Comments Thread For: Anthony Joshua Reportedly To Sign 100 Million Extension
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The boxing media will DESTROY Joshua for fighting Povetkin ?
If thats the case cant wait until Wilder announces Breazeale a guy who Joshua defeated in fight 17 .
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It was all sarcasm fam! All sarcasm! He's not fighting Wilder in 2018! Wilder's only hopefuls are Fury (if he beats Joshua) or Ortiz (if he beats Whyte). I would rather Wilder fight Kowncaki than Breazeale! Breazeale is trash!Originally posted by FLY TYWhat kind of idiot boxing fan, wishes a guy walks away from the biggest heavyweight guarantee ever, and the current biggest fight in the sport?
Why do you come here, dude?Comment
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Your narrative is anything not Pro-Wilder is automatically to be despised or treated with contempt. it's an extremely boring one.
The boxing media will destroy him for fighting a mandatory ?? A mandatory he'd be fighting only if the current wilder negotiations fail and he fights Breazeale.. an AJ leftover? K pal...
Who gets savaged more? Wilder for fighting Breazeale, a fighter who isnt even a top 2 HW in the USA never mind globally.. for a payday substantially less than anything he would have got against AJ...
or AJ fighting the bloke widely regarded as the #3 in the world and the best without a belt? that's a tough one
Can you do me a favour... and give me an actual example of why the fight wouldn't happen because the AJ side says no, that doesnt involve "he dont want da fight doe" but DOES include.. a reason that i cant irrefutably prove has a valid basis for them saying no ?
I'll wait..Comment
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Sorry, but that's not what going to happen! It will be "After relentlessly chasing Joshua, even offering $50 Million to fight in Las Vegas, Wilder will reluctantly face Dominic Breazeale."
The narrative has already begun:
April 16, 2018:
In boxing, as in life, if something sounds too good to be true it probably is -- and that's why the prospect of seeing an undisputed heavyweight world championship fight between three-belt titlist Anthony Joshua and one-belt man Deontay Wilder next is so unlikely.
The main reason is that, at least when it comes to actions instead of words, it seems like the Joshua camp is not actually serious about pursuing one of the biggest fights in the sport and easily the biggest fight in the heavyweight division in many years...
If Joshua (21-0, 20 KOs) wants the fight with Wilder (40-0, 39 KOs) next, it sure doesn't seem that way, regardless of what he says. It's clear in the offer Joshua's promoter, Matchroom Boxing's Eddie Hearn, recently made to the Wilder camp: a flat fee of $12.5 million, take it or leave it, for Wilder's participation in the fight.
Of course, $12.5 million large is giant money for most people, but for a fight of this magnitude, it is not a serious offer. If Wilder's team -- managers Al Haymon, Shelly Finkel and Jay Deas and promoter Lou DiBella -- accepted the deal, they would be committing malpractice on behalf of their client.
http://www.espn.co.uk/boxing/story/_...ean-fight-nextComment
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****ing hell... a fat dan article thats now a month old.Sorry, but that's not what going to happen! It will be "After relentlessly chasing Joshua, even offering $50 Million to fight in Las Vegas, Wilder will reluctantly face Dominic Breazeale."
The narrative has already begun:
April 16, 2018:
In boxing, as in life, if something sounds too good to be true it probably is -- and that's why the prospect of seeing an undisputed heavyweight world championship fight between three-belt titlist Anthony Joshua and one-belt man Deontay Wilder next is so unlikely.
The main reason is that, at least when it comes to actions instead of words, it seems like the Joshua camp is not actually serious about pursuing one of the biggest fights in the sport and easily the biggest fight in the heavyweight division in many years...
If Joshua (21-0, 20 KOs) wants the fight with Wilder (40-0, 39 KOs) next, it sure doesn't seem that way, regardless of what he says. It's clear in the offer Joshua's promoter, Matchroom Boxing's Eddie Hearn, recently made to the Wilder camp: a flat fee of $12.5 million, take it or leave it, for Wilder's participation in the fight.
Of course, $12.5 million large is giant money for most people, but for a fight of this magnitude, it is not a serious offer. If Wilder's team -- managers Al Haymon, Shelly Finkel and Jay Deas and promoter Lou DiBella -- accepted the deal, they would be committing malpractice on behalf of their client.
http://www.espn.co.uk/boxing/story/_...ean-fight-next
keep up son, theyre negotiating now... even the rest of the pro-wilder crew are saying things look good for it to be sorted.
pack your stuff up and go home lads, this threads over because bronx has decided to live in the pastComment
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