Tyson Furys resume is better than Anthony Joshuas

Discussion in 'World Boxing Forum' started by Joeywill, May 25, 2024.


  1. markclow

    markclow Well-Known Member Full Member

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    CORRECT.

    AND

    Usyk TKO9 Fury.
     
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  2. Joeywill

    Joeywill Well-Known Member Full Member

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    I've never heard anyone say that the count for Wilder vs Ortiz 2 was short
     
    Last edited: May 30, 2024
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  3. lordlosh

    lordlosh Boxing Junkie banned Full Member

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    It has. Because you are showing your heart in the gym. There is where fighters are made. In the ring you are showing your skills. Wilder choose to be delusional.
    In order to learn new stuffs, and improve, you actually have to lower your ego and accept there is things to be learned, and you also have to push yourself over the limit. AJ has clearly showed that and improved his game constantly.
    Wilder from the very beginning hasn't changed or improved his game at all.
     
  4. Absolutely!

    Absolutely! Fabulous, darling! Full Member

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    No **** he was hurt, for about ten seconds. Then he came firing back right after that. What are you criticising him for?
     
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  5. Joeywill

    Joeywill Well-Known Member Full Member

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    This isnt what heart means or the way I or fans use the term heart to mean in boxing. You just made up a completely new definition.
     
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  6. Joeywill

    Joeywill Well-Known Member Full Member

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    Not doing as well vs an inferior Whyte as Fury did vs a superior Whyte.
     
    Last edited: May 30, 2024
  7. Slyk

    Slyk Boxing Junkie Full Member

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    Better? He certainly has more elite, historic victories. He doesn't have the string of 40 year olds lined up by Matchroom that Joshua had.

    Personally the three dominant losses for Joshua detract a lot for me, especially when one was a quit job.
     
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  8. Absolutely!

    Absolutely! Fabulous, darling! Full Member

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    I've got a much more recent common opponent if you want to play that silly game.

    First name starts with Francis and last name ends in Ngannou.
     
  9. Joeywill

    Joeywill Well-Known Member Full Member

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    Fury did better than Joshua vs Wlad, Whyte and Usyk

    Joshua did better than Fury vs Wallin and Ngannou
     
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  10. Absolutely!

    Absolutely! Fabulous, darling! Full Member

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    Joshua kayoed Wlad and didn't nearly get sparked by an ancient middleweight. So I beg to differ sir.

    Fury only did better vs Whyte because Whyte never threw any punches. He was on Joshua from the first bell. Much more entertaining firefight.
     
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  11. Joeywill

    Joeywill Well-Known Member Full Member

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    Because Fury negated Whytes punches and who is the ancient Middleweight.

    Also saying that Joshua was better vs Klitschko is a reach even considering he knocked Klitschko out. Joshua went life and death and Fury dominated the whole way through pretty much
     
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  12. like a boss

    like a boss Boxing Junkie Full Member

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    Resumes are as much about who you lost to as they are about who you beat.
     
  13. hobby rider

    hobby rider Well-Known Member Full Member

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    Not to mention Joshua was a novice when he faced whyte too.
     
  14. lordlosh

    lordlosh Boxing Junkie banned Full Member

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    Cause you has never taken a Martial Arts seriously in your life. 90% of your work is done at the training room.
    This is the most telling video and sums up Wilder perfectly:
    This content is protected


    In order to comeback after defeat, and to actually show how much you want to be the best, aka how much you have in you, you had to put the real hard work, and not be delusional.
    Wilder has always been delusional and though he doesn't need to learn the right fundamentals and how to become a better version of himself. In order to overcome that, you need to show heart and desire and that you really want it, and to put aside your ego, and work your *** off.
    When did Wilder did any of this?

    Again you are winning or losing the fight in the training room. In the ring you are showing your skills and how much you wants it.
     
  15. lucky luke

    lucky luke Well-Known Member Full Member

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    I can clear ut up for you: it was a good win. Preceded and followed up by two questionable performances. And it was against a paper champion who never been proper tested in his career. (Except for the Olympics, where he finished third and then built his persona around it. That's tell you something, huh?)

    But this thread is about résumé. Having a 2-0-1 record against a regional one belt champion with several knock-downs is simply not that impressive.