Comments Thread For: Breland Responds To Wilder Again: Deontay Became Untrainable, I Didn't Even Have His Number

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  • PRINCEKOOL
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    #121
    Originally posted by Real King Kong
    Wilder’s body language showed otherwise imo.
    Stop talking nonsense, you know that he did not give up 'Wilder does not really think so deeply inside of the ring, he is a reactive fighter extremely primordial in his attitude.

    Tyson Fury has knocked nobody out at elite level, he has made nobody give up or want out 'People need to stop making out, Fury vs Wilder II was something that it was not etc'.

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    • PRINCEKOOL
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      #122
      Originally posted by New England
      i disagree. it's not like this was a guy with a tactical answer or an ability to work his way back into the fight. fury was bigger, had slowed deontay down to the point where he was no longer dangerous, and his life was on the line. he had mark breland out in the hallway crying alone. wouldn't let him into the dressing room. that's just the saddest picture in the world to me. wilder could have been great if he'd listened to breland. the guy got WORSE as he moved along. never put in the time and it shows. freakish power can ruin a fighter. what i mean by that is that wilder could be a triples and doubles hitter with a frame and speed like that if he was a consummate boxer. instead he fell in love with his power and never got much beyond the skill level of an amateur.
      Stop it mate.

      With all this? His life was on the line talk.

      What is it with people and this fight? People **** on about Fury vs Wilder II as if it was the most brutal gruesome fight that we have ever seen in boxing 'It was far from it'.

      Deontay Wilder was having a really tough time, but he did not give up on himself 'And was clearly still trying'. Wilder was being beaten in every department, yet still Fury was unable to make him divert from his simplistic game-plan 'On some level this must bother Fury'.

      If Deontay Wilder is in a fight, and is still trying 'He is still dangerous' there is no need to lie to yourself New England.

      Note: Wilder is a technically limited fighter, but in the aftermath of Fury vs Wilder II 'His character inside the ring as been defamed' Wilder did not give up, or look for a way out at any stage in the fight.
      Last edited by PRINCEKOOL; 02-10-2021, 04:52 PM.

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      • Real King Kong
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        #123
        Originally posted by PRINCEKOOL
        Stop talking nonsense, you know that he did not give up 'Wilder does not really think so deeply inside of the ring, he is a reactive fighter extremely primordial in his attitude.

        Tyson Fury has knocked nobody out at elite level, he has made nobody give up or want out 'People need to stop making out, Fury vs Wilder II was something that it was not etc'.
        Since when does a fighter need to have a history of KO’s to do long term damage to a guy who isn’t defending himself properly. If anything, a prolonged beating is worse. Wilder was not reacting well, breland probably saw that and made the call based on his experience.

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        • petero
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          #124
          Originally posted by 1hourRun
          You can thank Deontay Wilder's historical title defense run and Jack Reiss for those numbers. Tyson was fighting : Otto Wallin, Tom Schwarz, Sef Serfari, Franseco Pianteta, nobody in America cared for Tyson's tomato-can campaign, evident in his low ticket sells and pitiful numbers on the ESPN app streams. Without the 'Bronze-Bomber', Tyson can not draw.

          Look at Deontay Wilder's numbers here on the boxingscene, and compare them to A.J and Fury's numbers combined, and they still dont equal Wilder's figures.
          2020 Gypsy King £46,000,000 quid highest paid fighter on the planet. Boom So STFU you complete goon.

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          • pollywog
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            #125
            Fury had no intention of knocking Wilder out in the latter stages.

            He was gonna batter the man to within an inch of knocking him out, like a cat playing with its food.

            Licking and swatting knowing at any stage he could go for the kill and giving wilder just enough hope to think he was still in it.

            Breland knew it was over and put Wilder out of his misery by throwing in the towel and ending Fury's fun in the process.

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            • lion33lit
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              #126
              Originally posted by PRINCEKOOL
              No, this is entirely wrong. He had not given up, he was still in there and trying. He is a fighter who can change a fight in a instant, was clearly trying. He was losing the fight for sure, but the notion that he gave up 'In my opinion is coming from people with ulterior motives'.

              Tyson Fury has stopped nobody at elite level, you can discredit Wilder's technical abilities 'But as a fighter, when the going gets tough? Wilder is a extremely game fighter'.

              Sometimes you have to just let things go, this was no amateur fight it was a war 'Two men putting honor and reputation on the line'.
              Well said, and very true

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              • SUBZER0ED
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                #127
                Bottom line, Wilder thought he was going to be an undefeated, ATG HW champion of the world. He relied almost solely on his big right hand to do it. Fury had other plans and humiliated him with skill and power. Losing like that ruined his psyche to the point where Deontay blames everyone and everything for his loss, except himself.

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