Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Comments Thread For: CompuBox Review: Joshua's Evolution, Klitschko Comparison

Collapse
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Comments Thread For: CompuBox Review: Joshua's Evolution, Klitschko Comparison

    Anthony Joshua boxed his way to a unanimous decision win over Andy Ruiz Saturday in Saudi Arabia, regaining four straps (WBA, IBF, WBO, IBO) that were on loan to the portly Ruiz who tipped the scales at 283 lbs., the second heaviest combatant to fight for the heavyweight title.
    [Click Here To Read More]

  • #2
    Let analyze

    Interesting data.

    Comment


    • #3
      Winning formula. You are either forced to find it to stay the champion or you will have to rely on those rematch clauses. It took Klitschko 3 losses to find his. Boring-shmoring, who of you wouldn't do what keeps a crown over your head and rakes you millions vs blowing this all away to entertain the fans and get yourself slurred speech and damaged brain by 45?

      Comment


      • #4
        Let's look at some inaccurate data and come to some inaccurate conclusions.

        Comment


        • #5
          Originally posted by Robbie Barrett View Post
          Let's look at some inaccurate data and come to some inaccurate conclusions.
          Easy to hate on compubox because, yeah their data is inaccurate a lot. But, these numbers portray the narrative right in this instance. Anyone who saw the fight, saw it was a jab-a-thon. AJ trained for that type of boxing match, consulted Klitschko on how to win (what do you think he told him? Answer: jab and move), and then executed a jab and move strategy. Clinched when fight got inside, ala Klitschko. AJ even said right before the fight, I'm not here to put on a show, just to win. Well, he got his technical win, lets see if this is the way he fights here on out the rest of his career.

          Comment


          • #6
            Originally posted by Tman500 View Post
            Easy to hate on compubox because, yeah their data is inaccurate a lot. But, these numbers portray the narrative right in this instance. Anyone who saw the fight, saw it was a jab-a-thon. AJ trained for that type of boxing match, consulted Klitschko on how to win (what do you think he told him? Answer: jab and move), and then executed a jab and move strategy. Clinched when fight got inside, ala Klitschko. AJ even said right before the fight, I'm not here to put on a show, just to win. Well, he got his technical win, lets see if this is the way he fights here on out the rest of his career.
            The inaccurate numbers don't really tell you that though do they. They say he averaged only 3 more jabs than his previous fights.

            Comment


            • #7
              Even if Klitschko was boring, he was still too good for Wilder to actually fight him hahaha. Just like Wilder do led a prime Haye, Povetkin, Pulev, Whyte, AJ...and the list is still growing

              Comment

              Working...
              X
              TOP