It is painfully obvious that these 2 have some animosity. This kind of sibling stress can cause the camp problems. Floyd sr was quoted as bad mouthing his brother and then denies it, you can see jr try and play it off. jr, is gonna get mixed signals from these guys. Just one more layer to a complex fight. Good Observation reading the body language
Baskteball helps in that area like no other activity. If you play ball and have not in a long time thats the first place you feel it. Kind of contradictory
you're judging based on what you've seen on 24/7 only? Because I watched his work-out in London and some other footage and I don't see any decline? Same Floyd, Same ripped body. If you watch 24/7 De la hoya mayweather or hatton he doesn't go full speed. None of this will matter. The guy will still win. He's still the best fighter in the world.
I don't see a lost in speed at all, honestly. Hand speed is always the last thing to go, look at Ali and Jones Jr.
LMAO judging from 17 secs of footage i saw floyd train in person before he got injuired in england... he still has his hand speed!!!!
They've always disliked each other, nothing really new. Dont see why Roger would be pissed about Floyd Sr coming to camp though, unless Roger is in jail hes always gonna train Floyd.
Although it is logical that he has slowed down a minimal amount, he still appears to be stupidly fast, to the point where average Joe's eye would have no chance of noticing the difference. I call bull****, its all in people's heads.
Nostradumbass. You probably picked Hatton. Honestly, I can't see how you can tell on 24/7. They might even be showing slow-mos and there is nothing to compare with. Go back to the 24/7 and time the punches he was throwing in preparation for Oscar compared to now.
Power is the last thing to go. That's why a fat Foreman won the title at 45 while a 35 year old Ali was getting beaten to the punch by the likes of Leon Spinks. As great fighters get older, they find ways to compensate for decreased speed and reflexes and lengthen their career. But fighters who rely on speed and reflexes always have more to make up for than those that rely on power.