Evidence Joshua: Heavily dropped by Wladamir Klitschko right hand and hurt for a while, also Rocked by a Whyte hook on the inside Wilder: Heavily dropped by Harold Sconiers, rocked by Molina, rocked by Ortiz, buzzed a bit by Szpilka Fury: Dropped by Cunningham, Pajkic, rocked by Nikolai Firtha. My rankings are: 1: Joshua, as he's only been hurt by guys who have real power 2: Wilder, has been hurt by lesser punchers but did well to survive against Ortiz when a glass chin wouldn't have 3: Fury, hurt and dropped by non-punchers, has never been hit solid by a big puncher
Fury above Wilder. The shots that dropped him was shots over the top he didn't see coming rather than he was badly hurt by them. Wilder does have a glass chin. Ortiz' ain't a good finisher against guys in retreat, just plods about after them. Glass chinned Scott survived 12 rounds against him
Fury was clearly caught with two flush right hands by Vlad, one on the temple, in fact he mentioned a headache at the post fight presser from that blow. He was also clipped by some left hooks at least enough to get his attention, he mentioned concern about the hooks to Peter (and the drug dealing hype job trainer shrugged it off, telling him to just 'keep his right glove up', thanks Mr Meth, great advice facing the best left hook in boxing). Furthermore, Fury was caught multiple times by clean lefts of Joey Abel, who, while thought a bum a the time, went on a pretty good KO streak after that and clearly has substantial power. He's also taken punches by adult age David Price at only 17 years old and not been carried out the ring. Btw, he walked onto both overhand hayemakers from Cunningham and Pajkic, they were still heavyweights, it's not binary, that unless you are a ko artist you can't hurt anyone, these people punch things professionally. Wilder surviving the Ortiz onslaught might be telling. He also seemed to have taken some big hits from Haye in spars. But it's rare to see someone as hurt as Wilder was against Ortiz and not go down, I think he was a lot more hurt than some think, it looked like he'd been shot after getting clipped. Regardless of punches taken to this point, it is a fact that Fury has never been as hurt as Joshua or Wilder have been in the ring, never stumbled around drunk ready to go. So it's a little strange to call him the weakest.