Ruiz is obviously the coolest. Joshua is a bland manchild. Fury is a pathological liar. Wilder seems okay, but has an annoying public personality.
Joshua responds like a programmed cyborg... I wish we saw the real person Ruiz seems grounded and friendly outside the boxing ring, family man Fury is probably the most real out of the four, you see both the good and bad sides to him which is the definition of being genuine, a likeable down to earth guy Wilder deep down is a decent guy, he is also a family man but the Bronze Bomber is almost like a separate entity but it is almost like he has an emotional attachment to fighting
AJ is super respectful but I can't help thinking it's fake. Ruiz is cool, super respectful also but it seems genuine. Fury is really funny and down to earth but can be a bell end at time Wilder seems nice enough outside the ring but when he talks about boxing he's totally deluded and a complete bell whiff. 1. Fury 2. Ruiz 3. AJ 4. Wilder
I used to like Fury a lot but he's been getting on my tits lately. Too inconsistent, and the fame seems to have got to his head. Conversely I used to think Joshua was bland, but he's grown on me in the past year or so. He's probably still a phony A-hole behind closed doors, but if he is he's damn good at hiding it. Ruiz is a non-personality. Flat and boring as a blancmange. Wilder is an annoying prat with the iq of a doorknob. Parker's got the best personality of all. Him and that crazy cat Usyk.
I have no idea what this has to do with boxing, but it is fascinating seeing such contradicting views on how people perceive some of these guys - some of them make no sense at all to me as well. Good thing it's not a personality contest.
Fury is an arrogant idiot Joshua is just dumb Ruiz is a bit dumb but sort of cool Wilder is a great guy with a big heart
This post completely nailed it IMO. Was going to post something but this pretty much covers my own take on things. However, one thing I would probably give AJ is that he seemed to want to build a genuine legacy ... and at least he took his place as an icon for the sport seriously. Whereas Wilder and Fury seem(ed) to be content to bluff out a quasi-legacy based on hype and controversy rather than wins in the bank against top rated opposition. Ruiz, is different altogether, as until he landed the Joshua fight he didn't seem to be doing much of either, but on the other hand - he got a lucky break and absolutely made the most of it when it really counted. So good for him.