And This Is Why Fury Ducked
Collapse
-
He already beat Wilder, so what's the big deal? Chill out son, the fight will definitely happen, Wilder is just gonna have to wait on the A side to make his paper first.Comment
-
Do you even believe the drivel that you are writing yourself?A lot of people agree that fight would've been waved off under any other ref. If you believe a great job is letting a man who just got knocked out cold fight on, risking severe brain damage, then I don't know what to tell you. I find it completely irresponsible, and the only reason some are okay with it is because Fury didn't end up exactly like Adonis Stevenson. Had it been the other way around, no one would be taking the ref's side publicly. He not only circumvented standard boxing procedure, but he also put Fury's life at extreme risk.
Even Fury knows Wilder's too dangerous to be in the ring with, as is obvious now. Never mind right a near-death experience.
I think that you probably do. If you keep playing that tape in your head, and telling yourself that message , you will begin to actually believe it.
Psychologists call it "being delusional."
I won't bother debating this with you any more. It is harder to win an argument with a delusional person than with a rational person.Comment
-
Fury got KTFO, and I don't see this fight happening ever unless Wilder noticeably slows down in a couple years.
And by then it doesn't count.Comment
-
Comment
-
Nah, not having this. Go back and watch Holmes Vs Shavers 1.
It's a mistake to say any other ref would have stopped it in the last round of a title fight which Fury was winning; many a ref would have issued a count, if only as a formality.
Either you agree with "British" stoppages or you don't; you can't spend your life complaining about them and then demand one when it suits Wilder.
Wilder landed his money punch and the man got up. Twice.
Each time he got up and gave Wilder fits. If he'd been knocked half dead how does that happen? Why couldn't the most "dangerous puncher in heavyweight history" finish him off? It's not as if Fury was hanging on for dear life is it?
Having soundly outboxed Wilder as well as weathering his hardest punches, it makes no sense for Fury to be afraid of him. Arum is doing what Arum does as a promoter, rightly or wrongly.Comment
-
Fury got in the ring with Wilder despite being what? 65% fit? 70%?Nah, not having this. Go back and watch Holmes Vs Shavers 1.
It's a mistake to say any other ref would have stopped it in the last round of a title fight which Fury was winning; many a ref would have issued a count, if only as a formality.
Either you agree with "British" stoppages or you don't; you can't spend your life complaining about them and then demand one when it suits Wilder.
Wilder landed his money punch and the man got up. Twice.
Each time he got up and gave Wilder fits. If he'd been knocked half dead how does that happen? Why couldn't the most "dangerous puncher in heavyweight history" finish him off? It's not as if Fury was hanging on for dear life is it?
Having soundly outboxed Wilder as well as weathering his hardest punches, it makes no sense for Fury to be afraid of him. Arum is doing what Arum does as a promoter, rightly or wrongly.
Fury scared doe.Comment
-
Not playing it up. Taking the time to recover. Plus its embarrasing, plenty of fighters have gone done flat and lay there a bit with their arm over their faces before getting up. Fury essentially did the same thing without the arm. He was smart about it to make sure he was composed when he got up.I honestly think Fury was playing it up for the cameras to make it bigger than it was. Just the way he got up and seemed in control and was on steady legs right away then took the fight to Wilder and dominated the rest of the round.
It's a better story if he was KO'd then survived but I don't buy it.Comment
-
Comment
Comment