Wladimir Klitschko vs David Haye THE FACTS Haye was afraid to engage with Wlad. He went into survival mode, ran for his life and flopped like a ***** all night. Wlad easily dominated the fight. Wlad boxed masterfully and won every round. Wlad was the aggressor from start to finish. Wlad made Haye look like an amatuer. Wlad threw and landed twice as many punches as Haye. Wlad outlanded Haye in every round. Wlad was never hurt, took Haye's best shots and was unphased, everytime Haye landed, Wlad answered back right away and continued dominating. Haye was hurt several times, he went down 20 times, the ref correctly called a knockdown in the 11th. Haye was totally outclassed, outboxed, outskilled, outsmarted, schooled, dominated and humiliated by Wlad. It was a shutout 12-0 Masterful dominant win for Wlad. Haye is Wlad's *****.
Agree the stoppage wasn't necessary, considering the round had ended. Perhaps he gets stopped in the next round, but should have been allowed to continue. IMO
It is official Chisora was more tired than he was hurt. Chisora needs cardio. Haye gets blasted by a Klitschko brother.
[ame]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=btNABbbM7vQ[/ame] Not according to his trainer he hasn't. So quit lying dickhead.
Chisora was knocked out cold once as an amateur, I cant remember who against though. I'm a Haye fan by the way.
Seriously? By who? I know he's an ABA winner, but that was when Price was with the podium squad fighting in global tournaments. I wouldn't have thought his level of opposition would've even have been that great as an amateur ...
I've seen worse stoppages. The guy was down several times and didn't come up until.. what...8 or so...still looking wobbly?
What a lot of "people who know boxing" on here seem to not know is that the time left in the round is irrelevant to a refs decision. He looks at the fighter and makes a judgement whether he is fit to carry on right now, regardless of time left. If the bell had gone and the ref deemed him unfit to continue he can stop it, but obviously in those cases the ref will usually give him the benefit of the doubt with a definite minute to recover. In a case like that, he looks and says to himself "can this man fight on now?" and he decided no, which was evidently a good choice given that nobody from Chisora's camp or Chisora complained and he needed medical attention after the stoppage.
This. If the fighter, his trainer and his promoter are all happy with the stoppage that's a pretty good sign that it was the right call. The fact that Chisora was getting hit with every punch at the end is another.
That is a separate issue and probably true. It does not have any bearing on whether or not the stoppage was poor or sensible. Even **** refs make correct calls and good refs bad ones on occasion.