At his best I had him 50/50 against Spence. He has always been slightly underrated. I though he did better against Porter than anyone else and he did it without clinching.
I think Brook handled Porter better than Thurman. Thought Porter could very easily have gotten the decision vs Thurman. Believe I had it a draw.
Very undderated now going on posts in this thread I'd back him to beat Spence (I had Porter Edging Spence).
You know what, I was just thinking about Keith the other day. I will put it to you like this, If Thurman had never got injured and stayed consistent I could see him beating both Spence and Crawford due to his hand speed, power, counterpunching, and tremendous athleticism. He could fight on the back foot and he had very underrated defense and jab. He will go down as one of the biggest "what ifs" in boxing.
I disagree. I believe that Thurman did the best out of everyone due to the fact he fought a much fresher Porter, plus he did not have to clinch his way to victory like the others. The only exception would be Ugas who didn't lose any rounds to Porter IMO.
How was Porter not fresh against Brook? He was undefeated and coming off the destruction of Malignaggi. I didn't think there was any case for a draw or Porter win against Brook. Can't say the same for the Thurman fight.
Thurman won 8 rounds against Porter without clinching. Brook clinched his way to victory against Porter. I agree Porter was just as fresh as when he fought Brook, but Brook's game plan was boring and basic. Thurman and Ugas outboxed Porter without doing any clinching and they both barely lost any rounds.
Don't think Thurman conceivably won more than 7 rounds against Porter. Quite easily could have lost 6 or 7 as well. Would be interesting to dig up a poll from after the fight on here and see what people thought at the time.
He was world class but not Elite p4p material. He was like David Haye, Billy Joe Saunders, or Tim Bradley.
decent fighter, but in retrospect a little overrated by Keith himself, but he is a good talker and he sold himself well.