacobs either, because he would be fighting a unification bout w/ Saunders for the WBO title! If he beats Saunders, he becomes the undisputed (WBC, WBA, IBF, and WBO) Middleweight Champion of the World! If i'm GGG, Saunders 1st! Let's see Canelo fight Jacobs, Charlo, or Andrade!
                Personally I'd like to see G fight Saunders before he gets too old and slows down. That foot speed of Saunders is going to be really problematic the older Golovkin gets.

                Comment


                • #58
                  Originally posted by Bronx2245 View Post
                  June 13, 2017 By Lance Pugmire:

                  Barclays Center CEO Brett Yormark told The Times on Tuesday that bringing Garcia-Broner to Brooklyn underlines his arena's standing in the sport, emphasizing special fights more than the fighters' hometowns.

                  "We've really developed a boxing program here. It's something that's been a focus. And this solidifies us as the premier boxing venue in the country," Yormark said. "We look at ourselves as one of the biggest stages that a fighter can be a part of.

                  "Being in New York affords them a lot of opportunities from a P.R. standpoint. They love our crowds. And there's a great heritage of boxing here in the Brooklyn borough and New York in general. If you look at our fights, very few have had those roots in Brooklyn. The fans loved Mikey last summer.

                  "Barclays has become like a neutral site. It doesn't matter where you're from. This market, and our building, is one that people want to fight in."

                  Garcia returned from a two-year layoff over a contract dispute in July at Barclays, stopping Elio Rojas in the fifth round on the Carl Frampton-Leo Santa Cruz undercard.

                  He fought three times previously at the Madison Square Garden Theater, including a 2013 victory over former featherweight champion Orlando Salido.


                  http://beta.latimes.com/sports/boxin...613-story.html

                  October 8, 2016

                  Hispanics, being the largest immigrant group in the United States, are no exception. The effects of their contributions are visible in the economy at a macro level, but also in the social fabric of the many cities and States around America which they now call home.

                  New York is no stranger to this reality. As the historic entry point to the United States of people coming from all over the world, New York City is a testament of how immigrants make enormous contributions to the economic, cultural, social, and even political fabric of this country.

                  In the Tri-state area of New York, New Jersey and Connecticut, there are 5.5 million people of Hispanic origin, particularly from Puerto Rico, the Dominican Republic, Mexico, El Salvador, Ecuador and Colombia; but also from Brazil, Argentina, Cuba, Peru, and the rest of Latin America. In New York State alone, nearly one in five people identify themselves as Hispanic or Latino.

                  Hispanics do not only constitute a workforce asset. They also generate jobs in their communities. In the US, there are 3.3 million Hispanic-owned business, 12 percent of the total number of businesses in the country. There are more Latino-owned businesses in the US than there are businesses in the states of Georgia, Pennsylvania, Nevada and Massachusetts combined; and more than the overall businesses in California. New York and New Jersey are the 4th and 5th States with the largest share of Hispanic-owned businesses respectively, totaling more than 360,000 businesses and generating nearly $37.5 billion.

                  https://www.huffingtonpost.com/clacn..._12388334.html
                  "Barclays has become like a neutral site. It doesn't matter where you're from. This market, and our building, is one that people want to fight in."


                  Man this alone should show HE'S FULL of SHT!!! You can get white ppl to believe ANYTHING!!! *** Lance Pugmire he don't know SHT about MexiCANS and NEITHER do you!!! I saw with my very OWN EYES how many showed up for Cheato and Leo. You can lie to yourself and believe a WHITE dude talking for MexiCANS all you want!!! FAKE NEWS HOMIE!!!
                  Last edited by Shadoww702; 12-17-2017, 05:12 PM.

                  Comment


                  • #59
                    Originally posted by Bronx2245 View Post
                    June 13, 2017 By Lance Pugmire:

                    Barclays Center CEO Brett Yormark told The Times on Tuesday that bringing Garcia-Broner to Brooklyn underlines his arena's standing in the sport, emphasizing special fights more than the fighters' hometowns.

                    "We've really developed a boxing program here. It's something that's been a focus. And this solidifies us as the premier boxing venue in the country," Yormark said. "We look at ourselves as one of the biggest stages that a fighter can be a part of.

