Do these sparring stories ever make its way into a real fight ?
Dillian Whyte reveals he put down Tyson fury multiple times in sparring!!
Collapse
-
Well said. I agree completely.I don't see Whyte as this big giant killer. He is improving, but here we go again with these sparing stories. The facts are: Whyte got lucky against Parker (one of those knockdowns should not have counted), he got dropped by Kaboom, arguably lost against Chisora in the first fight, was also losing in the second fight, and was rocked by Wach. And now they say he handles Wilder and Fury? I don't agree. Styles make fights and anything can happen at heavyweight, but Whyte beating these two is highly unlikely.Comment
-
Otto Wallin lost pretty much every round despite fighting a weight drained man with one eye.Frankly, I am no fan of Whyte but I have also said many times that Fury ain't that unbeatable. The only reason Wilder lost is that he didn't have the skillset to adjust to styles. I am not sure Whyte can beat him but look how Otto Wallin dealt with Fury. If he had the power of Whyte, Fury would have been KO'ed.
Frankly, I think someone like Parker or Hrgovic has a better chance of beating Fury.
Parker openly admits that he would have no chance against Fury, and neither would that other big stiff.
Styles do indeed make fights, and Fury showed exactly how to handle Shytes style when he beat down Chisora to within an inch of his life and made him quit.Comment
-
-
- Anthony Joshua for several years was scared to fight Deontay Wilder, and actively avoided that contest.
- Eddie Hearn tried to position Dillian Whyte to take care of Wilder so that AJ wouldn't have to face him. Whyte would have had less chance than AJ in reality.
- Wilder and his people wanted the AJ fight and took offense at Hearn brazenly using Whyte as a bargaining chip.
- We could have had AJ vs. Wilder unification with Whyte facing the winner, but Hearn and AJ didn't want that.
- Hearn and AJ had ummed and ahhed for years over making the Wilder fight, the fight the people wanted to see.
- Tyson Fury came along, no nonsense, and took care of Wilder in style, reclaiming his position as #1 Heavyweight on the planet.
- Hearn and AJ only have themselves to blame.
- Dillian Whyte still prattles on, saying outrageous things for attention, but reality is he is no longer relevant.
- We need to see Fury vs. AJ, but appears Hearn is trying to employ the same tactics of using Whyte as a roadblock.
Comment
- Anthony Joshua for several years was scared to fight Deontay Wilder, and actively avoided that contest.
-
-
Comment
We believe this ****s.
Comment