Comments Thread For: Tyson Fury: Joshua Picked All My Belts Out Of The Garbage Bin
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Like Lennox Lewis said, "Tyson Fury is the man that stepped up." Tomorrow's winner is THE MAN until proven otherwise! Tell AJ to go see the wizard for some courage!Comment
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Lolx..... I have no issues with Lenox opinion. He can say whatever he likes doesn't authenticate the facts on ground.
Lenox has his opinion just like every other fan on this forum.
Save me that Lenox said mantra. It has no weight.Comment
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Of course you don't like the Lennox Lewis statements because the truth hurts! Lennox knows that no HW fighter IN THE HISTORY OF BOXING would've turned down that offer to fight in the states, unless he's scared! Thank God Fury had some heart! Enjoy Joshua vs. Whyte! Lol!Comment
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Fury believes a contest between himself and Joshua would be huge, but the 6ft 9ins tall heavyweight believes the Matchroom set-up may look to avoid him. "It seems to me that they never talk about fighting Tyson Fury. It seems to be this is a one way deal. I want the fight, because I don’t want to deprive the public.”
https://www.telegraph.co.uk/boxing/2...oshua-i-think/
“I haven’t thought about Joshua since he avoided me a while back, but it’s a fight where you would see me enjoy beating the piss out of him for several rounds,” Ortiz, during an earlier interview with Premiere Boxing Champions.
“I see myself breaking down Joshua to the body and ripping his head off with right hooks and straight left hands over the course of eight rounds. But at least Wilder put his money where his mouth is, stepped up and fought me. I’ve got zero respect for Joshua, who, at this point, is a complete punk hiding behind his puppeteer promoter [Eddie Hearn]”
Cuban southpaw Luis Ortiz likes drawing comparisons between some of his more impressive results and those of others, even though he's fully aware that styles make fights in boxing. In July, for example, the 6-foot-4, 240-plus-pound “King Kong” Ortiz (29-1, 25 KOs) flattened Razvan Cajanu in the second round to rebound from a three-knockdown, 10th-round stoppage loss in March to 6-foot-7 WBC heavyweight champion Deontay Wilder (40-0, 39 KOs), whom Ortiz had badly hurt and nearly out on his feet in the seventh round.
Do you see a pattern?Comment
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As far as I am concern, he logged that came from wilder's camp is a twitter offer and nothing more.Of course you don't like the Lennox Lewis statements because the truth hurts! Lennox knows that no HW fighter IN THE HISTORY OF BOXING would've turned down that offer to fight in the states, unless he's scared! Thank God Fury had some heart! Enjoy Joshua vs. Whyte! Lol!
Every boxing fan in wide world knows who the unified champ is. That's all that matters, not what Lenox think.Comment
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Lolx.... The only pattern I see here is guys trying to talk their way to a pay day.Fury believes a contest between himself and Joshua would be huge, but the 6ft 9ins tall heavyweight believes the Matchroom set-up may look to avoid him. "It seems to me that they never talk about fighting Tyson Fury. It seems to be this is a one way deal. I want the fight, because I don’t want to deprive the public.”
https://www.telegraph.co.uk/boxing/2...oshua-i-think/
“I haven’t thought about Joshua since he avoided me a while back, but it’s a fight where you would see me enjoy beating the piss out of him for several rounds,” Ortiz, during an earlier interview with Premiere Boxing Champions.
“I see myself breaking down Joshua to the body and ripping his head off with right hooks and straight left hands over the course of eight rounds. But at least Wilder put his money where his mouth is, stepped up and fought me. I’ve got zero respect for Joshua, who, at this point, is a complete punk hiding behind his puppeteer promoter [Eddie Hearn]”
Cuban southpaw Luis Ortiz likes drawing comparisons between some of his more impressive results and those of others, even though he's fully aware that styles make fights in boxing. In July, for example, the 6-foot-4, 240-plus-pound “King Kong” Ortiz (29-1, 25 KOs) flattened Razvan Cajanu in the second round to rebound from a three-knockdown, 10th-round stoppage loss in March to 6-foot-7 WBC heavyweight champion Deontay Wilder (40-0, 39 KOs), whom Ortiz had badly hurt and nearly out on his feet in the seventh round.
Do you see a pattern?
All road leads to the unified champ. Even LHW wants to have a share of the money man.Comment
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