                    "Being in New York affords them a lot of opportunities from a P.R. standpoint. They love our crowds. And there's a great heritage of boxing here in the Brooklyn borough and New York in general. If you look at our fights, very few have had those roots in Brooklyn. The fans loved Mikey last summer.

                    "Barclays has become like a neutral site. It doesn't matter where you're from. This market, and our building, is one that people want to fight in."

                    Garcia returned from a two-year layoff over a contract dispute in July at Barclays, stopping Elio Rojas in the fifth round on the Carl Frampton-Leo Santa Cruz undercard.

                    He fought three times previously at the Madison Square Garden Theater, including a 2013 victory over former featherweight champion Orlando Salido.


                    http://beta.latimes.com/sports/boxin...613-story.html

                    October 8, 2016

                    Hispanics, being the largest immigrant group in the United States, are no exception. The effects of their contributions are visible in the economy at a macro level, but also in the social fabric of the many cities and States around America which they now call home.

                    New York is no stranger to this reality. As the historic entry point to the United States of people coming from all over the world, New York City is a testament of how immigrants make enormous contributions to the economic, cultural, social, and even political fabric of this country.

                    In the Tri-state area of New York, New Jersey and Connecticut, there are 5.5 million people of Hispanic origin, particularly from Puerto Rico, the Dominican Republic, Mexico, El Salvador, Ecuador and Colombia; but also from Brazil, Argentina, Cuba, Peru, and the rest of Latin America. In New York State alone, nearly one in five people identify themselves as Hispanic or Latino.

                    Hispanics do not only constitute a workforce asset. They also generate jobs in their communities. In the US, there are 3.3 million Hispanic-owned business, 12 percent of the total number of businesses in the country. There are more Latino-owned businesses in the US than there are businesses in the states of Georgia, Pennsylvania, Nevada and Massachusetts combined; and more than the overall businesses in California. New York and New Jersey are the 4th and 5th States with the largest share of Hispanic-owned businesses respectively, totaling more than 360,000 businesses and generating nearly $37.5 billion.

                    https://www.huffingtonpost.com/clacn..._12388334.html
                    Hispanics, being the largest immigrant group in the United States, are no exception. The effects of their contributions are visible in the economy at a macro level, but also in the social fabric of the many cities and States around America which they now call home.

                    And that's the ******EST SHT I've READ all WEEK!!! You MUST be WHITE! Grouping us ALL together.

                    Bronx2245 "peeleft: RACIST sshOLE!!!

                    Comment


                    • #60
                      Originally posted by Bronx2245 View Post
                      December 17, 2017:

                      The crowd represents the changing face of Brighton Beach. Once known primarily as a Russian-***ish enclave, the neighborhood over the past two decades has taken on a more diverse mien as a new wave of Russian-speaking immigrants has chosen to call the area home. These newcomers are drawn by the gravitational pull of the common Russian language, which is itself a legacy of the Soviet education system.

                      “In school, we were educated in two languages,” Kenjabaev said, referring to Uzbek and Russian. “Our second language was Russian. What I like most about Brighton Beach is that everybody speaks it.”

                      Many of the newest arrivals, like Kenjabaev, are from the “stans,” the former Soviet republics in Central Asia. Motivated to emigrate by the lack of economic opportunity and the civil clashes that erupted in the aftermath of the Soviet Union’s collapse, they found in Brighton Beach a community that, though different from what they left behind, still offered some sense of linguistic and cultural familiarity...

                      The influx of Soviet ***ish refugees arrested the neighborhood’s decline and turned Brighton Beach into the area with the largest population of Russian immigrants in the United States. Almost half (47%) of immigrants in Brighton Beach and Coney Island come from Russia and Ukraine, state figures show. The newcomers hailed from across the former USSR, bringing with them the accents, customs and food that have come to define the area. So many moved from Odessa, the Ukrainian city on the Black Sea, that “Little Odessa” stuck as the neighborhood’s sentimental label.

                      Read more: https://forward.com/news/162963/chan...righton-beach/


                      Read more: https://forward.com/news/162963/chan...righton-beach/
                      Are you that GULLIBLE??? Quit FKN believing EVERYTHING you read.

                      Comment

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