He seems to be happy with his payments and activity but the last bit is contradictory to say the least
Comments Thread For: Jarrell Miller Tabs Joshua as 'Turd' - Gives High Praise To Hearn
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Does Miller's story sound a lot like Whyte, Fury, Lenox Lewis, and Wilder's? Maybe it's just coincidence? The difference in this story is Miller is giving praise to Hearn, basically saying this is like Khan/Brook, where Hearn wants to make a fight, and the one fighter doesn't want it! At least Khan turned down Hearn to fight a better opponent!Comment
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They can keep coming all day, and it won't change a thing! All these stories have one common theme, Joshua is very selective, and very suspect! I forgot to add Ortiz to the list too!Comment
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Here is the thing: we all have stories to tell. Personally I do not believe Joshua is ducking anyone. For us boxing is entertainment, for boxers it is both: sport and business. AJ achieved too much in such short span for us to accuse him of cowardice. Cowards don't achieve what he achieved. We are also so hung up on this number of "$50m", but the reality of business is that the devil is in the detail. Making that kind of offer and refusing to discuss the details unless AJ "accepts" this offer is not just ludicrous from a business standpoint, it would be foolish for AJ to comply with this petty blackmail. And all of Hearn's further attempts to set up a dialogue led to nothing. Why? You think Hearn doesn't want a cut of $50m? Or AJ doesn't want to set up his future generations for their lifetimes? That was an effective and cunning marketing move by Wilder team. Wilder wants no part of AJ and if you look at the level of opponents both faced to date its pretty damned clear who the coward really is, if we are to pick one. And its not AJ.
If anything, I'd advise AJ not to step up to Fury or Wilder until 2020 because I think he would benefit from more experience and will come into his prime then, but I see no credible facts to say that AJ is ducking either of them now. Superficially it looks like Wilder took over the narrative, but if you dig deeper its so far from reality.
Wilder taking the Fury rematch will be the biggest mistake of Wilder's professional career. He will most likely lose on scorecards this time (no gift draw) and will miss out on the biggest payday of his career with the greater chance of beating AJ. Really, really ****** decision to go via Fury, a decision driven by pride rather then calculation. "I told you so" is comingComment
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This is the guy that turned down a career high purse to fight Pulev and said Joyce had to earn a shot. What the **** has he done?Comment
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I couldn’t agree more. Wilder is turning down a better opponent in AJ to fight Fury. Tell me that’s what the Fu#ck you mean?
https://goo.gl/images/fnEB6xComment
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Jarrell "Baby" Miller said Eddie Hearn "has put his money where his mouth is," calling the Englishman's Matchroom USA "probably the most professional promotional company I've ever worked with." But Miller (23-0-1, 20 KOs) expressed frustration at his failure to land 6-foot-6 IBF/IBO/WBA/WBO Anthony Joshua (22-0, 21 KOs) of England, who is also aligned with Hearn and the DAZN streaming service, calling Joshua "a prima donna" who "wants easy money" rather than "hard fights with me or anybody tough."
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I told you this would happen guys.....
UK insiders are calling Joshua a pvssy
USA insiders are calling Joshua a pvssy
boxing fans in general are calling Joshua a pvssy
and now fighters are calling Joshua a pvssy
like I said.....
when Joshua's numbers take a hit, and they will, Fast Eddie will suddenly have no problem making the Wilder fightComment
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Does Miller's story sound a lot like Whyte, Fury, Lenox Lewis, and Wilder's? Maybe it's just coincidence? The difference in this story is Miller is giving praise to Hearn, basically saying this is like Khan/Brook, where Hearn wants to make a fight, and the one fighter doesn't want it! At least Khan turned down Hearn to fight a better opponent!
YEP, it sure does !!
except Hearn does not want that fight either at this pointComment
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Here is the thing: we all have stories to tell. Personally I do not believe Joshua is ducking anyone. For us boxing is entertainment, for boxers it is both: sport and business. AJ achieved too much in such short span for us to accuse him of cowardice. Cowards don't achieve what he achieved. We are also so hung up on this number of "$50m", but the reality of business is that the devil is in the detail. Making that kind of offer and refusing to discuss the details unless AJ "accepts" this offer is not just ludicrous from a business standpoint, it would be foolish for AJ to comply with this petty blackmail. And all of Hearn's further attempts to set up a dialogue led to nothing. Why? You think Hearn doesn't want a cut of $50m? Or AJ doesn't want to set up his future generations for their lifetimes? That was an effective and cunning marketing move by Wilder team. Wilder wants no part of AJ and if you look at the level of opponents both faced to date its pretty damned clear who the coward really is, if we are to pick one. And its not AJ.
If anything, I'd advise AJ not to step up to Fury or Wilder until 2020 because I think he would benefit from more experience and will come into his prime then, but I see no credible facts to say that AJ is ducking either of them now. Superficially it looks like Wilder took over the narrative, but if you dig deeper its so far from reality.
Wilder taking the Fury rematch will be the biggest mistake of Wilder's professional career. He will most likely lose on scorecards this time (no gift draw) and will miss out on the biggest payday of his career with the greater chance of beating AJ. Really, really ****** decision to go via Fury, a decision driven by pride rather then calculation. "I told you so" is coming
that is EXACTLY what they are doing Captain Obvious
just like smarter guys have been saying for some timeComment
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