Why do some forget that GGG accepted the Ward fight in 2013?
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Yeah you do or you wouldn't have answered with a bit of sarcasm. Plenty of people and not just Golovkin's fans have patiently explained to you what your error was. Why don't you just admit you jumped on a chance to discredit Golovkin and it blew up in your face. Being stubborn has it's virtues but in this case it's just digging yourself a deeper hole.Comment
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Guys with the smaller promoters and less backing are always gonna be at a disadvantage, always gonna be the ones begging for fights instead of picking 'em. Just the way it is, man, the way it's always been.Last edited by Citizen Koba; 02-01-2020, 12:41 PM.Comment
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Yeah you do or you wouldn't have answered with a bit of sarcasm. Plenty of people and not just Golovkin's fans have patiently explained to you what your error was. Why don't you just admit you jumped on a chance to discredit Golovkin and it blew up in your face. Being stubborn has it's virtues but in this case it's just digging yourself a deeper hole.Comment
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You're forgetting that across half the world until fairly recently there was no professional sport. The pinnacle of a fighters career was to medal in the Olympics or the World's and they were expected to stay amateur for their entire career. It's an entirely different philosophy and it fact whilst pro-boxing may have been secretly watched and admired the official line was that it was corrupt and decadent and much of that sentiment remains to this day.
In fact it's really only in the last decade or so that we've really seen large numbers of top amateurs from the former socialist countries turning pro and the pro sport gaining greater acceptance in those countries, though it's still viewed with su****ion by many older fighters and trainers.
Furthermore whilst in the US there's a fairly well established system to move promising young fighters from the ammys to the pro ranks, no such system existed in Kazakhstan in 2005/6, in fact there was pretty much no pro boxing at all and no-one to tell GGG how to go about making the transition or to advise him on what to do or offer him career advice or whatever, so in some ways it was a much bigger step into the unknown than it might have been for a US fighter making a similar moveLast edited by Citizen Koba; 02-01-2020, 01:05 PM.Comment
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You keep repeating yourself and getting the same the same futile outcome.
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That was in fact very much SOP across most of the ex-Soviets, Eastern Europe and Cuba. In the US amateur boxing has always been viewed as a stepping stone to a professional career and the assumption seems to be that it's always been that way everywhere, but actually that couldn't be further from reality.
You're forgetting that across half the world until fairly recently there was no professional sport. The pinnacle of a fighters career was to medal in the Olympics or the World's and they were expected to stay amateur for their entire career. It's an entirely different philosophy and it fact whilst pro-boxing may have been secretly watched and admired the official line was that it was corrupt and decadent and much of that sentiment remains to this day.
In fact it's really only in the last decade or so that we've really seen large numbers of top amateurs from the former socialist countries turning pro and the pro sport gaining greater acceptance in those countries, though it's still viewed with su****ion by many older fighters and trainers.
Either sucks to be him or it serves him right.
He could have been Nelo but nahComment
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And Canelo is only Canelo because of where he was born...GGG didn't have that advantageComment
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