This is one of the worst voluntary title defenses in recent times. There have been worse challengers, but not 3x!!!
Dangerous because Fury might take him lightly? Easy sparring session for Fury. If I was Chisora, I’d send a case of booze and a bag of the disco dust to Fury and hope he relapsed. Any form of Fury beats this guy. It’s just a question of how badly. The odds should be heavily stacked in Fury’s favor. Senseless fight.
Don't get me wrong, I think Fury should win. But I never back odds on favourites. I won't out much on- maybe just 10 or 20 but it makes it more exciting to watch
I'm a fan of both fighters but as with the main flow here, I didn't want, or see the point of a 3rd fight. Regardless of that I will be watching it. I expect Fury to win, but, I've got a funny feeling Chisora is gonna give Fury his best out of 3 performance this time round. The way Fury fights now is probably a little better suited to Chisora.
he made wilder look like a child? Like when he got laid out on his ass with his eyes rolling in the back of his head and barely beat the 10 count? Or in the 3rd fight when he had to peel himself off the ground twice? Why do people try to re-write history and make it sound like the Wilder Fights were a cake-walk for Tyson Fury when Fury barely escaped two of the 3 fights?????
1st bout Fury was 350 pounds 12 months earlier still boxed him up 2nd bout Fury on form made him look like a child 3rd bout Fury at his worst and chinned him with heart and guts alone, 3 weeks camp. Wilder cried in the corner like a child
Chisora is tough and he's actually shown his ring IQ isn't all that bad if his outings with Parker and Pulev are anything to judge him by. But he's old and gas tank is limited and Fury will just play jab n' grab for a few rounds before cutting him to pieces. I'm not expecting anything epic or pretty from this one, but I am expecting Fury to stop him some time around Rds 5-8.
Pretty dubious imo. Wilder has never lost to a pudding, whereas Joshua got dropped 4 times and quit in 7 against 25/1 underdog and PBC benchwarmer Ruiz, who Arum released because he regarded Ruiz as a slovenly, mediocre heavyweight who "didn't have a punch". Before Wallin-Breazeale you claimed that "solid fringe contender, broadly equivalent to Takam" Breazeale had a "far superior resume" to Wallin, how did that work out for him? And judging by their mutual performances against Fury, Wallin is far better than Chisora and Whyte, who blatantly ducked Wallin despite wanting activity before Fury.