This ain't my work. This is a new system, and from what i see there is like 5-6 fights punch count they did so far. But it's million times better than the s**** compubox, as there is no human factor and almost no room for error.
Yeah, when one guy is outlanding you by 300 punch, this is the main criteria. Boxing is about hit and not getting hit. Nice try.
Muhahhahahahaha i knew this was coming. How you say ? By outscoring him big time. And how many times GGG was on the ropes in the second fight? Exactly zero time. And where was that backing him up ? I see none of that. Canelo was on the front foot, but he was getting countered all night long, and was outlanded by 150 clean punches. He lost in every single categoria, or you just decide to totally ignore the stats: I will do the work for you: Canelo landed 202 punches, while GGG landed 354 punches. 152 more punches. High Impact Punches - 71 for Canelo, 89 for GGG. Thrown - 643 for Canelo to 950 to GGG Pressure - 28% for Canelo to 32% to GGG Aggression - 32% for Canelo, to 38% to GGG First fight GGG outlanded Canelo by a 50 punches based on the compubox, and threw 200 punches more. In reality the stats were prolly double in GGG favor. He outlanded Canelo in 10 out of the 12 rounds. While Canelo outland Golovin in just 1 round, and there was 1 even. This is all based on highly biased, highly flawed Compubox. In reality GGG schooled Canelo. Canelo was on the ropes multiple time and was backed up constantly. In the second fight there is not a single moment where GGG is being backed up, where is outlanded or where he is on the ropes. Actually there is plenty of moments even in the second fight, even though GGG strategy was different, where Canelo find himself backed and was on the ropes. You don't gain extra points for going forward. You may get extra point for being the effective aggressor, and for that you have to outland your opponent. Canelo never done that. And Boxing has always been about HIT and not being Hit. So this is always going to be the main factor, aka landed punches. Also clean and hard punches. And while some loves to score Jabs for not a power punch, we all know that GGG jab is exactly a power punch. Is all depend whether you put your body behind your punches or not, and we know that GGG does that. Completely different compares to for example Fury, who often just arm punches his jab. So nice try.
Sorry but we knew this from the jump, he landed jabs. Jabs don't win fights against Canelo unless you are Floyd. You can cry to the moon and back but the results are etched in history, L- MD. He lost that one, i won't fault you for feeling like he should have gotten the nod the 1st go round but Canelo took the 2nd fight.
100% - had GGG winning the second wider than the first . Thought GGG landed cleaner and heavier shots in the second
All the criteria boil down to one thing - clean effective punching. If some guy is walking forward being aggressive controlling the centre of the ring (“effective aggression” or “ring generalship”) but getting outlanded (clean punching), he is not winning the round Im afraid. Boxing is about clean punching all the criteria relate to that
I really liked how Callum Smith really tried against heavy handed Beterbiev but played scared shitless against tiny Clenelo. Your lover boy is a shameless fight fixer
GGG wins Canelo I easily and no one who knows anything about boxing denies this fact. Boxrec notwithstanding. Canelo II was close; I thought it was a draw.
Actually i read more recently that 38 ringside media had for Golovkin, 15 had it a draw, and 2 had it for Canelo. Watching it at regular speed, i had it for Golovkin by 2 points, just giving Canelo credit for aggression and benefit of the doubt in fast exchanges . Slowing the fight down to see what really landed, the lead gets much wider. The story of the fight should be Canelo switched up his style to aggression, the Wiley old Champion Golovkin adapted by excellently boxing, and poured it on down the stretch in the championship rounds and once again defeating Canelo and beating Hopkins title defense record.